Neuromuscular Massage Therapists Near You
Neuromuscular therapy (NMT) is a clinical, evidence-based approach that addresses the relationship between the nervous system and the muscular system. It identifies and treats trigger points, nerve compression, postural distortions, biomechanical dysfunction, and ischemia (restricted blood flow to tissue).
Sessions involve detailed assessment — the therapist maps your posture, movement patterns, and areas of referred pain before working. Treatment is precise and methodical, targeting the specific structures responsible for your symptoms rather than providing general relaxation.
NMT is best suited for people with specific, diagnosable pain conditions: sciatica, carpal tunnel syndrome, rotator cuff injuries, thoracic outlet syndrome, piriformis syndrome, and post-accident rehabilitation. It is therapeutic rather than relaxing.
Most neuromuscular therapists integrate homework — stretches, strengthening exercises, postural corrections — into the treatment plan. Results build significantly over multiple sessions, making it more of a therapeutic process than a one-time treatment.
Related Massage Types
Neuromuscular Massage — Common Questions
- How much does Neuromuscular massage cost?
- Neuromuscular massage rates vary by location and therapist experience. Browse profiles in your city to compare current pricing directly.
- How many Neuromuscular massage therapists are near me?
- Hemasseur lists 0 Neuromuscular massage therapists across 0 US cities. Browse the city list above to find practitioners in your area. Each profile includes contact details, rates, and photos — no booking fees.
- What is Neuromuscular massage good for?
- Neuromuscular therapy is best for people with specific, diagnosable pain conditions: sciatica, carpal tunnel syndrome, rotator cuff injuries, thoracic outlet syndrome, piriformis syndrome, and post-accident or post-surgical rehabilitation.
- How does Neuromuscular massage differ from other types?
- Neuromuscular therapy is the most clinical of all massage modalities. Sessions begin with postural and movement assessment. Treatment is targeted rather than full-body, and includes homework and corrective exercises. It's therapeutic rather than relaxing.