Dry Needling in Mesquite, Nevada
Trigger point dry needling using AAMT-informed, evidence-based techniques — targeting the root cause of muscle pain, joint dysfunction, and movement limitations. Fast results, often felt after the first session.
What Is Dry Needling?
Dry needling is a precise, evidence-based treatment in which a thin filiform needle is inserted directly into a myofascial trigger point — a tight, hyperirritable knot within a muscle that causes local and referred pain.
The needle stimulates a local twitch response in the muscle — an involuntary contraction that releases the trigger point, restores normal muscle function, enhances blood flow to the area, and triggers the body's natural pain-relief response. The result is reduced pain and improved range of motion, often felt within the same session.
Unlike acupuncture, which is rooted in traditional Chinese medicine, dry needling is grounded entirely in Western anatomy, neuromuscular science, and musculoskeletal diagnosis. Dr. Hamilton employs techniques informed by the American Academy of Manipulative Therapy (AAMT) — the world's leading institution for evidence-based dry needling education and certification for chiropractors, physical therapists, and athletic trainers.
Conditions Treated With Dry Needling
The following conditions have strong clinical evidence supporting dry needling as an effective treatment, based on the evidence-based curriculum and published research of the American Academy of Manipulative Therapy (AAMT).
Head, Neck & Jaw
Cervicogenic Headaches
Headaches originating from the cervical spine and suboccipital muscles respond exceptionally well to dry needling. AAMT research demonstrates significant reduction in headache frequency and intensity through targeted needling of the upper cervical musculature.
Tension-Type & Migraine Headaches
Dry needling of the trapezius, SCM, scalene, and suboccipital trigger points reduces the muscular contribution to tension and migraine headaches — often providing relief where other treatments have fallen short.
Neck Pain & Whiplash
Mechanical neck pain and whiplash-associated disorders are among the most commonly treated conditions with dry needling. Needling the cervical musculature restores normal joint mobility, reduces guarding, and accelerates recovery from both acute and chronic neck injuries.
Temporomandibular Dysfunction (TMJ/TMD)
Jaw pain, clicking, and limited mouth opening caused by TMJ dysfunction often involves trigger points in the masseter, temporalis, and pterygoid muscles. Dry needling these muscles can provide rapid relief and restore normal jaw function.
Cervical Radiculopathy
Nerve-related arm pain, tingling, and weakness from compressed cervical nerve roots can be significantly relieved through dry needling of the surrounding musculature, reducing the compression and neurological irritation contributing to symptoms.
Myofascial Pain Syndrome
Myofascial trigger points — the root cause of many chronic pain complaints — are the primary target of dry needling. Inactivating these hyperirritable muscle knots eliminates both the local pain and the referred pain patterns they generate in distant body regions.
Shoulder, Arm & Upper Extremity
Shoulder Impingement Syndrome
Rotator cuff irritation and subacromial impingement are effectively addressed through dry needling of the rotator cuff muscles and shoulder girdle — restoring normal shoulder mechanics, reducing pain, and improving overhead mobility.
Lateral Epicondylalgia (Tennis Elbow)
Chronic elbow pain from lateral epicondylalgia responds well to dry needling of the common extensor origin and associated forearm muscles — addressing the tendinous tissue and muscular trigger points that perpetuate pain and grip weakness.
Carpal Tunnel Syndrome
Wrist pain, numbness, and hand tingling from carpal tunnel syndrome can be partially driven by trigger points in the forearm flexors and pronators. Dry needling these muscles — combined with chiropractic care — can reduce symptoms and improve nerve conduction.
Spine, Hips & Lower Extremity
Low Back Pain & Facet Syndrome
Lumbar trigger points in the erector spinae, multifidus, quadratus lumborum, and gluteal muscles are major contributors to low back pain. Dry needling these muscles reduces pain, muscle guarding, and the mechanical stress on the lumbar spine and facet joints.
Sciatica & Piriformis Syndrome
Sciatic-type pain running down the leg is often aggravated by trigger points in the piriformis and deep hip rotators that compress the sciatic nerve. Dry needling these muscles directly reduces nerve irritation and the characteristic radiating pain.
Knee Pain & IT Band Syndrome
Anterior knee pain, patellofemoral syndrome, and IT band tightness commonly involve trigger points in the quadriceps, TFL, and iliotibial band. Dry needling these structures reduces pain and improves knee tracking and stability.
Plantar Fasciitis & Ankle Pain
Heel and foot pain from plantar fasciitis is closely linked to trigger points in the calf, intrinsic foot muscles, and plantar fascia itself. Dry needling provides rapid reduction in the morning heel pain and stiffness that characterizes this condition.
Rib Pain & Thoracic Dysfunction
Intercostal and rib-related pain syndromes, along with mid-back tightness from thoracic facet irritation, respond well to dry needling of the intercostal, rhomboid, and paraspinal muscles — restoring normal rib mechanics and thoracic mobility.
Sports Injuries & Overuse Conditions
Muscle strains, tendinopathies, and overuse injuries in athletes heal more efficiently when trigger points perpetuating dysfunction are directly inactivated. Dry needling is a core component of Dr. Hamilton's sports medicine approach — getting athletes back in the game faster.
Dry Needling Pricing in Mesquite, NV
Packages are customized based on your condition and care plan — Dr. Hamilton will recommend the right number of sessions at your first visit.