Sports Injury Treatment in Kansas City
Whether you run, lift, swing a golf club, or play recreational sports, injuries are part of the game. As a sports chiropractor in Kansas City, Dr. Tyler Smith works with athletes across the metro to recover from injuries, prevent recurrence, and improve performance through better movement. Sports chiropractic care combines targeted adjustments with soft-tissue work and movement retraining.
What we treat
- Runner's knee and IT band issues
- Golfer's and tennis elbow
- Rotator cuff injuries
- Plantar fasciitis
- Shin splints
- Hip and groin strains
- Hamstring strains
- Lower back injuries from lifting
- Shoulder impingement
Our approach
We treat the injury and the underlying movement dysfunction that caused it. That means manual therapy to the affected joint and tissue, plus corrective exercises to fix the movement pattern. Most athletes return to full training within weeks, not months.
Frequently asked questions
How is this different from physical therapy?
We combine manual joint adjustments with soft-tissue work and corrective exercise. Many athletes use both; chiropractic for joint mobility, PT for strengthening.
Can I keep training while I heal?
Often yes. Dr. Smith will give you specific guidance on what to modify or avoid temporarily.
Do you work with high-school or college athletes?
Yes. We treat athletes of all levels and ages.
Can chiropractic improve my performance, not just fix injuries?
Yes. Better joint mobility and movement patterns translate directly to better performance; more efficient stride for runners, more shoulder rotation for golfers, more squat depth for lifters. Many of our patients use chiropractic as part of regular maintenance, not just injury care.
What is the difference between an acute sports injury and an overuse injury?
Acute injuries happen at a specific moment; a rolled ankle, a lifted-too-heavy strain. Overuse injuries develop gradually from repetitive load; runner's knee, tendinitis, plantar fasciitis. Treatment differs: acute focuses on reducing inflammation; overuse usually requires changing movement patterns or training load.
How quickly can I get back to my sport after an injury?
Depends on the injury and the sport, but most non-surgical sports injuries return to full activity in 2-8 weeks of consistent care. We rarely keep athletes sidelined longer than necessary; return-to-sport is often gradual rather than all-or-nothing.
Do you treat runners with knee or hip pain specifically?
Yes; running injuries are one of our most common cases. The cause is usually upstream of the symptom (hip mechanics causing knee pain, foot drop causing IT band pain). We treat the chain, not just the spot that hurts.