If you’ve ever dealt with stubborn muscle tension, tightness that stretching can’t fix, or pain that keeps showing up during runs or workouts, someone may have recommended dry needling. But what exactly is it—and how do you know if it’s right for you?
At Steady State Health, we use dry needling as part of our performance-based physical therapy approach. It’s not a cure-all, but for many of our clients—especially runners and active adults—it’s a powerful tool for moving better, recovering faster, and breaking out of chronic pain loops.
Dry needling is a contemporary physical therapy technique used to treat musculoskeletal pain. It involves placing thin, sterile needles into muscle tissue—specifically, trigger points or areas of tightness that are often areas of knotted or dense muscle tissue. The goal of dry needling is to release tension in these spots, alleviate pain, and improve mobility.
Unlike acupuncture, which is rooted in traditional Chinese medicine, dry needling is based on modern anatomy and neuroscience. It’s a mechanical and neurological intervention—not an energy-based one.
In short, what dry needling does is help reduce neuromuscular tension, restore movement, and create an opportunity for your body to relearn how to move without pain.
When integrated into a comprehensive physical therapy plan, dry needling can help with:
We often use it alongside other treatments like strength training, education around training, manual therapy, and mobility work to support long-term resilience—not just short-term symptom relief.
Not appropriate for everyone, such as needle-phobic individuals or certain health conditions
We never recommend dry needling in isolation, and we won’t use it unless it makes sense for your goals, comfort level, and clinical picture.
If dry needling is part of your plan, here’s what you can expect:
Assessment first: We’ll evaluate your movement, symptoms, and goals before ever picking up a needle.
Aftercare: Soreness is possible (like a deep muscle workout), and we’ll guide you on how to recover and keep progressing.
Most people feel relief quickly, but dry needling works best as part of a bigger plan—one that includes strength, movement retraining, and education.
We use dry needling most often for runners and active adults dealing with:
If you're curious but unsure, we’re happy to talk through whether dry needling makes sense for you during a free discovery call.
At Steady State Health, dry needling is just one piece of the puzzle. We combine it with strength-forward rehab, running-specific care, and clinical decision-making that reflects your goals—not just your symptoms.