Hip pain treatment in Baltimore — one-on-one, not one-size-fits-all.
Hip pain that lingers, flares with movement, or keeps coming back after treatment usually means the root cause hasn't been addressed. At Physica Medica, a Doctor of Physical Therapy evaluates and treats you for the full hour — every visit.
If nothing has worked yet, that's not on you.
Most patients who come in for hip pain have already been somewhere. Chiropractic, massage, a round of PT that helped a little and then stopped. The pain came back, or never fully went away.
That pattern almost always means the treatment targeted the symptom — the tight hip flexor, the sore glute — without identifying what's driving it. A movement dysfunction somewhere else in the chain. A loading problem. Scar tissue from an old injury that was never fully cleared.
The first visit at Physica Medica is 60 minutes built around finding that driver. Not a quick screen and a generic exercise sheet. A full movement assessment, a clear diagnosis, and treatment that starts the same day.
Common causes of hip pain we treat.
Hip pain rarely has a single source. Most cases involve two or three overlapping contributors. Here are the patterns we see most often.
IT band syndrome and lateral hip pain
Pain on the outside of the hip or down the thigh that worsens with running, stairs, or prolonged sitting. IT band syndrome is often overtreated with stretching that doesn't change anything — because the real issue is usually hip abductor weakness and faulty movement mechanics.
Piriformis syndrome
Deep gluteal pain that can mimic sciatica, sometimes with referral down the back of the leg. The piriformis muscle compresses the sciatic nerve when it's overloaded or in spasm. Dry needling and targeted manual therapy address this directly.
Hip flexor tightness and anterior impingement
A pinching or aching sensation at the front of the hip with flexion — common in people who sit for long stretches and in runners. Tight hip flexors pull the pelvis forward and alter how the femoral head sits in the socket. Stretching alone rarely fixes it.
Glute and deep hip rotator dysfunction
Weak or inhibited glutes force other muscles to compensate, which shows up as hip pain, knee pain, or low back pain. Identifying which muscles have dropped out — and reloading them correctly — is central to how we treat this.
Post-surgical hip pain and scar tissue
Hip replacement, labral repair, and other procedures leave scar tissue that restricts range of motion and alters movement patterns. Soft tissue work, IASTM, and corrective loading can restore function that surgery alone doesn't.
Bursitis and tendinopathy
Greater trochanteric bursitis and gluteal tendinopathy both produce lateral hip pain that worsens with loading. These respond well to a combination of manual therapy and progressive tendon loading — not rest and anti-inflammatories alone.
How we treat hip pain at Physica Medica.
Manual therapy, dry needling, and corrective movement — used together, in the same session, by the same DPT. The combination matters. Releasing tissue without retraining the movement pattern doesn't hold.
Manual therapy and dry needling for hip pain
Manual therapy restores joint mobility and addresses soft tissue restrictions that limit how the hip moves. For chronic tightness, muscle knots, and trigger points that refer pain into the glute or down the leg, dry needling reaches layers that hands alone can't. Some techniques involve temporary discomfort during treatment — most patients describe it as pressure or a brief muscle twitch, not sharp pain.
If you're nervous about needles: the needle is hair-thin and nothing is injected. The sensation is different from a blood draw. Most patients are surprised by how manageable it is.
Biomechanics and movement assessment
Hip pain almost always involves a movement problem upstream or downstream — how you load your foot, how your pelvis moves, how your spine compensates. We assess the full picture, not just the painful spot.
Corrective loading and progressive training
Once the tissue is released and mobility is restored, the new range has to be trained under load or the problem returns. We build that into every treatment plan — not as homework you'll forget, but as targeted, progressive work tied directly to what your assessment showed.
What to expect at your first visit.
Sixty minutes. One DPT, start to finish. By the end, you'll know what's driving your hip pain, what the treatment plan looks like, and roughly how many sessions to expect.
Book Free Consultation- 01
History and movement assessment
What you've tried, what hasn't worked, and what you actually want to be able to do again. Then a full movement screen — how your hip loads, where it restricts, what the surrounding structure is doing.
- 02
Same-day treatment
You don't come back next week to start. Manual therapy, dry needling if indicated, and corrective movement work begin in the first visit.
- 03
Clear plan
Projected number of sessions, what we expect to change week by week, and a home program that's specific to your case. No open-ended commitment.
[Real patient testimonial will be placed here — a short narrative from a neck pain patient describing what previous treatments hadn’t solved, what changed at Physica Medica, and what they can do now.]
Frequently asked questions about hip pain treatment.
If yours isn't here, see the full FAQ or call the clinic directly at 443-228-8029.
How long does it take for physical therapy to relieve neck pain?
How many sessions will I need? Most hip pain cases resolve in 6 to 10 sessions. The first visit gives us enough information to give you a realistic projection — not a vague 'it depends.' Some straightforward cases move faster. Chronic or post-surgical cases may take longer.
Is dry needling effective for neck pain and stiffness?
Is this covered by insurance? Physica Medica is an out-of-pocket practice. You pay directly, which means no prior authorizations, no session limits set by a claims department, and no splitting your hour between a DPT and an aide. Many patients submit for out-of-network reimbursement on their own — we can provide documentation for that.
Do I need a doctor’s referral for neck pain physical therapy in Maryland?
Do I need a referral? No. Maryland is a direct-access state, so you can start PT without a physician referral.
I’ve done PT for neck pain before and it didn’t help. What’s different here?
Why pay more here than at a standard PT clinic? At most PT clinics, you get 15 to 20 minutes with the DPT and the rest with a tech. Here, the full hour is with the Doctor of Physical Therapy — assessment, hands-on treatment, and movement work. That's why results happen in fewer visits.
Will I need imaging or a scan?
Is dry needling safe for hip pain? Yes, when performed by a qualified provider. Dry needling in Maryland requires specific training and certification. Your DPT at Physica Medica is certified to perform it. For hip and glute pain specifically, it's one of the more effective tools available for trigger points and deep muscle spasm.