Modality library · v1

The 15 modalities, in plain language.

What each one actually is, how it works, what it's used for, when it isn't appropriate, and the questions to ask any provider who offers it. Same rigor we apply inside the screening tool.

15 entries Sourced from the ChiroMatch clinical screening tool
Contents 15 modalities
  1. HVLA Manipulation
  2. Activator / Instrument Adjust
  3. Joint Mobilization
  4. Flexion-Distraction Technique
  5. Spinal Decompression
  6. Shockwave Therapy
  7. Cold Laser / LLLT
  8. Cupping Therapy
  9. IASTM / Muscle Scraping
  10. Active Release Technique (ART)
  11. Dry Needling
  12. Corrective Exercise / Rehab
  13. Soft Tissue Massage
  14. Therapeutic Ultrasound
  15. Kinesiotaping

HVLA Manipulation

Core modality
Also called: spinal adjustment, manipulation, the "crack" · Typical cost: $50–$100/visit · Typical course: 6–12 visits

High-velocity, low-amplitude thrust — the classic chiropractic adjustment. A fast, short-range thrust delivered to a specific joint at end-range, usually producing an audible cavitation of the joint capsule.

How it works

A manual thrust delivered faster than the stretch reflex can resist (~150 ms). Gapping the joint briefly reduces articular pressure and triggers reflexive muscle relaxation around the segment.

Best used for

Acute and subacute mechanical low back pain, mechanical neck pain, cervicogenic headache, thoracic stiffness, and joint-level hypomobility confirmed on exam.

When to avoid

Fracture, surgical hardware, active infection, cancer at the spine, aortic aneurysm, severe osteoporosis, cauda equina, and untreated anticoagulation — all routed away by the ChiroMatch screen.

Evidence base

First-line recommendation for acute non-specific low back pain in the 2017 American College of Physicians guideline, alongside heat and massage.

Ask the provider
  • What specific technique school do you practice — Diversified, Gonstead, Thompson?
  • How will you know whether HVLA is actually working? What's the reassessment point?
  • If I'm not improving by visit 4–6, what changes?

Activator / Instrument Adjust

Low-force
Also called: instrument-assisted adjusting, impulse tool · Typical cost: $50–$100/visit · Typical course: 6–12 visits

An FDA-cleared spring-loaded handheld instrument that delivers a precise, controlled low-force impulse. The defining advantage: it's fast enough to move a joint without recruiting the protective muscle reflex.

How it works

A calibrated spring delivers a thrust in roughly 3 ms — faster than muscle guarding can activate. Force and amplitude are precisely controlled by the instrument rather than by hand.

Best used for

Patients where manual HVLA is too risky — pregnancy, elderly, osteoporosis, anticoagulant users, pediatric cases, high-anxiety patients, and cervical work where the provider wants tighter force control.

When to avoid

Fracture, active spinal infection or malignancy, and cauda equina — the same hard absolutes that apply to any spinal technique.

Evidence base

The Activator Methods protocol has been studied across multiple controlled trials for mechanical neck and back pain with outcomes comparable to manual HVLA in many contexts.

Ask the provider
  • Are you Activator Methods Proficiency-rated or Advanced-Proficiency-rated?
  • Why Activator versus manual adjustment in my specific case?

Joint Mobilization

No-thrust
Also called: graded mobilization, Maitland · Typical cost: $60–$110/visit · Typical course: 4–10 visits

Gentler, graded joint movement without a thrust. Rather than a single fast impulse, the clinician moves the joint rhythmically through a range — graded from small oscillations in early range up to sustained stretches at end-range.

How it works

Graded (I–IV) oscillations restore accessory joint motion and modulate pain through mechanoreceptor input, without the cavitation or end-range thrust of HVLA.

Best used for

When HVLA is contraindicated or not tolerated — post-op patients, acute inflammatory flare-ups, elderly patients, and people with fear-avoidance around manipulation.

When to avoid

Active fracture, infection, or instability in the region being mobilized. Generally safer than HVLA but the same hard absolutes apply.

Evidence base

Supported across orthopedic manual therapy traditions (Maitland, Kaltenborn, Mulligan) as a first-line option for many spine and peripheral joint conditions.

Ask the provider
  • What grade of mobilization will you use, and why?
  • How does this fit with any HVLA you're also planning?

Flexion-Distraction Technique

Disc-focused
Also called: Cox technique, hands-on decompression · Typical cost: $55–$110/visit · Typical course: 8–20 sessions

Doctor-controlled hands-on spinal decompression. The clinician manually guides a segmented prone table (a Cox or Zenith table) to apply gentle flexion combined with long-axis traction — pumping the spine rhythmically to reduce pressure on a disc or nerve root.

How it works

The table's caudal section flexes and distracts while the clinician's hand applies a specific contact at the target segment, opening the posterior disc space and intervertebral foramen.

Best used for

Disc herniation with radicular pain, lumbar and cervical stenosis, spondylolisthesis, facet syndrome, and many post-surgical spines where HVLA is off the table.

When to avoid

Acute fracture, severe osteoporosis, aortic aneurysm, and progressive neurological loss (which needs medical workup, not decompression).

Evidence base

The Cox flexion-distraction protocol has multiple clinical studies showing reduced intradiscal pressure and improved outcomes in disc-mediated pain.

Ask the provider
  • Are you Cox Certified (Cox-1, Cox-2)?
  • Which protocol — I, II, or III — fits my imaging and symptoms?
  • Will you be combining this with exercise and home positioning?

Spinal Decompression

Motorized
Also called: DRX9000, motorized traction, non-surgical decompression · Typical cost: $75–$150/visit · Typical course: 15–30 sessions

A motorized traction table that applies computer-controlled axial distraction to the spine. The pulling force oscillates on a programmed curve, intended to create brief negative intradiscal pressure and allow herniated material to retract.

How it works

Devices such as the DRX9000, SpineMED, or Chattanooga Triton apply 40–60% of body weight in alternating traction-and-release cycles, aiming to sustain the distraction long enough to lower intradiscal pressure.

Best used for

Multi-level disc herniation, degenerative disc disease with radiculopathy, and sustained decompression loading when hands-on flexion-distraction isn't enough on its own.

When to avoid

Pregnancy, abdominal aortic aneurysm, acute fracture, severe osteoporosis, metal hardware in the treatment region, and any red-flag neurology.

Evidence base

Evidence for motorized decompression over standard traction is mixed — the treatment can help the right patient, but results depend heavily on case selection and on integrating with active rehab.

Cost noteMost insurance plans do not cover motorized decompression. Expect a cash-pay course in the range of $1,500–$4,500. Ask for the full package price before you start — not just the per-visit rate.
Ask the provider
  • What device are you using, and what protocol does it run?
  • What's the total package cost and refund policy if it isn't working?
  • Are you combining decompression with exercise and manual care?

Shockwave Therapy

Tendons & soft tissue
Also called: ESWT, radial/focused shockwave · Typical cost: $80–$150/visit · Typical course: 4–8 sessions

High-energy acoustic pulses delivered through a handheld applicator. Used primarily for chronic tendinopathy and stubborn soft-tissue pain that hasn't responded to standard care.

How it works

Acoustic waves generate mechanotransduction in tissue — micro-stress that triggers controlled inflammation, angiogenesis, and collagen remodeling in chronically degenerated tendon.

Best used for

Plantar fasciitis, lateral epicondylitis (tennis elbow), rotator cuff tendinopathy, Achilles tendinopathy, calcific shoulder, greater trochanteric pain syndrome.

When to avoid

Pregnancy over the treatment area, active malignancy at the site, bleeding disorders or anticoagulation, and directly over growth plates in children.

Evidence base

Among the better-evidenced passive modalities — multiple systematic reviews support shockwave for chronic tendinopathy, particularly plantar fasciitis and lateral epicondylitis.

Ask the provider
  • Radial or focused shockwave — and which is right for my diagnosis?
  • What output settings and how many pulses per session?
  • What happens if I'm not responding by session 3–4?

Cold Laser / LLLT

Photobiomodulation
Also called: low-level laser therapy, photobiomodulation, PBM · Typical cost: $40–$80/visit · Typical course: 6–15 sessions

Therapeutic light delivered at specific wavelengths, usually 600–1100 nm. Painless and non-thermal — the mechanism is photochemical, not heat.

How it works

Photons at specific wavelengths are absorbed by cytochrome c oxidase in mitochondria, increasing ATP production and modulating reactive oxygen species — nudging cells toward tissue repair and pain modulation.

Best used for

Tendinopathy, joint inflammation, neuropathic pain, post-surgical recovery, wound healing adjunct, and as a safe pain-modulation option when manual therapy isn't tolerated.

When to avoid

Directly over active malignancy, over the pregnant uterus, over the thyroid, or on patients with photosensitizing medications without medical clearance.

Evidence base

Evidence is strongest for neck pain and tendinopathy when dose (joules per cm²) is correct. Many underpowered machines produce no effect — dose matters.

Ask the provider
  • What wavelength, what power (in mW), and what dose (in J/cm²)?
  • Is this Class III or Class IV laser? Why that choice?

Cupping Therapy

Myofascial decompression
Also called: myofascial decompression, MFD · Typical cost: $40–$80/visit · Typical course: 3–8 sessions

Negative pressure applied to the skin through silicone or glass cups. The cups lift and decompress skin, fascia, and superficial muscle — the opposite of pressing down.

How it works

Suction decompresses layered tissues, transiently increases local circulation, and provides novel sensory input that may modulate pain centrally. The visible circular marks are capillary stretch, not bruising in the injury sense.

Best used for

Chronic myofascial tightness, upper-back and lat restriction, recovery adjunct for athletes, and as a pre-adjustment soft-tissue prep.

When to avoid

Bleeding disorders and anticoagulant therapy (bruising risk), skin infections, burns, or open wounds, and directly over the pregnant abdomen.

Evidence base

Short-term pain reduction is supported by several trials; long-term disease-modifying claims are not. Useful adjunct, not a standalone treatment.

Ask the provider
  • Dry, wet, or moving cups — and why for me?
  • How intense should the marks be, and when should I expect them to clear?

IASTM / Muscle Scraping

Soft tissue
Also called: Graston, HawkGrips, ASTYM, gua sha · Typical cost: $50–$90/visit · Typical course: 4–10 sessions

Instrument-Assisted Soft Tissue Mobilization. The provider uses a stainless-steel or plastic edged tool to glide across soft tissue, detecting and treating restricted fascia and adhesions.

How it works

The tool amplifies the clinician's ability to locate tissue restriction. Applied pressure causes controlled microtrauma to disorganized collagen, triggering fibroblast activity and tissue remodeling.

Best used for

Chronic tendinopathy, post-surgical scar tissue, plantar fasciitis, IT band restriction, myofascial adhesions after repetitive use injury.

When to avoid

Open wounds, active infection, anticoagulant therapy (bruising risk), acute inflammation, and directly over recent hematoma.

Evidence base

Evidence supports short-term pain and mobility improvements; mechanism claims around "breaking up adhesions" are more marketing than proven. The clinical effect is real even if the mechanism is debated.

Ask the provider
  • Which system — Graston, HawkGrips, ASTYM — and are you certified in it?
  • How do you calibrate pressure, and what should I expect afterward?

Active Release Technique (ART)

Soft tissue · nerve entrapment
Also called: ART, Leahy technique · Typical cost: $60–$125/visit · Typical course: 4–8 sessions

A patented, movement-based soft-tissue technique developed by Dr. P. Michael Leahy. The clinician applies precise directed tension to a specific muscle, tendon, fascia, or peripheral nerve while the patient actively moves the body part through its range of motion. The pairing of sustained contact with active movement is what distinguishes ART from traditional massage or static pressure work.

How it works

Over-used tissue develops cross-linking, scar-like adhesions, and decreased glide between adjacent fascial layers. ART uses the patient's own active motion against the clinician's contact to shear and release those restrictions between layers — targeting muscle–muscle, muscle–nerve, and muscle–tendon interfaces rather than a single muscle belly.

Best used for

Repetitive-strain and overuse injuries: carpal tunnel, plantar fasciitis, IT band syndrome, tennis/golfer's elbow, shin splints, hamstring and groin strains, shoulder impingement, sciatica, piriformis syndrome, thoracic outlet syndrome, cervicogenic headache. Broadly useful wherever the clinical picture is fascial adhesion or peripheral nerve entrapment rather than joint restriction.

When to avoid

Acute blunt trauma or active inflammation at the treatment site; acute or unhealed fracture; open wounds, burns, or skin infection over the area; known bleeding disorder or full anticoagulation (relative — downgrade, don't always stop); DVT or suspected thrombosis in the limb; active malignancy at the treatment site. In pregnancy, abdominal work is avoided; extremity work is generally safe in trained hands.

Evidence base

Best evidence is in repetitive-strain and nerve-entrapment presentations — carpal tunnel, hamstring flexibility and strain, plantar fasciitis, and lateral epicondylitis. RCT literature is still thin; most data is case-series and practitioner-reported outcomes. Like most manual therapies, ART works best paired with progressive loading and rehab rather than as a standalone.

Certification mattersART is a trademarked system with tiered provider certification (Upper Extremity, Lower Extremity, Spine, Nerve Entrapment, Masters, Biomechanics). Ask which certification levels the provider currently holds — it tells you where their protocol library is deepest.
Ask the provider
  • Which ART certifications do you hold, and are you current for this year?
  • For my specific diagnosis, which body-region protocol will you use?
  • How will we know by session 3–4 whether this is the right approach?

Dry Needling

Trigger point
Also called: trigger point dry needling, intramuscular manual therapy · Typical cost: $60–$100/visit · Typical course: 3–8 sessions

Thin filiform needles inserted into trigger points or motor points within muscle. Different from acupuncture — dry needling is based on Western neuromuscular anatomy rather than meridian theory.

How it works

Needling a trigger point elicits a local twitch response that disrupts the taut band, desensitizes the motor end-plate, and modulates peripheral and central pain pathways.

Best used for

Myofascial trigger points, tension headache, TMJ referral, piriformis and quadratus lumborum pain, and post-exercise muscle guarding.

When to avoid

Anticoagulation (increased bruising), local infection, needle phobia, lymphedema over the region, and pregnancy over abdomen and lumbosacral regions without provider clearance.

Evidence base

Moderate evidence for short-term pain reduction in myofascial pain syndromes. Works best paired with exercise rehab, not as a standalone.

Scope varies by stateDry needling is regulated separately by each state's chiropractic and physical therapy boards. Some states require specific certification or restrict the scope. Always confirm the provider is licensed to perform it in your state.
Ask the provider
  • Are you licensed to perform dry needling in this state, and what certification?
  • How many sessions before we evaluate whether it's working?

Corrective Exercise / Rehab

Active care
Also called: therapeutic exercise, movement retraining, active care · Typical cost: $50–$100/visit · Typical course: 8–16 sessions

Progressive loading, motor control, and movement retraining. The active counterpart to every passive modality on this list — and the one most directly tied to whether improvements last.

How it works

Tissue adapts to the load you give it. Specific exercise progressions tell the musculoskeletal system what capacity to build, while motor-control work re-teaches coordinated movement patterns around a previously painful segment.

Best used for

Essentially every musculoskeletal complaint — acute, chronic, pre-op, post-op. Especially important for low back pain, rotator cuff dysfunction, and all return-to-sport work.

When to avoid

Very few hard contraindications — but exercise selection must be appropriate to the diagnosis (for example, avoiding end-range flexion in acute disc herniation).

Evidence base

The single best-evidenced intervention in musculoskeletal care. Without active rehab, passive modalities usually plateau.

Ask the provider
  • What's my home program between visits?
  • How will we progress load and complexity over time?
  • When will I be discharged to an independent maintenance program?

Soft Tissue Massage

Adjunct
Also called: myofascial release, deep tissue, trigger point massage · Typical cost: $60–$120/visit · Typical course: 4–12 sessions

Manual manipulation of muscle and fascia. Used alone or, more commonly, as preparation for and integration with spinal work.

How it works

Mechanical pressure lengthens and mobilizes soft tissue while reducing sympathetic nervous-system output — which partly explains why an effective massage can reduce pain out of proportion to any observable tissue change.

Best used for

Muscle tension, secondary stress-related musculoskeletal pain, post-exercise recovery, and preparation for joint work in tight or guarded patients.

When to avoid

Deep vein thrombosis, active cellulitis, unhealed fractures, anticoagulation with aggressive deep-tissue techniques.

Evidence base

Well-supported for short-term pain and anxiety reduction; part of the ACP first-line set for acute low back pain. Like cupping, more adjunct than standalone.

Ask the provider
  • How does this integrate with the rest of my care plan?
  • Is this a licensed massage therapist in this state?

Therapeutic Ultrasound

Adjunct
Also called: US, therapeutic US · Typical cost: $30–$60/visit · Typical course: 6–12 visits

High-frequency sound waves (typically 1–3 MHz) delivered through a gel-coupled handheld head. Produces thermal and non-thermal effects in deeper tissue.

How it works

Acoustic energy at 1 MHz penetrates roughly 3–5 cm, causing tissue vibration that heats deeper structures (continuous mode) or drives micro-streaming and cavitation at cellular level (pulsed mode).

Best used for

Historically: tendinopathy, joint contracture, soft-tissue heating before manual work, and post-surgical adhesion softening.

When to avoid

Over malignancy, active infection, the pregnant abdomen or pelvis, over pacemakers, over growth plates in children, and directly over the eye.

Evidence base

Honest take: evidence is modest for most indications. For many conditions, shockwave or LLLT now produce better outcomes. Useful as pre-manual warm-up but rarely a standalone solution.

Ask the provider
  • Why ultrasound rather than shockwave or cold laser for my condition?
  • What frequency, intensity, and duration are you using?

Kinesiotaping

Supportive
Also called: K-tape, RockTape, Kinesio Tex · Typical cost: $20–$50/visit · Typical course: As needed

Elastic cotton tape applied in specific patterns across skin overlying a muscle, joint, or fascial chain. Worn for several days at a time between treatments.

How it works

Proposed mechanisms include mechanical unloading of tissue, sensory input that modulates pain perception, and subtle changes to local lymphatic flow. The cutaneous sensory effect is probably the most reliable.

Best used for

Short-term pain modulation, postural awareness between sessions, patellofemoral pain, shoulder impingement, and as a between-session extension of in-clinic care.

When to avoid

Adhesive allergies, fragile skin, open wounds, active skin infection, and over deep vein thrombosis.

Evidence base

Short-term pain reduction is reasonably supported; long-term outcomes are not. Treat it as a useful adjunct, not a primary treatment.

Ask the provider
  • What taping pattern, and what should I feel differently while wearing it?
  • How long should I leave it on, and what if the skin reacts?
Not sure which of these you actually need?
The ChiroMatch screening ranks all 15 modalities against your specific conditions, medications, and red flags — and tells you which ones to avoid.
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