Treatments

Blood Flow Restriction Training

Build strength with lighter resistance, support recovery, and train more efficiently with personalized blood flow restriction training from Dr. Eddie.

Session

60 Minutes

Setting

Home / Gym / Office

Format

1-on-1 with Dr. Eddie

Session

60 Minutes

Setting

Home / Gym / Office

Format

1-on-1 with Dr. Eddie

What Is Blood Flow Restriction Training?

Blood flow restriction training, often called BFR, uses specialized cuffs placed on the arm or leg to partially restrict blood flow while performing low-load exercise.

This approach can create a challenging strength stimulus without requiring heavy weights. It is often used when someone needs to build or maintain strength but cannot tolerate traditional loading due to pain, surgery, injury, or joint irritation.

Dr. Eddie carefully controls cuff placement, pressure, exercise selection, and dosage so the session is specific, monitored, and appropriate for your goals.

benefits Include

Blood flow restriction training can help support strength and conditioning when heavy loading is not ideal.

Blood Flow Restriction Training May Help With:

Conditions Treated

BFR may be useful when weakness, pain, or post-surgical limitations make traditional strength training difficult.

Common Conditions Include:

Techniques Used

BFR training must be individualized. Dr. Eddie selects the right setup based on the limb, tolerance, phase of recovery, and strength goal.

Personalized Cuff Placement

Cuffs are positioned on the upper arm or upper leg depending on the target area and exercise plan.

Rehabilitation-Based BFR

For post-injury or post-surgical cases, training is progressed carefully based on tissue tolerance and healing stage.

Low-Load Strength Training

Exercises are performed with lighter resistance while still creating a meaningful muscle challenge.

Performance-Focused BFR

For active clients, BFR may be used to add training stimulus without excessive joint or tendon load.

What to Expect

Safety Screening

Dr. Eddie reviews your health history, injury status, and training goals to determine whether BFR is appropriate.

Guided Exercises

You perform selected exercises while cuff pressure, fatigue, and form are closely monitored.

Progressive Loading

BFR is integrated into a broader strength plan so you can gradually return to heavier or more advanced training when ready.

Frequently Asked Questions

It can be safe when properly screened, dosed, and supervised. Dr. Eddie determines whether it is appropriate before using it.

It can feel intense or uncomfortable due to pressure and muscle fatigue, but it should not feel sharp or unsafe.

Not permanently for everyone. It is often used as a bridge when heavier loading is not currently ideal.

People with certain vascular, clotting, cardiac, or medical conditions may not be appropriate candidates. Screening is required.

Timing depends on the procedure, medical clearance, healing stage, and individual presentation.

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