Fort Worth clinic
A lot of Fort Worth patients realize the truth the morning after a wreck. Getting out of bed hurts more than expected, the neck is stiffer, and the back is sharper.
Fort Worth is a practical first stop when next-morning stiffness and early workday function loss are what make the injury feel real. If that is happening, call the clinic for a more specific exam and next step.
No copays, no deductibles, and no upfront costs.
How to find us
Getting to the Fort Worth Clinic
If you use GPS, enter the full address and give yourself a little extra time for parking.
Most people who come here are dealing with crash injuries. The same clinic also evaluates work injuries, sports injuries, and injuries that happen at home.
Fort Worth often makes sense when you went home feeling manageable enough, then the next morning told a different story.
It is also a strong fit when the first work shift makes it obvious that neck, back, or nerve symptoms are still active and not settling on their own.
For many people coming from I-30, I-35W, downtown Fort Worth, or the nearby medical district, that straightforward next-day follow-up matters.
The visit should leave you with a clearer answer than being told to give it time.
Tell us when the pain became real after the wreck, what got worse overnight, and whether getting out of bed, the first drive, or the first work shift made it obvious.
Neck, back, and joint motion are checked, and nerve-related symptoms are evaluated directly when pain, tingling, numbness, or weakness are part of the pattern.
If you already went to the ER or urgent care, bring any paperwork and imaging reports you were given.
You should leave with a clear next step, which may include follow-up, targeted nonsurgical treatment, imaging review, or other options based on what the exam shows.
When the morning after is the real problem, the next step usually needs to be more specific than medication and time.
Treatment for neck, back, joint, and nerve pain after a car accident.
ER imaging and other studies are reviewed when they matter to the injury pattern.
Available when the exam supports a more targeted pain-relief step.
Both joint injections and PRP injections are available when the diagnosis points in that direction.
Headache, dizziness, fogginess, and other post-head-impact symptoms are evaluated here, with treatment guided by the pattern.
If the injury pattern points that way, the next step can include surgical evaluation and recommendation when appropriate.
This clinic fits a common Fort Worth pattern: you go home thinking you may just be sore, then the next morning and the first work shift tell a different story.
Many people only realize how specific the injury is once getting out of bed hurts, turning the head to drive is tighter, or the workday feels harder than it should.
This clinic is a straightforward first stop from I-30, I-35W, downtown Fort Worth, and the nearby medical district. The goal is clarity about what is driving the pain, what needs treatment next, and what the plan should be.
Fort Worth often makes sense when the injury feels most real the next morning or during the first work shift.
That is common. Stiffness and soreness often change overnight, and the real pattern can show up once you are moving again.
The first movement after a night of stiffness can make neck, back, hip, and joint injuries feel much more specific.
Workday demands often expose what rest was hiding. Sitting, standing, lifting, walking, and turning can all make the pattern clearer.
The ER is built to rule out emergencies. It is common to still have pain that needs a more targeted exam, especially if symptoms become more specific over the next day or two.
Say that right away. Radiating pain, tingling, numbness, or weakness can point to a nerve-related pattern that needs a careful exam.
Yes. The Fort Worth clinic evaluates headache, dizziness, fogginess, and other post-head-impact or concussion symptoms after a wreck.
Yes, when appropriate. In-office fluoroscopy-guided injections, joint injections, and PRP injections may all be part of the next step when your exam and imaging support that direction.
If the exam and imaging suggest that possibility, the clinic can provide surgical evaluation and recommendation when appropriate.
Call the clinic and tell the team what changed overnight or over the first few days. They can help you find the next available appointment.
If the morning after is when the injury really became clear, these physician-written articles go deeper into the neck, back, joint, nerve, and head-symptom patterns that often follow a wreck.