Physical Therapy Services
It is one of the medical fields that is based on the rehabilitation of patients, to restore and develop their motor and functional abilities, through the development of a comprehensive treatment program.
Physiotherapy at Capital home is concerned with identifying and improving the quality of life and mobility within the areas of prevention, treatment, and rehabilitation. Physiotherapy involves interaction between physiotherapists and patients, through conducting a preliminary examination, to identify the size of the injury and the history of the disease, to develop a systematic treatment plan.
The benefits of physiotherapy:
Orthopedic medicine and surgery
Physiotherapy in orthopedics is based on the treatment of injuries of the musculoskeletal system, rehabilitation in case of surgical operations.
Pediatrics
Growth retardation and paralysis are two of the most prominent diseases that some children suffer from, so the role of physiotherapy in this problem is to help treat growth retardation and cerebral palsy through rehabilitation using various therapeutic methods according to international standards.
Geriatrics
Aging is the most common problem experienced by the elderly, for which physiotherapy comes into play, with the aim of increasing fitness abilities, restoring mobility and preventing pain.
Neurology
The role of physiotherapy, in relation to neuropathology, includes the treatment of neurological disorders, such as cerebral palsy and motor neuropathy.
What you get
The benefits of physiotherapy:
- Reducing the severity of pain.
- Speed of the recovery process after surgical operations.
- Enhance muscle capacity.
- Relieve the severity of puffiness.
- Stimulate the ability of muscles and joints to muscles, to move and maintain.
- Improve the ability of the central nervous system.
- Improve the ability to walk.
- Maintain muscular fitness.
What to expect
The most prominent cases that need physiotherapy sessions at home:
- Strokes that cause paralysis in one or all organs in the body such as hemiplegia, total paralysis, or paralysis in only one organ depending on the location of the clot and the extent of its impact on brain function, where the patient will require physiotherapy sessions at home until he regains his normal movement.
- Rehabilitation after surgical procedures such as joint changes and fractures that require prolonged immobility.
- Parkinson's patients to improve muscle mobility and cope with excess nerve signals.
- Muscle atrophy, muscle tension, muscle asthenia.
- Spinal pain, fracture injuries, bone operations, cruciate ligament operations.
- Urinary incontinence caused by muscle weakness.