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You've been told it's arthritis. Maybe your knee, maybe your hip, your lower back, your shoulder, or your hands - arthritis rarely picks just one spot. And the advice so far has probably sounded something like this: take the anti-inflammatories, lose a few pounds if you can, try to stay active, and come back when it gets bad enough to talk about surgery.
That's a long runway of "deal with it" for something actively changing how you live.
If you've been putting off the stairs, canceling the walks you used to love, sleeping badly because nothing feels comfortable, or switching to shoes you can actually wear - you already know arthritis isn't something you just get used to. It progresses. The stiffness in the morning stops going away by noon. The knee that used to hurt after a long day starts hurting when you stand up from the couch.
At NJ Sports Spine and Wellness in Jamesburg, NJ, we help patients with arthritis get back to living their actual lives - without rushing to surgery, without depending on daily medication, and without accepting that this is just how it has to be. Our combination of advanced therapeutic tools, targeted physical therapy, chiropractic care, and a real multidisciplinary team gives us a broader set of options than most practices have.
Let's talk about what's driving your pain and what can actually change it.

Arthritis isn't a single disease - it's an umbrella term for more than 100 conditions that cause joint pain, stiffness, and inflammation. The two broad categories most people have in mind are osteoarthritis (by far the most common) and inflammatory arthritis (rheumatoid arthritis, psoriatic arthritis, ankylosing spondylitis, and others).

Osteoarthritis is a mechanical condition. The cartilage that cushions your joints gradually wears down from years of use, injury, or abnormal loading. As the cushioning thins, bones start rubbing more directly against each other, which causes inflammation, stiffness, and pain. The body often responds by forming bone spurs - small bony projections that can further limit motion and compress nearby nerves. Osteoarthritis typically affects weight-bearing joints (knees, hips, lower back) and heavily used joints (hands, thumbs, neck).

Inflammatory arthritis is an immune system problem. The body's immune cells mistakenly attack joint tissue, causing widespread inflammation, pain, and eventually joint damage. These conditions need to be managed by a rheumatologist, because the core treatment involves medications that modulate the immune system. Our role in inflammatory arthritis is supportive - helping manage pain and maintain function alongside the rheumatology care.
The majority of the arthritis we treat in Jamesburg, NJ is osteoarthritis, and that's where conservative treatment has the most to offer. What follows focuses primarily on osteoarthritis, with notes on the inflammatory types where relevant.
The most common arthritis we see. Cartilage breakdown in the knee joint causes pain with stairs, difficulty standing up from chairs, stiffness after sitting, swelling, and a grinding or catching sensation. Often develops after years of sports, physical work, previous knee injury, or cumulative wear.
Pain typically felt in the groin, outer hip, or buttock. Hip arthritis often presents as stiffness first (the feeling that you can't put your socks on the same way you used to), then progresses to pain with walking, prolonged sitting, and sleep positioning.
Facet joint arthritis in the lower back and neck causes stiffness, reduced range of motion, and localized pain. When bone spurs encroach on nerve openings, spinal arthritis can also cause radiating pain into the arms or legs - a condition closely related to stenosis and radiculopathy.
Pain and stiffness that limit reaching overhead, reaching behind your back, or sleeping on the affected side. Common in patients with a history of shoulder injuries or repetitive overhead activity.
Pain and stiffness in the small joints of the fingers and at the base of the thumb. Makes gripping, opening jars, writing, and fine motor tasks progressively harder.
Often follows previous sprains or fractures. Pain with walking, morning stiffness, and difficulty with uneven surfaces. Frequently coexists with plantar fasciitis or bunions.
Arthritis that develops in a joint after a previous injury - a knee that was surgically repaired years ago, an ankle badly sprained in college, a shoulder never quite right since a fall. Often hits younger patients who don't fit the usual arthritis profile.
We provide supportive musculoskeletal care for patients who are already being managed by a rheumatologist - helping manage joint pain, maintain strength and mobility, and reduce the impact on daily function.
Arthritis progresses faster when untreated. Early intervention slows progression, preserves function, and produces better long-term outcomes than waiting.
The standard arthritis advice - anti-inflammatories, weight management, low-impact exercise - isn't wrong. It's just incomplete. Those things help, but they don't address the specific biomechanical problems accelerating joint wear in your particular body.
If your knee arthritis is partially being driven by weak glutes letting your knee collapse inward with every step, generic advice to "stay active" won't fix that - and may actually accelerate the damage. If your lower back arthritis has a significant piece of hip stiffness contributing to it, a general fitness routine won't address the hip piece. If your shoulder arthritis is being aggravated by compensatory posture from an old injury, nobody's going to fix that unless they look for it.
Effective arthritis treatment finds the specific factors accelerating your joint wear and changes them. It reduces the inflammation you're already dealing with, strengthens the structures that support the joint, and improves the movement patterns that overload it. That's what makes the difference between arthritis that slowly steals your function and arthritis that stabilizes so you can keep doing the things that matter.


Our therapeutic laser delivers deep, photobiomodulating light into arthritic joints to reduce inflammation, support cellular repair, and significantly reduce pain. It's one of our most effective tools for osteoarthritis of the knee, shoulder, hip, and hands, and it's well-tolerated by patients who can't use anti-inflammatories long-term.

Acoustic-wave treatment stimulates healing in soft tissues around arthritic joints, reduces inflammation, and can improve pain in cases where laser alone isn't enough. Particularly useful for knee, shoulder, and foot/ankle arthritis with associated tendon involvement.

For arthritis of the lower back - especially when facet arthritis is combined with disc degeneration or stenosis - spinal decompression gently reduces pressure on compressed nerves and discs. It's often the piece that finally provides meaningful relief for patients with long-standing spinal arthritis.

Targeted adjustments restore motion to joints that have become restricted and compensation patterns built up over years. For spinal arthritis, neck arthritis, and the low-grade stiffness that accompanies most arthritic conditions, chiropractic care is often part of what keeps patients moving.

The single most evidence-supported intervention for osteoarthritis is appropriate strengthening of the muscles that support the affected joint. For knee arthritis, that means building glute and quad strength. For hip arthritis, glute medius and core. For spinal arthritis, deep core stability and hip mobility. Our in-house physical therapy team builds arthritis programs around exactly this work - and the difference it makes is substantial.

For knee and hip arthritis patients, the AlterG allows walking and light running at a fraction of your body weight. That means rebuilding conditioning, maintaining cardiovascular fitness, and retraining gait without loading the painful joint. For many patients, this is what breaks the cycle of "I can't exercise because it hurts, so I'm getting weaker, so it hurts more."

Arthritic joints are almost always surrounded by tight, compensating muscles. Hands-on techniques - including instrument-assisted soft-tissue mobilization and cupping - release that tension and restore the mobility that protects the joint itself.

There's a substantial evidence base for acupuncture in osteoarthritis, particularly knee OA. We use it as a standalone option or alongside other treatments, especially for patients who've relied heavily on NSAIDs and are looking for other ways to manage pain.

For arthritis of the knee, hip, ankle, or lower back, how your foot strikes the ground matters. Custom orthotics correct biomechanical issues that are quietly overloading the arthritic joint with every step. Often a small change here produces a disproportionate improvement upstream.

When needed, our pain management team can provide targeted interventions to control acute flare-ups while the mechanical treatment takes effect. The goal is to help you get moving again - not to build dependence on medications.
For advanced arthritis - particularly bone-on-bone knee or hip osteoarthritis that hasn't responded to thorough conservative care - joint replacement surgery can be genuinely life-changing. When that's the path, we coordinate with orthopedic surgeons who use modern, minimally invasive techniques. Smaller incisions, less tissue disruption, and lower infection risk than traditional approaches.
But here's the honest framing: a lot of arthritis patients are told they need surgery significantly earlier than necessary. Before any surgical conversation, we want to know that laser therapy, structured physical therapy, AlterG-assisted rehabilitation, and (where relevant) spinal decompression or custom orthotics have all been genuinely tried. For most patients, that changes the picture.


Arthritis rarely involves just one joint or one contributing factor, which is why single-provider approaches often fall short. Our chiropractors, physical therapists, occupational therapists, acupuncturists, pain management specialists, and podiatrist all work in the same building, on the same chart, toward the same plan. If your knee arthritis has a hip component, a foot component, and a back component (and many do), we can address all of it at once.

We've invested in the tools that move the needle for arthritis: LiteCure Class IV laser, shockwave therapy, DRX9000 spinal decompression, AlterG anti-gravity treadmill, and on-site imaging. These aren't add-ons - they're central to how we treat this condition.

When a flare-up is keeping you from doing your job or sleeping through the night, you don't want to wait three weeks. We offer same-day appointments whenever the schedule allows.

Arthritis is chronic, but your treatment shouldn't be indefinite. We build plans with clear phases: reduce the current pain, strengthen what needs strengthening, address the contributing factors, and transition you to a maintenance approach you can manage on your own. The goal is a stable, functional baseline and periodic check-ins - not a permanent spot on the schedule.
Your first arthritis evaluation at our Jamesburg, NJ office is thorough. We'll ask when your symptoms started, which joints are involved, what makes them better or worse, what you've already tried, and how arthritis is affecting the specific things you want to do. Then we'll do a detailed exam - assessing range of motion, strength, gait, and biomechanics of the affected joint and the related structures above and below it. If imaging would clarify the picture, we can often do it on-site.
From there, we walk you through what we think is going on and what the treatment plan looks like. You'll leave knowing the next steps, what's realistic to expect, and roughly how long before you notice real improvement.

If arthritis is limiting what you can do - and "just live with it" hasn't worked for you - let's take a look. For most patients, we can significantly reduce pain, restore function, and delay or avoid surgery.
Call our Jamesburg, NJ office at (908) 866-7246 to schedule. Same-day appointments available.
It depends what you mean by "treated." Arthritis itself - the underlying joint changes - typically doesn't reverse. But the pain, stiffness, and functional limitation absolutely can be reduced, often significantly. The goal isn't to turn back the clock on the joint; it's to address inflammation, restore mobility, rebuild supporting strength, and change the factors accelerating the wear. Done well, this approach stabilizes many patients for years and keeps them doing the things they want to do.
Not necessarily, and usually much later than you've been told if you do. Joint replacement is reserved for advanced cases where bone-on-bone changes have significantly compromised function, and many patients never reach that point with good conservative care. For those who do eventually need it, non-surgical treatment in the meantime keeps you stronger and more mobile going into surgery - which meaningfully improves surgical outcomes and recovery.
Class IV therapeutic laser delivers specific wavelengths of light into the tissues around an arthritic joint. At the cellular level, the light reduces inflammatory signaling, supports mitochondrial function, and accelerates tissue repair. For patients, that typically translates into meaningful pain reduction and improved function. It's drug-free, non-invasive, and well-suited to patients who can't use anti-inflammatories long-term.
Rheumatoid arthritis and other inflammatory arthritis conditions need to be managed by a rheumatologist, because the core treatment involves immune-modulating medications. What we provide for patients with RA is supportive musculoskeletal care - laser therapy, physical therapy, manual work, and acupuncture to help manage pain and maintain function alongside their rheumatology treatment.
The right exercise is essential. The wrong exercise can make things worse. "Stay active" is incomplete advice if nobody's telling you which movements strengthen the supporting structures of your affected joint, which ones load it in a way that accelerates wear, and which ones to avoid for now. That's what our PT and AlterG programs address - and why patients told to "just exercise" without specifics often end up more frustrated than when they started.
For years, Jamesburg’s main street sat quietly — a few shops, a pizza place, not much else.But recently, things have started to change in the small Central Jersey suburb. A coffee shop. A craft burger joint. A Peruvian spot. And now, an innovative new Indian restaurant bringing big flavors to town.Thumkaa, owned by husband-and-wife team Ruby Bhalla and Sunil Ratwani, opened in March in a space with deep local roots. It occupies part of the former home of Mendoker’s, a beloved neighborhood bakery that served Ja...
For years, Jamesburg’s main street sat quietly — a few shops, a pizza place, not much else.
But recently, things have started to change in the small Central Jersey suburb. A coffee shop. A craft burger joint. A Peruvian spot. And now, an innovative new Indian restaurant bringing big flavors to town.
Thumkaa, owned by husband-and-wife team Ruby Bhalla and Sunil Ratwani, opened in March in a space with deep local roots. It occupies part of the former home of Mendoker’s, a beloved neighborhood bakery that served Jamesburg for 84 years before closing in 2016.
The building has since been split in two; the other half now houses Burrito Bowl Mexican Grill — also owned by Bhalla and Ratwani. Burrito Bowl also has locations in Howell, Freehold and Monroe Township.
Bhalla told NJ Advance Media the space that now houses Thumkaa was originally meant for something else entirely.
“We originally bought this building as a production house for our other restaurants, but it was a 3,500-square-foot place that was empty,” Bhalla said. “I was like, what should we do?”
Being from India herself, Bhalla said the decision to open an Indian restaurant was about more than just business — it was personal. She wanted to create something tied to her cultural roots, and saw a need for a place like Thumkaa in the area.
But with new businesses constantly opening up in town, does Thumkaa fit in? And in a space that once housed a beloved bakery, can Thumkaa live up to that same potential? Let’s dig in.
Bhalla also serves as Thumkaa’s executive chef, bringing her vision and heritage directly to the plate. While the menu is broadly Indian, much of it draws inspiration from the northern region of Punjab, known for its intense flavors and generous use of spices, butter and cream.
Diners will find classics like butter chicken, biryani, and crisp, golden samosas — but Thumkaa also branches out. A dedicated Indo-Chinese section highlights the spicy fusion cuisine beloved across India, while playful twists like chicken tikka pizza show Bhalla isn’t afraid to mix tradition with innovation.
The restaurant is currently working on getting its liquor license, but guests are more than welcome to BYO. They also offer a selection of hand-crafted mocktails.
Chaat is a category of Indian street snacks typically made with crispy dough bits, chickpeas, yogurt, spices and chutneys all layered together. Their papri chaat ($16), is piled high with crunchy papris (bite-sized wafers), yogurt, tamarind chutney, chickpeas and sev (deep-fried noodle pieces), finished with a sprinkle of pomegranate seeds. It’s a beautifully colorful and chaotic dish — a compliment. Each bite bursts with a medley of flavors and textures: sweet, slightly spicy, creamy, and crunchy all at once.
Paneer tikka is a popular Indian appetizer featuring marinated paneer (firm Indian cheese) that is cooked in a tandoor, or clay oven, until smoky and charred. While Thumkaa offers this timeless appetizer, they also find a creative spin with the paneer tikka tacos ($16 for 3). Each soft tortilla stuffs chunks of paneer, pickled onions, curry aioli and minty chutney. A thoughtful, flavorful mashup that was tangy, smooth and well spiced.
All of the entrées at Thumkaa come with a side of fragrant basmati rice, but diners can also round out their meal with a selection of additional rice dishes and bread such as naan or roti. Guests can also choose a heat level for their meal, from mild to spicy. Most of my dishes were served mild, but still packed some of punch; spice-averse eaters use caution.
The amritsari fried fish ($26) is a well-known Punjabi dish of spiced, fried fish. At Thumkaa, it’s made with swai — a mildly flavored freshwater fish from Southeast Asia (sourced from in Virginia) — coated in a gram flour batter and fried until golden brown. The result is wonderfully flaky, tender, and juicy, with a satisfying crunch. The side of jalapeño aioli adds just the right kick.
The lamb buna ($30) stews pieces of slow-cooked lamb in a blend of spices, tomatoes and herbs. The meat is melt-in-your-mouth soft, soaking up the rich, concentrated flavor of the thick, clinging sauce – one of the heartiest dishes on the menu. I used garlic naan and some rice to soak up every drop of that meaty, savory sauce.
For a taste from the Indo-Chinese section, I tried the gobi manchurian dry ($18) – crispy, battered cauliflower florets coated in a zesty sauce with hints of sweetness and gentle heat. The flavor instantly reminded me of General Tso’s chicken, but with a lighter, veggie-friendly twist.
Thumkaa’s dessert menu features a mix of Western favorites like crème brûlée and chocolate lava cake with Indian specialties like gulab jamun (golden brown balls soaked in rose sugar syrup) and kulfi (frozen milk dessert). I ordered the ras malai (cheese dumplings soaked in cardamom flavored milk, $14) and the rose kulfi (frozen milk treat infused with rose).
Neither dessert quite lived up to the high bar set by the rest of the meal. After such a vibrant and flavorful dinner, the dessert felt like an unexpectedly flat ending — more of a pause than a finale.
As a former Jamesburg-adjacent local myself (I grew up in Monroe), I have vivid memories of visiting Mendoker’s bakery when it was still open — small, cozy and always packed.
Thumkaa feels a galaxy away in style: The space has been transformed into a large, modern, nightclub-like atmosphere, with dark-toned walls and tables, tinted windows, and vibrant pops of color in the seating and decor.
It’s bold and dramatic — a striking contrast to what stood there before, and a clear sign that something new has arrived in Jamesburg.
There’s also live music that plays in the restaurant on Wednesdays and Sundays in the summer, and then Wednesdays, Fridays, Saturdays and Sundays during the rest of the year.
A restaurant like Thumkaa has been a long time coming for Jamesburg.
And the location couldn’t be more perfect. Yes, Edison and Woodbridge get top billing with Oak Tree Road and its long list of South Asian favorites, but there are large Indian communities in surrounding towns like South Brunswick, East Brunswick, and Sayreville, too. Thumkaa feels right at home in the middle of it all.
It will certainly compete with Bagara n’ Biryani, a more modest Indian restaurant two minutes down the road. But for a more elevated experience, Thumkaa is the place to be. The restaurant stands out for its expressive flavors, modern flair, and thoughtful fusion dishes that venture beyond the basics.
“There was a need for this kind of restaurant. Our whole setup is unlike any other place here. It’s very city-like and that’s the vibe I wanted to bring here,” Bhalla said.
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Lauren Musni may be reached at . Follow her on Twitter @Laurengmusni and on Instagram. Find on Facebook.
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