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Peripheral Neuropathy Treatment in Manalapan Township, NJ | NJ Sports Spine and Wellness
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Peripheral Neuropathy Treatment in Manalapan Township, NJ - Finally Feel Your Feet Again

That burning sensation that won't let you sleep. The numb toes you can't feel on the carpet in the morning. The tingling that runs from your calves down into your heels with no warning. If any of that sounds like your evenings, you already know what you're dealing with - even if no one's put a proper name on it yet.

You're not imagining it, and you're not stuck with it.

Peripheral neuropathy affects more than 20 million Americans, and far too many of them have been told to just "live with it" or manage it with another prescription. At NJ Sports Spine and Wellness in Manalapan Township, NJ, we've helped patients who'd all but given up on feeling normal again - and we've done it without surgery, without long-term pain medication, and without the endless runaround.

If you're tired of the nerve pain, the numbness, and the nighttime burning in your feet, let's talk about what might actually be driving it - and what we can do about it.

What Is Peripheral Neuropathy?

Peripheral neuropathy is what happens when the nerves outside your brain and spinal cord - your peripheral nerves - stop communicating properly with the rest of your body. Picture those nerves as a network of wires running out from your central nervous system to your hands, feet, arms, and legs. When one of those wires is compressed, inflamed, starved of nutrients, or damaged by disease, the signals it sends get scrambled on the way to the brain.

That's the reason neuropathy symptoms can feel so contradictory. Your foot might feel like it's on fire while you simultaneously can't feel the floor underneath it. Your fingers might tingle for hours and then go suddenly numb. The nerves are sending mixed messages, and your brain is doing its best to translate the static.

Here's the most important thing to understand: neuropathy is almost never a standalone disease. It's a symptom of something else - a compressed spinal nerve, uncontrolled blood sugar, a vitamin deficiency, an autoimmune reaction, or repetitive strain. Real treatment starts with figuring out what's actually causing the damage. Anything short of that is just masking the problem.

Peripheral Neuropathy Treatment Manalapan Township, NJ

Neuropathy Symptoms We See Every Day in Manalapan Township, NJ

Every patient describes their nerve pain a little differently. But almost everyone who walks into our Manalapan Township, NJ office describes some combination of the following:

  • Burning feet at night - the kind that has you kicking the covers off and regretting it a minute later
  • Tingling in the hands and feet - persistent pins and needles that never fully goes away
  • Numb toes or loss of sensation - you stub your toe on furniture you didn't feel
  • Sharp, electric-shock- like nerve pain that comes and goes with no obvious trigger
  • Muscle weakness in the legs or hands that's starting to affect your balance or grip
  • Sensitivity to light touch - a bedsheet or sock suddenly feels painful
  • Cramping or twitching in the calves or feet, especially late at night
  • The "invisible sock" feeling - pressure or tightness on your feet that isn't actually there
  • Loss of sensation that's slowly creeping upward from your toes toward your ankles

If you've been dealing with any of these for more than a few weeks, it's worth getting looked at. Nerve damage tends to progress, and the earlier we intervene, the more we can typically do.

What Causes Peripheral Neuropathy?

There isn't one cause, which is a big part of what makes neuropathy so maddening to deal with. Some of the most common contributors we see at our Manalapan Township, NJ clinic:

  • Diabetes - the leading cause, and the one responsible for diabetic neuropathy
  • Spinal nerve compression from herniated discs, stenosis, or misalignment
  • Vitamin deficiencies, particularly B12, B1, and B6
  • Autoimmune conditions like rheumatoid arthritis, lupus, or Sjogren's syndrome
  • Chemotherapy and certain medications that have nerve toxicity as a side effect
  • Repetitive use injuries that compress nerves over time (think carpal tunnel, tarsal tunnel)
  • Chronic alcohol use or exposure to environmental toxins
  • Thyroid and kidney dysfunction
  • Idiopathic neuropathy - when testing doesn't turn up a clear cause

One cause a lot of practices overlook? Your spine. A substantial number of peripheral neuropathy cases trace back to nerve root compression in the lower back or neck. When those nerve roots get irritated, the symptoms can show up far from the actual source - in your feet, calves, fingers, or hands. Because we're a sports, spine, and wellness practice, the spinal connection is always part of how we evaluate your case. It's often the piece other providers have missed.

Our Approach to Peripheral Neuropathy Treatment

Most clinics treat neuropathy with medication and a wait-and-see attitude. If that doesn't work, you get a referral to a surgeon. That's a short menu for a complicated problem.

At NJ Sports Spine and Wellness, we take a different route. We're a conservative care practice by design, which means we start with non-surgical options and build a treatment plan around the specific picture your body is showing us. Our team evaluates your nerve function, your spinal health, your muscle strength, your gait and balance, your medical history, and yes - what's already been tried. Then we put together a plan that goes after the cause, not just the surface symptoms.

Peripheral Neuropathy Pain Relief Manalapan Township, NJ

Non-Surgical Treatment Options

DRX9000 Spinal Decompression.

When nerve compression in the spine is part of the picture - and it often is - our DRX9000 decompression system gently relieves pressure on the affected nerve roots without any incisions or injections. For patients whose neuropathy stems from a herniated disc or stenosis, this can be a turning point.

Chiropractic Care.

Targeted adjustments restore proper motion to the spine and joints, reducing mechanical stress on irritated nerves. For the right patient, this is one of the most direct ways to calm nerve symptoms in the feet and hands.

Physical Therapy and Neuromuscular Reeducation.

We use guided exercise progressions to rebuild strength, retrain balance, and help your nervous system relearn how to talk to your muscles. This matters enormously if neuropathy has started to affect how you walk, stand, or grip.

LiteCure Laser Therapy.

Our class IV LiteCure laser delivers deep therapeutic light into damaged tissue to reduce inflammation around irritated nerves and support the body's natural repair process. It's non-invasive, drug-free, and well-tolerated.

Electrical Stimulation Therapy.

Low-level electrical currents help calm overactive pain signals and encourage nerve healing. It's one of the more effective tools for patients who haven't responded well to medication alone.

Acupuncture.

Acupuncture has a surprisingly strong evidence base for nerve pain and neuropathy symptoms. Our licensed practitioners use it as a standalone option or as part of a broader plan.

Functional Medicine and Nutritional Support.

Nerve health depends heavily on what you're putting into your body. If deficiencies, blood sugar swings, or chronic inflammation are slowing your recovery, we identify it and address it - with practical, livable changes.

Manual Therapy and Soft Tissue Work.

Tight muscles around irritated nerves make everything worse. Hands-on therapy relieves that tension, improves circulation to the nerves, and creates a better environment for healing.

When More Is Needed

If conservative care isn't moving the needle far enough - and we'll tell you honestly if it isn't - we coordinate with surgical partners who specialize in minimally invasive techniques. That means smaller incisions, less disruption to surrounding tissue, and a lower risk of infection compared with traditional open surgery.

But here's what matters: the majority of our neuropathy patients never reach that step. Our goal is always to exhaust effective non-surgical options first. The best surgery is often the one you end up not needing.

Nerve Pain Treatment Manalapan Township, NJ

Why Patients Choose NJ Sports Spine and Wellness

Same-Day
Same-Day Appointments

Nerve pain doesn't politely wait six weeks for an opening, and we don't think your care should either. We offer same-day appointments for new and existing patients whenever our schedule allows, because nobody dealing with burning feet at midnight wants to hear "we can squeeze you in next month."

Philosophy
A Conservative-Care Philosophy

We don't reach for injections, prescriptions, or surgical referrals as the first move. We believe in working with your body's capacity to heal - and we've seen how far that approach can go when it's applied consistently by clinicians who actually know what they're doing.

Disciplinary
A Multi-Disciplinary Team Under One Roof

You won't be bounced between three different offices with three conflicting opinions. Our chiropractors, physical therapists, occupational therapists, pain management specialists, acupuncturists, and podiatrist/foot and ankle surgeon all work together - same building, same chart, same plan for you.

Invasive
Minimally Invasive Referrals When Surgery Is Warranted

In the smaller subset of cases where surgery is truly the right call, we refer to specialists who use minimally invasive techniques. Smaller incisions. Less tissue disruption.

Technology
Advanced In-House Technology

We invest in the equipment that actually moves the needle: the DRX9000 spinal decompression table, LiteCure class IV therapeutic laser, AlterG anti-gravity treadmill for gait retraining, shockwave therapy, NormaTec compression, and on-site X-ray and ultrasound for same-visit diagnostics.

Plan
A Treatment Plan With an Actual Finish Line

Our plans have a destination. We track your progress, adjust what isn't working, and don't keep you coming back indefinitely. The point is getting you better - and getting you back to the things you've been avoiding.

What to Expect at Your First Visit

Your first appointment at our Manalapan Township, NJ office is really a conversation, not an assembly line. We'll sit down and talk about when your symptoms started, what makes them better or worse, and what you've already tried. From there, we'll do a thorough physical and neurological exam - testing reflexes, sensation, strength, range of motion, and balance. We may take on-site imaging if it adds clarity to what we're seeing.

Then we'll walk you through, in plain English, what we think is going on and what the options look like. You'll leave the visit knowing exactly what the next step is, what treatment would involve, and what realistic improvement could look like for someone with your history.

No pressure. No upselling. Just a straightforward plan.

Chronic Nerve Pain Relief Manalapan Township, NJ

Ready to Stop Just Coping? Call Today.

If you've been dealing with burning, numbness, tingling, or nerve pain, and you're done waiting for it to get better on its own - we'd like to help. Peripheral neuropathy rarely improves without intervention, but with the right approach, most patients see real, measurable change in how they feel day to day.

Call our Manalapan Township, NJ office at (908) 866-7246 to schedule. Same-day appointments available.

Frequently Asked Questions About Peripheral Neuropathy Treatment

It depends on what's causing it and how long it's been going on. Nerve irritation from spinal compression, nutritional deficiency, or early-stage diabetes often responds well to treatment, and many patients see meaningful symptom improvement. More advanced or long-standing nerve damage may not fully reverse, but we can usually reduce pain significantly, improve function and balance, and slow or stop further progression. The earlier you start, the more we can typically do.

There's no single "best" treatment - it depends on what's causing the nerve damage. For most of our Manalapan Township, NJ patients, the strongest results come from a combination approach: spinal decompression (when compression is part of the picture), targeted physical therapy, LiteCure laser therapy, electrical stimulation, and nutritional support tailored to nerve health. We don't use a one-size-fits-all protocol, because no two neuropathy cases are really the same.

If you've had numbness, tingling, burning, or nerve pain for more than a few weeks - or if your symptoms are spreading or getting worse - it's worth getting evaluated. You don't need a formal neuropathy diagnosis to come in. If you've noticed changes in how your feet feel, a loss of grip strength, or balance issues you didn't have a year ago, that's reason enough for an exam.

No referral needed. You can schedule directly with our office. If you've already seen another provider, bringing along any recent imaging, bloodwork, or test results makes your first visit more efficient - but it's not required.

Every patient's timeline is different, and your provider will give you a more specific estimate once they understand your case. Some patients notice a meaningful shift in the first few weeks; others are working with a longer treatment arc because of how long the issue has been developing. We check in on progress regularly and adjust the plan based on how you're responding - so you're never in the dark about whether something's working.

Latest News in Manalapan Township, NJ

Blizzard In Manalapan: 11 Inches Of Snow & Counting

MANALAPAN, NJ — Dozens of homes and businesses are without power on Monday as a blizzard continues to make its way throughout New Jersey.In Manalapan, 11 inches of snow have fallen as of 10:30 p.m. on Sunday, according to the National Weather Service, with more on the way as snow continues to fall on Monday.According to the weather service, snowfall is expected to continue well into Monday afternoon, with a blizzard warning in effect until 6 p.m.A travel ban also remains in place until noon, Governor Mikie Sherrill...

MANALAPAN, NJ — Dozens of homes and businesses are without power on Monday as a blizzard continues to make its way throughout New Jersey.

In Manalapan, 11 inches of snow have fallen as of 10:30 p.m. on Sunday, according to the National Weather Service, with more on the way as snow continues to fall on Monday.

According to the weather service, snowfall is expected to continue well into Monday afternoon, with a blizzard warning in effect until 6 p.m.

A travel ban also remains in place until noon, Governor Mikie Sherrill announced, with NJ Transit buses and trains suspended as well. Schools across the state were also closed on Monday, alongside municipal offices.

In Manalapan, 168 homes are without power as of Monday morning, according to JCP&L. Currently, there is no estimated time of restoration listed.

Due to the storm, garbage and bulk collection for Monday has been rescheduled to Thursday in Manalapan, according to a post from the township.

Town Hall, the Senior Center, the Recreation Center and the Recycling Center are closed, with Municipal Court scheduled for Monday also cancelled and set to be rescheduled.

All vehicles should be removed from the roads so Public Works can safely clear the streets, township officials said.

For those who don’t have space in their driveways to accommodate their vehicles, the Englishtown Auction has offered to allow cars to park in their lot until the snow has stopped.

If residents use this option, they must move their vehicle within 24 hours of the end of the storm to allow for their lots to be cleared and plowed, officials said.

Any vehicles found left in the roadway during the snow removal process will be ticketed and towed at the owner’s expense. If you see cars parked on your street during the storm, you can call 732-446-4300 so it can be addressed.

“Emergency Operations have begun as our personnel manage the snow and blizzard conditions in Manalapan Township,” township officials said Sunday evening. “Please stay off the roads and allow township emergency employees to safely clear the roads and respond to any emergencies. This will be a long-duration, large accumulating, dangerous storm.”

To report a power outage, you can:

“Our teams are working around the clock to clear the roads, get us back up and running, and ensure the safety of New Jerseyans,” Governor Miki Sherrill said in an online post. “Please stay in and stay safe.”

As of Monday morning, snowfall totals in Monmouth County include:

Want to share your blizzard photos with Patch? Find out how to share them here.

Patch Blizzard Coverage

40 years later, beloved N.J. Chinese restaurant is still well worth a visit | Review

Celebrating more than 40 years in business, Peking Pavilion still stands as a New Jersey institution for upscale Chinese dining.Originally opened in 1975 in Richmond, Virginia before relocating to Manalapan in 1983, owners Mike and Corinna Kuo passed “The Pavilion” on to their nephew, Dufan Li in 2020. While management may have changed, Mike and Corinna still maintain a regular presence at the restaurant, along with manager Steven Peng, who has been there since the beginning, reminding guests that the legacy they built is ...

Celebrating more than 40 years in business, Peking Pavilion still stands as a New Jersey institution for upscale Chinese dining.

Originally opened in 1975 in Richmond, Virginia before relocating to Manalapan in 1983, owners Mike and Corinna Kuo passed “The Pavilion” on to their nephew, Dufan Li in 2020. While management may have changed, Mike and Corinna still maintain a regular presence at the restaurant, along with manager Steven Peng, who has been there since the beginning, reminding guests that the legacy they built is still very much alive.

“This restaurant feels like home,” hostess Mindy Kramer said. “Corinna carried me around this restaurant when I was a baby. When I was going through a divorce, I needed a shoulder, and she suggested I come here a few days a week to take my mind off of things. I worked a few shifts and never looked back. This restaurant has become my second home. When you come here, you really are family.”

I visited during lunch on President’s Day, and the place was bumping. Nearly every table was occupied across the two dining rooms, the bar crowd spilling into one of them.

“The bar here is a huge draw, Kramer said. “You’ll see the same faces three to four times per week. They come for our bartenders, Jason and Jackson. They make some of the best mai tais and lychee martinis around.”

Aptly timed with the Lunar New Year, a visit to this Monmouth County staple was in order.

The good

The best thing we ate was one of the first dishes to hit the table. Five, plump pork soup dumplings ($15) nested within a steamer basket were purses of juicy, meaty perfection. There is an art to eating soup dumplings to avoid the mistake of a mouthful of boiling hot broth. These were the perfect temperature — and with the accompanying dumpling sauce, succulent and satisfying.

The second-best dish was the Peking duck ($56), a dramatic presentation of a whole slow roasted, Long Island duck, quartered and sliced, and served with oversized crepes, scallions, cucumber and homemade plum sauce. The meat was moist and skin crispy, but the highlight was the sauce. Without it, the dish would have lacked seasoning and overall flavor. With it, every bite sang harmoniously. I would have appreciated more of the accoutrement but all in all, it was a very solid version of the dish.

We ended the meal with the only non-American dessert offered, a set of three mochi ($11). We chose green tea and mango, both of which did their job for a sweet, chewy and creamy bite to end the meal.

The bad

I was told by many that I had to order the filet mignon egg roll ($7), so the expectation going in was lofty. While I appreciated the creative, elevated spin on a Chinese-American staple, this one fell short. The egg roll itself sat in a pool of grease, and I found myself searching for the beefy flavor that was diluted by the overwhelming amount of shredded cabbage filling. Even with the duck sauce and spicy mustard that accompanied it, the egg roll paled in comparison to some of the more traditional ones I’ve had — even just from no-frills takeout spots.

As a long-time P.F. Chang’s lettuce wrap enthusiast, I had high hopes for the Chicken Soong in lettuce wraps ($18). Pre-portioned into four cups of crisp iceberg lettuce, the chicken, mushroom and bell pepper mixture had a flavor I couldn’t quite put my finger on. It lacked brightness and salt, which made this dish forgettable and somewhat disappointing.

Another dish I was instructed to order was the Grand Marnier prawns ($33), an impressive tower of jumbo prawns, set atop a bed of sliced oranges. This dish has so much potential, but didn’t meet it. The prawns were probably the largest and highest-quality shrimp I’ve ever had at a Chinese restaurant, and they were battered and fried to crispy perfection. The big issue here was the sauce. Trix cereal-sweet with no obvious Grand Marnier flavor, the balance of flavor here was sadly off. The overall sweetness overpowered the exquisite shrimp and one ended up being more than enough.

We rounded out the meal with one of the least traditional more intriguing entrees, Corrina’s Critically Acclaimed 24 ounce New York strip steak ($60). Aged in-house, this piece of meat was massive. Juicy, tender and cooked to a perfect medium, the steak itself was good and an even better value. When we ordered, the server mentioned a side of fried rice with the steak, but we did not receive one. The stir-fried vegetable and a spring roll were fine, and the dish itself wasn’t a let down, but did not exceed expectations.

The vibe

Pulling up to Peking Pavilion, one might think they’re arriving at a modern art museum — an industrial cement structure with a dramatic white geometric entry way. The bold, red door and statue give way to a gilded hostess stand and two dining rooms that carry the theme throughout. Sleek architectural lines complimented by traditional Chinese tapestries, dramatic, glass lighting fixtures and original furniture from the ’80s outfit the space. A perimeter of windows let light flood in, making the restaurant feel even more open, bright and inviting. There is an instant lived-in, familiar feeling juxtaposed with Peking Pavilion’s elegance. The bar threw off an unexpected energy, with the Olympics and other sports projecting off the screens while regulars settled into their stools. With the charm and diverse dining options offered, Peking Pavilion is a great option for a family or friends outing, fancy enough for a date, yet familiar enough for a casual bite at the bar.

The bottom line

It’s very obvious why Peking Pavilion has had a stronghold on locals and visitors alike. From management’s friendly welcome to the high quality and diverse dishes offered, there’s something for everyone here. Although there were some misses, Peking Pavilion is worth a visit, especially for the pork soup dumplings and Peking duck.

Peking Pavilion is open for lunch Sunday through Friday and for dinner 7 days a week.

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Tingling And Numbness Treatment Manalapan Township, NJ