If you live in Mount Vernon, Indiana and are struggling with chronic knee pain, you don’t necessarily need to pursue injections or surgery as your first option. Many patients from Mount Vernon and surrounding areas in Posey County travel to our Evansville office for structured, non-surgical knee pain treatment designed to improve mobility and function. Located just a short drive via Highway 62, our clinic provides advanced conservative care for individuals dealing with arthritis-related stiffness, tendon irritation, and long-standing knee discomfort.
Knee pain is a condition involving irritation, overload, or dysfunction of the structures that make up the knee joint—including cartilage, tendons, ligaments, muscles, and the surrounding joint surfaces. The knee plays a critical role in weight-bearing, movement, shock absorption, and overall mobility.
When these tissues become inflamed, stiff, weakened, or poorly supported, the knee can struggle to tolerate everyday forces such as walking, climbing stairs, squatting, or standing from a seated position. This often leads to symptoms such as pain, stiffness, swelling, clicking, instability, or a feeling that the knee cannot be trusted.
Knee pain may develop gradually from wear and repetitive stress, or it can appear after an injury that never fully healed. While the discomfort is often felt directly at the knee, the problem may also be influenced by mechanics above or below the joint, including the hips, ankles, and surrounding soft tissues.
Knee pain commonly affects one or both knees and can vary from mild discomfort to activity-limiting pain. Identifying the underlying contributors—not just the location of pain—is key to improving function and restoring confidence in movement.

Have been told they are “bone-on-bone”
Feel stiffness after sitting
Experience knee pain with stairs or getting up from a chair
Have swelling or chronic irritation that hasn’t resolved
Want alternatives to injections
Are not ready for surgery
Many individuals seek care after months or even years of gradual decline in knee function.

Knee pain rarely comes from a single issue. In most cases, it develops when the tissues of the knee are exposed to more stress than they can tolerate or recover from over time. This can involve joint surfaces, cartilage, tendons, ligaments, muscles, or the way forces are distributed through the knee during movement.
Common contributors to knee pain include:
Joint wear and cartilage stress, often described as arthritis or “bone-on-bone” changes
Tendon overload or irritation, particularly around the patellar or quadriceps tendons
Meniscus irritation or degeneration, which can affect shock absorption and stability
Poor kneecap tracking, leading to uneven pressure within the joint
Residual effects of old injuries that never fully resolved
Reduced tissue flexibility or circulation, limiting the knee’s ability to recover
Movement and alignment factors from the hips, ankles, or feet that increase knee strain
Over time, these factors can reduce the knee’s ability to handle normal daily activities. As tolerance decreases, movements that were once easy—such as stairs, walking, or standing—may begin to trigger pain or stiffness.
Understanding what is contributing to knee pain is an important step toward improving function, restoring movement confidence, and preventing further decline.
Medications mask symptoms-
Some commonly used injections for joint or pain conditions—especially corticosteroid (steroid) injections—can cause a temporary rise in blood sugar levels. This effect is well-documented and can occur even in people who do not have diabetes, though it is more pronounced in those who do.
Steroids work by reducing inflammation, but they also influence how the body processes glucose. Specifically, they:
Increase glucose release from the liver
Reduce the body’s sensitivity to insulin
Interfere with how cells absorb and use sugar
As a result, more glucose remains circulating in the bloodstream.
Injections don’t repair nerves
Most patients never get tissue-level care

Laser therapy is used to support the body’s natural healing processes in tissues around the knee that have become irritated, inflamed, or slow to recover. It works at a cellular level to help improve tissue metabolism, circulation, and inflammatory balance without stressing the joint.
When knee tissues are overloaded or degenerated, their ability to repair and tolerate everyday forces—such as walking, stairs, or standing—can decline. Laser therapy is designed to help create a more favorable environment for recovery by supporting how cells respond to stress and repair demands.
Laser therapy is non-invasive and painless, making it appropriate for a wide range of knee conditions, including chronic pain, stiffness, and post-injury irritation. It is commonly applied to areas such as the joint line, surrounding soft tissues, tendons, and supportive musculature.


Shockwave therapy uses targeted acoustic energy to stimulate healing responses in tissues around the knee that have become irritated, overloaded, or slow to recover. It is commonly used for chronic knee pain involving tendons, soft tissues, and areas of long-standing stress where the body’s normal repair processes have stalled.
When knee tissues are repeatedly stressed—through activity, injury, or degenerative change—circulation can diminish and cellular signaling becomes less effective. Shockwave therapy delivers brief, focused pulses that help re-activate these processes by increasing local circulation and stimulating cellular activity involved in tissue repair.
This approach is especially useful for conditions involving tendon irritation, soft-tissue stiffness, and chronic pain patterns that have not responded well to rest or passive care alone.

Early changes often include reduced stiffness or pain sensitivity
Improvements in mobility, walking tolerance, and activity confidence tend to occur gradually
Best results occur when laser and shockwave are used together as part of a structured treatment program
These therapies support healing and function but do not promise instant results or a cure
By combining laser therapy and shockwave therapy, care is directed at helping the knee recover, adapt, and move more comfortably—especially in cases where rest alone or isolated treatments have not been enough.

Neuropathy can be a frustrating and life-altering condition for many Evansville residents. Symptoms such as burning, tingling, numbness, weakness, or sharp nerve pain in the feet, legs, hands, or arms can make everyday activities uncomfortable or even unbearable. We're able to help at Lobacz Chiropractic.
For many people, neuropathy symptoms persist despite medications or traditional care. While drugs may help manage symptoms temporarily, they do not always address the underlying nerve health or circulation issues contributing to the condition.
As a result, many individuals in Evansville and surrounding communities are seeking conservative, non-surgical approaches that focus on nerve support and long-term function.
Neuropathy refers to damage or dysfunction of the peripheral nerves—those outside the brain and spinal cord. These nerves are responsible for sensation, movement, and communication between the body and the nervous system.
When nerves are irritated or damaged, symptoms may include:
Tingling or “pins and needles” sensations
Burning or shooting pain
Numbness or reduced sensation
Muscle weakness
Sensitivity to touch
Neuropathy can affect one area or multiple parts of the body and may worsen over time if underlying contributors are not addressed.
Neuropathy can develop for many reasons, including:
Metabolic or blood sugar issues
Poor circulation
Chronic inflammation
Nerve compression or irritation
Previous injuries or trauma
Certain medications
In many cases, neuropathy is multifactorial, meaning more than one issue contributes to nerve dysfunction.
One of the challenges with neuropathy is that nerve tissue heals slowly. Reduced blood flow, ongoing inflammation, or mechanical irritation can interfere with the body’s ability to repair damaged nerves.
This is why many Evansville patients report:
Symptoms that gradually worsen
Limited improvement with medication alone
Increasing numbness or balance issues
Difficulty sleeping due to nerve pain
Treatments focused only on symptom suppression may not adequately support nerve recovery.
Traditional approaches to neuropathy often include:
Prescription medications
Pain management strategies
Lifestyle modifications
Monitoring progression
While medications may help reduce discomfort, they do not always improve nerve health or function. Some individuals also experience side effects that limit long-term use.
Because of this, many people explore conservative, non-drug options designed to support circulation, nerve signaling, and tissue health.
Conservative care for neuropathy focuses on improving the environment in which nerves function and heal.
Some non-surgical options that may be considered include:
Shockwave therapy uses acoustic waves applied to targeted areas to help stimulate circulation and cellular activity. Improved blood flow may help support nerve health and tissue repair in certain neuropathy cases.
High-intensity laser therapy is used to support cellular function, reduce inflammation, and help calm nerve irritation. It is non-invasive and often comfortable for patients.
Improving spinal and joint mechanics may help reduce nerve irritation or compression. When the nervous system and musculoskeletal system function optimally, nerve signaling may improve.
You may want to seek professional evaluation if:
Numbness or tingling is worsening
Pain interferes with sleep or daily activities
Balance or coordination is affected
Symptoms persist despite medication
Neuropathy is limiting quality of life
A comprehensive evaluation can help determine whether conservative, non-surgical care may be appropriate for your situation. We're able to help you get started on a comprehensive exam at Lobacz Chiropractic.
If you live in Evansville, Newburgh, Henderson, or the surrounding area and are struggling with neuropathy symptoms, non-surgical options may offer an alternative to medication-only management.
The goal of conservative care is to support nerve health, improve comfort, and help you maintain independence and daily function—without invasive procedures.
If neuropathy symptoms are affecting your daily life, an evaluation can help identify contributing factors and determine which non-surgical options may be appropriate for your condition. A Neuropathy exam will help you in taking your next steps.
Many cases of knee pain can improve with non-surgical, conservative care focused on supporting tissue health, circulation, and joint function. Treatments such as laser therapy, shockwave therapy, and targeted movement support are commonly used to help the body recover and adapt—especially when surgery or injections are not desired or recommended.
Some patients notice early changes such as reduced stiffness or discomfort within the first few visits. Improvements in mobility, walking tolerance, and activity confidence typically occur gradually over 6-8 weeks. Chronic knee pain usually responds best to consistent care delivered as part of a structured program rather than one-time treatments.
Yes. Many of our patients travel from Mount Vernon and surrounding Posey County communities.
Approximately 20–25 minutes depending on traffic.
Yes. Our care is centered around conservative therapies designed to support tissue recovery and function.
Knee Pain Treatment in Mt. Vernon, just down
the road to our Evansville knee pain office.
We regularly serve patients from:
Henderson
Newburgh
Owensboro
Mt. Vernon
Evansville
And surrounding communities.