Myofascial Release Therapy in Bergen County, NJ

Hands-on manual therapy that targets the fascia — the connective tissue that wraps every muscle, joint, and organ in your body. When fascia tightens, gets stuck, or scars over, it pulls on everything around it. Myofascial release uses sustained, precise pressure to ease those restrictions, relieve chronic pain, and restore the way you move.

What is myofascial release?

Fascia is a continuous, three-dimensional web of connective tissue that runs throughout your entire body. Specifically, it wraps and supports your muscles, surrounds your organs, and links every part of your musculoskeletal system together. When it’s healthy, fascia glides freely. When it’s not — from injury, surgery, repetitive strain, chronic inflammation, or even prolonged stress — it can thicken, develop adhesions, or lose its ability to move.

 

Myofascial release is the clinical technique that addresses these restrictions directly. A trained provider locates restricted areas through hands-on assessment, then applies sustained pressure — typically 90 to 120 seconds per spot — until the tissue softens and releases. The result is reduced pain, restored range of motion, and a body that moves the way it’s supposed to.

This is not a relaxation massage. It’s a specific clinical intervention performed by licensed clinicians — chiropractors and physical therapists — in a treatment setting, not a spa.

Conditions we treat with myofascial release

Chronic back pain

Lower back tightness, lumbar restrictions, and stubborn pain that hasn't responded to adjustments alone

Neck and shoulder tension

Cervical restrictions, levator scapulae tightness, and trapezius adhesions

Plantar fasciitis

Myofascial work on the calf and arch to release the tissue driving heel pain

IT band syndrome

Releasing the lateral chain rather than just stretching the IT band itself

Hip pain & piriformis syndrome

Deep gluteal and hip-rotator restrictions

Frozen shoulder

(Adhesive capsulitis) — restoring fascial glide around the joint capsule

Cervicogenic & tension headaches

Addressing upper-neck and suboccipital fascia that drives headache patterns

TMJ & jaw tension

Masseter, temporalis, and pterygoid release work

Sciatica

Particularly when nerve symptoms are driven by deep gluteal or piriformis tightness

Post-surgical scar tissue

Restoring mobility around healed surgical sites

Sports injuries

Accelerating recovery and supporting return to sport

Fibromyalgia

Adjunct care that can reduce the diffuse tightness many patients live with daily

If your pain has a hands-on, mechanical component — and most chronic pain does — myofascial release is one of the highest-leverage tools in our toolkit.

What Happens After the Release

Every session starts with assessment. Your provider will ask where you feel the problem, watch how you move, and use hands-on palpation to find the actual restrictions — which are often not where the pain is. Fascial pain refers; the spot that hurts is rarely the spot that’s stuck.

 

Once restrictions are identified, your provider applies sustained pressure to each area. The pressure is firm but precise — strong enough to engage the tissue, not so strong that you tense up against it. After 90 to 120 seconds, healthy fascia begins to soften and release. You’ll often feel it happen — a sense of warmth, easing, or movement returning to a spot that felt locked.

 

Most sessions combine myofascial release with movement work. Once tissue is released, you need to use the new range — otherwise the body returns to its old patterns. Your provider may guide you through specific stretches, mobility drills, or adjacent treatments (like Active Release Therapy or instrument-assisted soft tissue work) in the same visit. The goal is functional change, not just temporary relief.

 

Sessions typically run 30 to 60 minutes depending on how many areas need work. Most patients see meaningful change within 3 to 6 visits, though chronic restrictions may take longer.

Myofascial release therapy.

Myofascial release vs other techniques we offer

Several techniques in our practice address fascia and soft tissue. They’re related but not identical — your provider may use multiple in a single session depending on what your tissue actually needs.

TechniqueWhat makes it different
Myofascial ReleaseBroad fascial work using sustained, hands-on pressure. Targets restricted areas anywhere fascia is stuck.
Fascial Manipulation (Stecco Method)A specific, structured Stecco-trained protocol — uses targeted “centers of coordination” rather than broad palpation.
Active Release Therapy (ART)Patented technique combining pressure with active patient movement — releases adhesions while the muscle moves through its full range.
Graston TechniqueInstrument-assisted soft-tissue work — uses stainless-steel tools to detect and treat fibrotic tissue. Particularly effective for chronic tendinopathies and scar tissue.
Cupping TherapyNegative-pressure decompression — pulls fascia and skin away from underlying structures rather than pressing into them. Different vector, often complementary.

After Your Session

New patients start with a full intake — a conversation about your pain, what you’ve tried, what works, and what doesn’t. Then your provider will examine how you move and palpate the areas in question.

 

The actual treatment begins immediately. Most patients are surprised by how specific the pressure is — myofascial release isn’t kneading or rolling, it’s targeted holds in specific spots. You may feel sensations radiate to other parts of your body as restrictions release; this is normal and clinically meaningful.

After your session, expect:
  • Mild soreness in the worked areas for 24 to 48 hours — similar to the day after a workout you haven't done in a while
  • Improved range of motion that's often noticeable immediately
  • Better-than-expected sleep the night of your session, particularly if chronic tension was driving sleep disruption
  • Hydration matters — drink more water than usual for the first 24 hours after fascial work
Most patients return for a follow-up within one to two weeks. The frequency tapers as restrictions resolve and you transition into maintenance care.

Who performs myofascial release at Spine & Health Center

Myofascial release at our clinics is performed by licensed chiropractors and Doctors of Physical Therapy across our three Bergen County locations. Our team includes practitioners trained in the Stecco Method (Fascial Manipulation), Active Release Therapy (ART), and instrument-assisted soft-tissue mobilization (IASTM) — three of the most established fascia-specific techniques in the field.

 

When you book, the front desk matches you with a provider whose specialty fits your case — whether that’s chronic pain, sports injury rehab, post-surgical recovery, or vestibular tension contributing to your symptoms.

Frequently Asked Questions

Myofascial release is a hands-on manual therapy that targets the fascia — the connective tissue surrounding muscles, organs, and joints. A trained clinician applies sustained pressure to restricted areas, holding 90 to 120 seconds per spot, until the tissue softens and releases. It relieves chronic pain, restores range of motion, and addresses problems that often don’t respond to massage or stretching alone.
Deep tissue massage works the muscles broadly — kneading, stripping, and warming the tissue. Myofascial release is more specific. It targets exact restrictions in the connective tissue surrounding the muscle, holds sustained pressure on those spots, and waits for the tissue to release. It’s clinical rather than relaxing, and it’s performed by licensed providers like chiropractors and physical therapists, not massage therapists.

It can be intense at the most restricted spots, but it shouldn’t be painful in the way that makes you brace or hold your breath. The pressure is firm and sustained, and most patients describe a “good hurt” — uncomfortable while it’s happening, then noticeably better afterward. Your provider will adjust pressure based on your feedback throughout the session.

Most patients notice meaningful change within 3 to 6 sessions. Acute issues — a recent injury, post-surgical scar tissue, a flare-up — often resolve faster. Chronic restrictions that have been building for years may take longer. Once your initial issue resolves, many patients move into maintenance care every 4 to 8 weeks to keep tissue mobile.
During the session you’ll feel sustained, targeted pressure — sometimes accompanied by a sensation that travels to other parts of your body as restrictions release. After the session, expect mild soreness for 24 to 48 hours similar to a workout, noticeably improved range of motion, and often better sleep that night. Hydration helps; drink more water than usual.

When myofascial release is performed by a chiropractor or physical therapist as part of a treatment plan, it’s often covered under your existing chiropractic or PT benefits. Coverage depends on your plan, your diagnosis, and whether your provider documents the visit as medically necessary. Our front desk can verify benefits before your first appointment.

Yes — and often dramatically. Plantar fasciitis is rarely just a foot problem. The fascia of the calf, the tissue around the Achilles, and even the lower back can all contribute to the heel pain you’re feeling. Myofascial release works the entire chain — not just the bottom of the foot — which is why it often produces results when stretching and night splints alone haven’t.

Myofascial release is the broad therapeutic category — using sustained hands-on pressure to free fascial restrictions wherever a clinician finds them. Fascial Manipulation, also known as the Stecco Method, is a specific, structured protocol within that category. It uses defined “centers of coordination” mapped throughout the body, applied in a precise sequence. We have Stecco-trained practitioners on staff at our Park Ridge location. Both work; Stecco is more protocol-driven.

Foam rolling and lacrosse-ball work are useful for general maintenance and can absolutely help broad muscle tightness. But they can’t reach the precise restrictions a trained clinician finds — you can’t feel where your own fascia is stuck the way an experienced provider can, and a roller can’t apply the targeted, sustained pressure clinical work requires. Use foam rolling as an adjunct to clinical care, not a replacement for it when you’re dealing with chronic pain.

Myofascial release is performed by our licensed chiropractors and physical therapists across all three locations — Closter, Montvale, and Park Ridge. Our team includes Stecco Method (Fascial Manipulation) practitioners, ART-certified providers, and clinicians trained in IASTM — so the technique applied depends on what your tissue actually needs. The front desk will match you with the right provider when you book. (See our full team.)

Book myofascial release at the location nearest you

Three Bergen County locations. Five clinicians trained in fascial care. Same-week appointments available.
📍 Visit us at one of our Bergen County locations:
  • Closter: 31 Vervalen St, Closter, NJ 07624
  • Park Ridge: 146 Kinderkamack Rd, Park Ridge, NJ 07656
  • Montvale: 32 Philips Pkwy, Montvale, NJ 07645
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