GLP-1 Medications, Weight Loss, Joint Pain, and Physical Therapy: What Patients Should Know
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GLP-1 Medications, Weight Loss, Joint Pain, and Physical Therapy: What Patients Should Know

GLP-1 medications, including medicines such as Wegovy, Ozempic, Mounjaro, and Zepbound, are used for conditions such as obesity, weight management, and type 2 diabetes. They can help some people lose a significant amount of weight and may also improve blood sugar and certain heart or kidney-related health risks in specific populations.

Weight loss from GLP-1 medications usually comes mostly from body fat, but some loss of lean mass or fat-free mass can also happen. That does not automatically mean these medications cause frailty, but it does mean that strength, nutrition, exercise, and function matter.

Physical therapy can help people taking GLP-1 medications by improving strength, balance, joint pain, walking tolerance, exercise confidence, and long-term movement habits. PTs can also help you track what your body can do, not just what the scale says.

Physical therapists do not manage your medication, dosing, or side effects. Those questions should go to your prescribing provider or pharmacist. But your PT can help you notice symptoms that may affect exercise safety and communicate with the rest of your healthcare team when needed.

A good care team may include your physician, physical therapist, pharmacist, registered dietitian, mental health professional, and other providers depending on your needs. The goal is not just weight loss. The goal is helping you feel stronger, safer, more capable, and more connected to your body.

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❤️ POTS, Dizziness, and a Racing Heart: Why the Conversation Matters (for Patients)
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❤️ POTS, Dizziness, and a Racing Heart: Why the Conversation Matters (for Patients)

  • POTS stands for Postural Orthostatic Tachycardia Syndrome. It can cause symptoms like dizziness, racing heart, fatigue, brain fog, weakness, nausea, shakiness, and feeling worse when standing, showering, exercising, or being in the heat.

  • POTS is related to upright posture. Symptoms often show up or worsen when standing, walking, exercising upright, or waiting in line, and may improve when lying down.

  • Dizziness and a racing heart do not automatically mean POTS. Dehydration, anemia, thyroid issues, medication effects, heart rhythm problems, blood pressure changes, infection, deconditioning, and other conditions can look similar.

  • Hypermobility can be part of the conversation, but it is not the whole story. Some people have both POTS-like symptoms and hypermobility, but being hyper-flexible does not automatically mean you have POTS or Ehlers-Danlos syndrome.

  • You deserve a thoughtful evaluation. Your symptoms are real. A good healthcare team should help you understand what happens when you stand, whether your heart rate or blood pressure changes, what else should be ruled out, and what kind of movement or physical therapy may be safe for you.

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It’s More Than Flexible: A Patient’s Guide to Hypermobility, hEDS, HSD, and Pain
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It’s More Than Flexible: A Patient’s Guide to Hypermobility, hEDS, HSD, and Pain

Hypermobility is not “just being flexible.”

For some people, flexible joints are painless and harmless. For others, hypermobility comes with pain, instability, fatigue, dizziness, digestive issues, anxiety, frequent injuries, or feeling like the body is hard to control.

Two common diagnoses are:

Hypermobile Ehlers-Danlos Syndrome (hEDS): a connective tissue condition diagnosed through clinical criteria. There is currently no single genetic test for hEDS.

Hypermobility Spectrum Disorder (HSD): symptomatic hypermobility that does not fully meet hEDS criteria but can still cause real pain, disability, and daily-life challenges.

The latest research supports care that is multidisciplinary, movement-based, patient-centered, and psychologically informed. In plain English: you need a team that listens, helps you move safely, teaches you how your body works, and supports your confidence—not just your joints.

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Exercise and Heart Failure: What Patients Should Know About Moving Safely
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Exercise and Heart Failure: What Patients Should Know About Moving Safely

Heart failure is one of the most common health conditions affecting adults today. It can feel overwhelming to hear that diagnosis.

But here’s something encouraging that many patients don’t hear enough:

One of the most powerful treatments for heart failure isn’t a new medication or procedure.

It’s movement.

Research shows that safe, guided exercise is one of the best things people with stable heart failure can do to improve their energy, mobility, and quality of life.

Exercise training is now considered a top-level medical recommendation for many people living with heart failure.

Still, it’s normal to have questions like:

Is it safe for me to exercise?
What kind of exercise should I do?
What if I get tired or short of breath?

The good news is that with the right guidance from your healthcare team—including your physician and physical therapist—exercise can help you feel stronger, more confident, and more in control of your health.

Moving again isn’t just about improving your heart.

It’s about restoring confidence, independence, and trust in your body.

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Stronger, Simpler, and Built for You: What the New 2026 American College of Sports Medicine Resistance Training Guidelines Means for Your Weekly Training
The Joint Connection Company The Joint Connection Company

Stronger, Simpler, and Built for You: What the New 2026 American College of Sports Medicine Resistance Training Guidelines Means for Your Weekly Training

  • Resistance training (strength training) is one of the best things you can do for your health—for strength, mobility, balance, and long-term independence.

  • It doesn’t have to be complicated to work.

  • A simple starting point:

    • Aim for 2x per week

    • Do 2–3 sets of each exercise

    • Use a weight that feels challenging for you

  • You don’t need:

    • Fancy equipment

    • Perfect programs

    • To feel completely exhausted after every workout

  • The real secret:
    👉 Consistency beats perfection.

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