GLP-1 Medications, Weight Loss, and Physical Therapy: What Providers Should Know
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GLP-1 Medications, Weight Loss, and Physical Therapy: What Providers Should Know

GLP-1 receptor agonists and related incretin-based medications, including semaglutide and tirzepatide, can produce substantial weight loss and important cardiometabolic benefits for many patients with obesity and/or type 2 diabetes.

Weight loss from GLP-1 medications usually comes mostly from fat mass, but some fat-free mass and lean mass loss can occur. Current evidence does not support the blanket claim that GLP-1 medications automatically cause frailty or clinically meaningful sarcopenia, but high-risk patients deserve thoughtful monitoring.

Physical therapists should not manage GLP-1 prescriptions, dosing, or medication side effects independently. PTs can, however, screen medication history, monitor functional changes, prescribe progressive exercise, support long-term activity habits, communicate with the prescribing provider, and refer when symptoms fall outside PT scope.

Resistance training, aerobic exercise, adequate recovery, and appropriate nutrition conversations are especially important. APTA recognizes that diet and nutrition are relevant to PT-managed conditions and that PTs may screen and provide general information while referring to dietitians or other qualified providers when care exceeds professional or personal scope.

The best conversation is not “Are GLP-1 medications good or bad?” The better conversation is: How do we help this specific patient preserve function, build strength, stay safe, and remain connected to the right healthcare team?

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❤️ POTS, Dizziness, and a Racing Heart: Why the Conversation Matters
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❤️ POTS, Dizziness, and a Racing Heart: Why the Conversation Matters

  • Postural Orthostatic Tachycardia Syndrome, better known as POTS, is a condition involving symptoms of orthostatic intolerance. That means symptoms tend to show up or worsen when someone moves into an upright position, such as sitting or standing, and often improve when lying down.

  • Commonly reported symptoms can include lightheadedness, dizziness, palpitations, racing heart, fatigue, exercise intolerance, nausea, headache, “brain fog,” weakness, and feeling worse in heat or after prolonged standing.

  • Symptoms alone do not diagnose POTS.

    • Many conditions can look similar, including dehydration, anemia, thyroid disease, medication effects, cardiac rhythm problems, orthostatic hypotension, vasovagal syncope, infection, anxiety, deconditioning, and other medical concerns.

  • For patients, this means:

    • You are not “making it up,” and you also deserve a careful evaluation.

  • For providers, this means:

    • We should validate symptoms, screen thoughtfully, recognize when referral is needed, and help patients build safe, progressive strategies to improve function.

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🧠 “More Than Flexible”: Understanding Hypermobility, hEDS, and the Power of Listening
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🧠 “More Than Flexible”: Understanding Hypermobility, hEDS, and the Power of Listening

Hypermobility isn’t just “being flexible.” For many patients, it’s a complex, often misunderstood condition that can affect the entire body—not just joints.

Hypermobile Ehlers-Danlos syndrome (hEDS) and hypermobility spectrum disorders (HSD) can present with chronic pain, fatigue, anxiety, and multisystem symptoms. Diagnosis can take years, and patients often feel dismissed along the way.

The most effective care isn’t just clinical—it’s relational. When providers listen, validate, and collaborate, outcomes improve. Treatment works best when it’s multidisciplinary, patient-centered, and focused on long-term self-management.

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Lateral Hip Pain Isn’t Just “Bursitis”: What’s Really Going On (and What Actually Helps)
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Lateral Hip Pain Isn’t Just “Bursitis”: What’s Really Going On (and What Actually Helps)

  • “Lateral hip pain” is often grouped under Greater Trochanteric Pain Syndrome (GTPS)—not just bursitis.

  • It commonly affects middle-aged women and is linked to hip tendon irritation, weakness, and movement patterns.

  • Pain often shows up with walking, stairs, single-leg tasks, or lying on your side.

  • There’s no single perfect test—it’s about the whole clinical picture.

  • Treatment works best when it focuses on:

    • Education (huge)

    • Load management (avoid irritation early)

    • Progressive strengthening (especially hip + core)

  • This is usually a gradual, chronic condition—not something caused by one big injury.

  • The goal isn’t just to “fix pain”—it’s to restore confidence, movement, and trust in your body.

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Low Back Pain Isn’t Just “Getting Older”: What Helps Most
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Low Back Pain Isn’t Just “Getting Older”: What Helps Most

  • Low back pain is one of the most common reasons people seek healthcare—but it is not simply something you must “live with.” Many cases improve with the right plan, especially one focused on movement, education, exercise, and trust between patient and provider.

  • Research consistently shows that staying active within tolerance is better than prolonged bed rest, and treatments like physical therapy, exercise, spinal mobilization, yoga, aquatic therapy, and targeted strengthening can help many people.

  • For providers, one of the most powerful interventions is often the conversation itself: reducing fear, building confidence, explaining prognosis, and helping patients move forward safely.

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Prescribing Strength, Not Just Exercise: What Clinicians Need to Know from the New 2026 ACSM Resistance Training Recommendations
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Prescribing Strength, Not Just Exercise: What Clinicians Need to Know from the New 2026 ACSM Resistance Training Recommendations

Resistance training (RT) is one of the most effective and heavily studied interventions for improving strength, function, and long-term health in adults.

  1. Most variables may not matter as much as we thought—clinicians should prioritize adherence over optimization.

  2. Key prescriptions for clinical practice:

    • ≥ 2 sessions/week

    • 2–3 sets per exercise

    • Heavier loads (≥80% 1RM) → strength

    • ≥ 10 sets/week/muscle group → hypertrophy

  3. Training to failure, equipment type, timing, and complex programming?
    👉 Not essential for outcomes.

  4. The clinical takeaway:
    👉 It doesn’t have to be complicated - move heavy (whatever is “heavy” for you), move with purpose, and move consistently. The more you move, the more benefit you’ll have.

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Femoroacetabular Impingement Syndrome (FAIS): What Providers Need to Know About Assessment, Conversations, and Conservative Care
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Femoroacetabular Impingement Syndrome (FAIS): What Providers Need to Know About Assessment, Conversations, and Conservative Care

  • Femoroacetabular impingement syndrome (FAIS) is not just an imaging finding. It is a movement-related clinical disorder that requires the combination of symptoms, clinical signs, and imaging findings to support diagnosis. For providers, that distinction matters.

  • Many active patients—especially younger athletes—may show cam or pincer morphology on imaging without pain. That means our job is not simply to “find a bump” on a radiograph. Our job is to connect the patient’s story, symptom behavior, movement presentation, and goals into a meaningful clinical picture to promote long-term success.

  • Current guidance supports a multimodal, nonoperative first-line approach for many patients with nonarthritic hip pain and FAIS. This usually includes activity modification, strengthening of the hip and trunk, movement retraining, and patient education. Physical therapy has shown short-term improvements in pain and function, with moderate to large effects reported in systematic review data.

  • Providers, take note: patients with hip pain often see multiple clinicians before getting a clear explanation. That makes communication an essential part of treatment. A thoughtful exam, clear education, and shared decision-making can reduce fear, improve buy-in, and help patients understand why rehab is not “doing less,”; in fact, it can actually be the most appropriate place to start.

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