Address the root causes of your pain syndromes, rather than just the symptoms.

Fight chronic pain from many angles including structural causes, systemic causes and contributors, and related lifestyle factors.

 
 
Approximately 4 years ago while competing in a Bjj tournament, I had a knee injury that tore my patellar tendon, ACL, PCL, and MCL.

Having had an active lifestyle most of my life, I underwent 14 months of rehab to try and get my life back. I was not seeing the results I wanted and became depressed. I had been following Mike’s progress from his recovery, and his work with clients. I approached him with the desire to have him work with me and from that point I was hooked.

The care and patience he took to set attainable goals, and reduce pain and discomfort was amazing. As an older person who has chosen combat sports as my form of exercise, I am grateful for Mike’s ability to keep me moving. The old school “no pain no gain” philosophies are gone and the results are real.

This approach has helped me to make exponential gains in my recovery and my return to martial arts training. If you are rehabbing an injury or looking to take your performance to the next level, Mike Asmar, Kinetic Flow master, is your guy.
— Aric Shelton

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Chronic and acute pain syndromes are detrimental to your quality of life. My objective is for you is to be competent in managing your body, your rehabilitation, and the development of your health.

Rehabilitation is a skill set, one that can be learned and cultivated. It is a skill which will help you to thrive in your career and personal life.

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I see human movement as a sophisticated language. The mechanical interplay for any given movement can be observed in the length tension relationships between its prime movers, synergists, agonists, antagonists, and stabilizers. These relationships are regulated by the central nervous system through motor neurons and their biofeedback loop to mechanoreceptors located within the tissues.


Mike really knows his stuff. I find him to be very thoughtful and his history with injuries has given him a true appreciation for individual training needs.
— Luke Buffum, PT, MPT, Board Certified Orthopedic and Sports Specialist
 

At Kinetic Flow, we view human movement patterns as a guiding metric for structural integrity. We place an emphasis on assessing connective tissue and its relationship to:

  • breathing

  • compound sagittal, frontal, and transverse movement patterns

  • weight displacement

  • prone + supine movement patterns

  • crawling patterns

  • walking

  • shuffling

  • jogging

  • sprinting

  • jumping

  • throwing

  • rotation

  • lateral flexion

  • flexion

  • extension

  • adduction

  • abduction

  • dorsiflexion

  • plantarflexion

  • pronation

  • supination

  • inversion

  • eversion