Learn about the benefits of pain management combined with non-opioid strategies and how they can help you manage pain effectively.
Table of Contents
Integrative, Evidence-Based Pain Management With Chiropractic Care, PRP Therapy, and Multidisciplinary Oversight
In this educational post, I guide you through a modern, integrative, and evidence-based roadmap for managing persistent and chronic pain using a non-opioid-first strategy wherever feasible. I explain how we classify and phenotype pain, why biopsychosocial and spiritual factors matter, when opioids are appropriate and when they are not, and how to deploy targeted non-opioid pharmacology, regenerative therapies, and complementary approaches. I detail how integrative chiropractic care supports function, neuromuscular control, and quality of life, and how regenerative Platelet-Rich Plasma (PRP) therapy promotes tissue healing and reduces pain in musculoskeletal conditions. Our multidisciplinary team at Injury Medical Clinic PA (Mission Plaza Injury Medical Clinic) in El Paso, Texas, coordinates medical oversight and functional rehabilitation. Under the medical direction of Dr. Maria Guadalupe Cardenas, MD (Board Certified in Internal Medicine; NPI #1164426749; Texas MD License #J2933), we blend internal medicine, chiropractic care, functional medicine, regenerative procedures, and rehabilitation to reduce opioid exposure, improve function, and enhance long-term recovery. Throughout, I present findings from leading researchers and clinical guidelines, translating them into practical, mechanism-based steps you can use in clinic and at home.
Meet Our Integrated Care Team in El Paso, Texas
I am Dr. Alex Jimenez, DC, APRN, FNP-BC, CFMP, IFMCP, ATN, CCST. My clinical focus bridges chiropractic medicine, advanced practice nursing, and functional medicine. At Injury Medical Clinic PA, I deliver integrative chiropractic care, neuromusculoskeletal assessment, functional rehabilitation strategies, and ultrasound-guided regenerative procedures such as PRP injections, all supported by current research and outcome tracking.
Our Medical Director and Collaborative Physician, Dr. Maria Guadalupe Cardenas, MD (Board Certified in Internal Medicine; NPI #1164426749; Texas MD License #J2933), brings more than 40 years of internal medicine expertise. Dr. Cardenas provides medical oversight, ensures safe pharmacologic and regenerative stewardship, coordinates comorbidity management, and supports complex diagnostic workups that inform our multimodal plans.
Together, we coordinate:
- Medical evaluation and oversight (Internal Medicine)
- Integrative chiropractic care and neuromusculoskeletal optimization
- Regenerative PRP therapy for tissue healing and pain reduction in joints, tendons, and soft tissues
- Functional medicine assessment (nutrition, metabolic drivers, inflammation)
- Personal injury and trauma-informed care (evaluation, imaging, return-to-function)
- Rehabilitation (therapeutic exercise, graded activity, neuromotor retraining)
- Supportive services and referrals (psychology, psychiatry, pain specialists, and others as needed)
This multidisciplinary configuration allows an MD to direct medical and regenerative care while a chiropractor implements non-pharmacologic, hands-on, and functional strategies aligned with the patient’s goals.
Why “Less Opioids First” Aligns With Today’s Best Practices for Chronic Pain
Over the past decade, leading guidelines have shifted chronic pain management toward multimodal, non-opioid-first care whenever feasible, reserving opioids for clearly indicated mechanisms or acute scenarios while mitigating risks such as tolerance, endocrine suppression, opioid-induced hyperalgesia, and persistent use (Dowell et al., 2022).
In my clinic, this shift is operational. We integrate targeted non-opioid pharmacology, regenerative PRP therapy, manual therapies, rehabilitative exercise, neuro-modulatory strategies, and patient education—wrapped in medical oversight—to reduce opioid exposure, improve function, and support recovery.
Key reasons the shift is scientifically sound:
- Pain is multidimensional and not merely a nociceptive signal. Psychological, social, and spiritual dimensions can amplify pain perception; addressing them can reduce pain intensity and distress (IASP, 2020).
- Many persistent pain syndromes are neuropathic or mixed, responding better to adjuvant agents (e.g., gabapentinoids, SNRIs), regenerative interventions, and non-pharmacologic methods than to dose escalation of opioids.
- Early risk stratification and functional restoration planning lower the likelihood of persistent opioid use after injury or surgery.
What this means in practice: we match the mechanism of pain to precise therapies, use redundancy across modalities (including PRP for biological repair) to minimize the burden of any single drug, and employ functional restoration to recalibrate the nervous system and reduce central sensitization.
Understanding Persistent Pain: Mechanisms Drive Methods
To choose the right tools, we map pain along three crucial axes: mechanism, duration, and syndrome pattern.
Mechanisms:
- Nociceptive somatic pain (bone, muscle, fascia, joints, tendons): localized, aching, mechanical-aggravated.
- Nociceptive visceral/referred pain: diffuse, gnawing, sometimes referred from internal structures or axial sources.
- Neuropathic pain (nerve compression, entrapment, injury, or metabolic causes): burning, tingling, shooting, allodynia.
- Mixed pain: common in chronic and post-injury states; requires multimodal strategies.
Duration:
- Acute pain (e.g., post-injury or postoperative days/weeks): prioritize rapid relief and function to enable mobilization and treatment adherence.
- Chronic/persistent pain (≥90 days or ongoing): emphasize non-opioid regimens, regenerative support, functional restoration, psychological support, and conditioning.
Common syndromes:
- Post-surgical or post-traumatic pain; peripheral neuropathy (compressive, diabetic, idiopathic, or post-injury); myofascial pain from deconditioning and guarding; facet-mediated or discogenic axial pain; tendinopathies and ligamentous injuries; radicular or plexopathy-type pain from compression or irritation.
Physiological underpinnings:
- Nociceptive pain arises from activation of peripheral nociceptors by inflammatory mediators (prostaglandins, bradykinin, cytokines) and mechanical deformation.
- Neuropathic pain involves ectopic firing, sodium channel upregulation, central sensitization (spinal dorsal horn wind-up, microglial activation), and impaired descending inhibition (Campbell & Meyer, 2006; Colloca et al., 2017).
- Injury, degeneration, and inflammation alter ion channels, mitochondrial function, and tissue integrity, producing persistent dysesthesia, hyperalgesia, and impaired healing.
Why this matters: when we identify the mechanistic driver, we select mechanism-aligned therapies—including PRP to support tissue repair—and avoid ineffective escalation that increases risk without improving function.
The Biopsychosocial-Spiritual Model: Why Context Changes Pain
Pain is a sensory and emotional experience shaped by biological, psychological, social, and spiritual factors (IASP, 2020). In my practice, I see how:
- Depression, anxiety, somatization, fear-avoidance, and catastrophizing amplify central sensitization, raising pain intensity and analgesic requirements.
- Social factors—caregiver support, employment, financial stress—modulate coping and adherence.
- Spiritual distress and existential concerns meaningfully heighten suffering, even when tissue pathology is addressed.
Clinical takeaway: Early screening and supportive interventions reduce pain intensity and improve functional outcomes even without changing nociceptive input.
We systematically screen:
- Mental health risk (PHQ-9, GAD-7), substance use risk, and pain interference (Brief Pain Inventory).
- Cultural considerations shaping pain expression and treatment preferences.
- Cognitive barriers and age-related communication needs, using pictorial scales when needed.
When Opioids Are Appropriate—and When They Are Not
“Less opioids first” does not mean “never opioids.” There are clear indications:
- Severe acute post-injury or postoperative pain: short courses with a taper plan, reducing dose and duration via multimodal adjuncts (e.g., acetaminophen, NSAIDs if permissible, regional techniques where available).
- Certain severe chronic nociceptive or mixed pain states when benefits clearly outweigh risks and other modalities have been optimized.
Why not opioids first for most chronic syndromes?
- Risks include endocrine suppression (hypogonadism), constipation, immunomodulation, fracture risk, and opioid-induced hyperalgesia (Chou et al., 2016; Häuser et al., 2020).
- Comparable or superior function is often achieved with non-opioid combinations plus rehabilitation, regenerative therapies like PRP, and behavioral approaches.
Non-Opioid Pharmacologic Strategies: Matching Drug to Mechanism
We target specific pathophysiological nodes to preserve alertness and facilitate rehabilitation.
Neuropathic or mixed pain:
- Gabapentinoids (gabapentin, pregabalin) modulate alpha-2-delta calcium channels; start low and titrate for effect and sedation balance.
- SNRIs (duloxetine): enhance descending inhibitory pathways; strong support in many neuropathic and mixed pain states.
- TCAs (nortriptyline): sodium channel blockade plus monoamine reuptake inhibition; consider anticholinergic and cardiac risks.
- Topicals: lidocaine patches for focal neuropathic regions; capsaicin for selected cases.
Nociceptive/MSK pain:
- Acetaminophen: central COX modulation; safe backbone when hepatic status allows.
- NSAIDs/COX-2 inhibitors: anti-inflammatory effect for bone, joint, and soft tissue pain; balance GI/renal/CV risk under MD oversight. In select cases, celecoxib at modest doses may offer a balanced profile.
- Corticosteroids: short-term edema reduction in inflammatory flares; time-limited use with glucose and infection vigilance.
Adjuvants and functional medicine supports:
- Muscle relaxants (e.g., cyclobenzaprine) short-term for spasm-related guarding; avoid benzodiazepines due to dependence risks.
- Alpha-lipoic acid, omega-3 fatty acids, and anti-inflammatory nutrition patterns supporting mitochondrial and membrane function.
Rationale: Focusing on ion channels, inflammatory mediators, and descending inhibition allows pain relief without global CNS dampening. Regenerative options like PRP add biological repair that complements these approaches.
Integrative Chiropractic Care: Evidence-Informed Role in Pain Management and
As a chiropractor and family nurse practitioner, I focus on safe, gentle, graded methods respecting tissue integrity, bone density, surgical history, and fatigue levels. Under Dr. Cardenas ‘ medical direction, our protocols complement medical and regenerative care.
What I do and why:
- Gentle spinal and extremity mobilization (avoiding high-velocity thrusts in at-risk bones): improves joint mechanics, reduces nociceptive input from restricted segments, and normalizes afferent-proprioceptive signaling—downshifting central sensitization.
- Myofascial release and trigger point therapy: decreases muscle guarding that perpetuates pain via ischemia and nociceptor sensitization; improves tissue glide after injury or surgery.
- Neuromotor retraining restores coordinated activation patterns that are inhibited by pain or disuse. Improved motor control reduces aberrant joint loading and recurrent pain.
- Posture and ergonomic coaching: mitigates mechanical drivers and supports recovery.
- Lymphatic and breathing techniques: diaphragmatic breathing and gentle facilitation reduce edema-related discomfort and autonomic arousal.
- Graded activity and walking programs: improve endogenous opioid tone, endocannabinoid signaling, and cortical pain modulation, enhancing resilience and mood (Naugle et al., 2014).
Safety considerations:
- In suspected osteoporosis or structural compromise, we avoid high-velocity thrust and load with caution, coordinating imaging and medical clearance first.
- We align frequency and intensity with blood counts, fracture risk, and overall status.
Clinical observations from my practice:
- Reduced pain interference when manual care is paired with targeted exercise, sleep optimization, nutrition support, and regenerative interventions.
- Faster return to daily activities with less reliance on breakthrough analgesia when patients engage in scheduled, gentle mobilization.
- Improved balance and proprioception in neuropathic conditions using sensory reweighting drills and intrinsic strengthening.
Regenerative PRP Therapy: Supporting Tissue Healing and Pain Reduction
Platelet-Rich Plasma (PRP) is an autologous regenerative therapy in which a patient’s own blood is processed to concentrate platelets and growth factors (including PDGF, TGF-β, VEGF, and others). These bioactive components promote tissue repair, modulate inflammation, support angiogenesis, and stimulate collagen synthesis and cellular proliferation.
How PRP helps in pain management:
- In knee osteoarthritis and other degenerative joint conditions, meta-analyses show PRP provides clinically relevant pain relief and functional improvement lasting up to 12 months, often superior to placebo and comparable or better than hyaluronic acid in longer-term follow-up, with low adverse event rates (Bensa et al., 2025; additional meta-analyses 2024–2025).
- For tendinopathies (lateral epicondylitis/tennis elbow, rotator cuff, patellar, Achilles, plantar fasciitis), evidence supports meaningful pain reduction, improved tendon morphology, and better function, especially when combined with rehabilitation (Fitzpatrick et al., 2017; recent reviews 2024–2025).
- In myofascial and post-injury soft-tissue pain, PRP can address underlying tissue degeneration and inflammation, creating a better environment for manual therapy and exercise to be effective.
In our clinic, we use ultrasound-guided PRP injections for precise delivery to joints, tendons, ligaments, or soft-tissue targets. PRP complements chiropractic care synergistically—PRP supports biological healing and tissue quality while chiropractic restores mechanics, neuromuscular control, and afferent input. Many patients experience reduced pain, improved tolerance to rehab, and better long-term outcomes with fewer medications. Treatment is individualized (often 1–3 injections spaced weeks apart) under medical oversight.
Safety: Autologous PRP has a strong safety profile with minimal risk of allergic reaction or disease transmission. We conduct appropriate screening and coordinate with Dr. Cardenas to assess medical suitability.
Myofascial Pain in Chronic Pain Care and Recovery: Recognition and Rehabilitation
Myofascial pain is pervasive after injury, surgery, or deconditioning, commonly presenting as focal muscle tenderness, taut bands, trigger points with referred pain, and limited range of motion.
Physiology of trigger points:
- Endplate hyperexcitability with excessive acetylcholine release.
- Local ischemia, low pH, and nociceptor sensitization.
- Segmental convergence producing predictable referred pain.
- Dorsal horn facilitation perpetuating central sensitization (Shah & Gilliams, 2008).
Risk factors: Muscle deconditioning, guarding, poor posture, repetitive tasks, structural drivers (scoliosis, osteoarthritis, scapular dyskinesis), systemic contributors (vitamin D/iron/B12/magnesium deficiency, mitochondrial stress), TMJ dysfunction, insomnia, anxiety/depression, and prior trauma or surgical scars.
Diagnosis: Palpation for taut bands and tender nodules, reproduction of referred pain, movement assessment, and review of history/imaging to clear red flags.
Rehabilitation first:
- Gentle stretching to normalize spindle/Golgi input and fascial glide.
- Strengthening and postural retraining to redistribute load.
- Aerobic conditioning to enhance perfusion and autonomic balance.
Trigger point and regenerative interventions:
- Dry needling or local anesthetic injections used judiciously with clearance.
- Non-invasive supports: TENS, kinesio taping, photobiomodulation, self-massage tools.
- PRP in select cases for associated tendinous or ligamentous degeneration to promote healing.
- Short-term muscle relaxants (cyclobenzaprine, tizanidine, baclofen); correction of nutrient deficiencies.
Clinical observations: Teaching early self-release, TENS, and mobility flows reduces flare frequency. Combining deep cervical flexor training with scapular control often resolves post-injury or postural headaches more reliably than medications alone. Correcting deficiencies enables faster progression in rehab.
For visual education, I use Travell and Simons’ trigger point charts.
Post-Surgical and Post-Traumatic Pain: Preventing Persistent Opioid Use
A notable percentage of patients develop persistent opioid use after surgery or significant injury, with higher risk in certain scenarios. Our approach:
- Preoperative or pre-rehab counseling: set expectations, outline non-opioid + regenerative plan, explain taper timelines.
- Multimodal analgesia: acetaminophen, NSAIDs/COX-2 (if safe), gabapentinoids for neuropathic features, topical agents; PRP post-procedure in appropriate cases to enhance healing and reduce scar-related pain.
- Early protected mobilization and graded activity.
- Scar and fascial mobilization at appropriate stages.
- Sleep and circadian support.
Rationale: Mechanistic redundancy (pharm + regenerative + manual + movement) reduces dose burden and supports faster recovery while restoring normal afferent input.
Neuropathic Pain Conditions: Non-Opioid and Multimodal Approaches
Neuropathic pain (from compression, entrapment, metabolic causes, or injury) presents with burning, shooting, tingling, or allodynia, often in stocking-glove or radicular patterns.
Evidence-based management:
- Duloxetine has consistent data for painful neuropathic states.
- Gabapentinoids titrated carefully.
- Topicals (lidocaine) for focal areas.
- Rehabilitation: balance/proprioceptive training, gait work, sensory reweighting.
- Chiropractic: soft tissue work, joint mobilization, posture correction to reduce mechanical contributors.
- PRP may support associated soft tissue or joint inflammation that amplifies neuropathic drive.
Why this works: Restoring ascending sensory fidelity, improving descending inhibition, and addressing peripheral tissue quality decreases the mismatch that drives central sensitization.
Axial, Joint, and Bone-Related Pain from Degenerative or Injury Causes: Mechanism-First Decisions
- Axial/joint pain (facet, discogenic, degenerative): Combine non-opioid agents, manual therapy, graded exercise, and PRP for intra-articular or peri-articular targets (e.g., knee OA) when appropriate. Chiropractic emphasizes safe mobilization and stabilization.
- Radicular or plexopathy-type pain from compression/irritation: SNRIs/gabapentinoids, targeted therapy, posture/thoracic outlet mechanics, gentle nerve-glide techniques within pain-free ranges.
- Goal: Stabilize mechanics, reduce inflammation, promote tissue health, and maintain function without provoking further injury.
Psychosocial and Spiritual Care: Reducing Pain by Reducing Suffering
We involve supportive services early to reduce distress, improve adherence, and lower analgesic needs. We teach realistic goals: the aim is a functional sweet spot that supports daily life and recovery with tolerable side effects.
Risk Stratification and Complex Pain: Setting the Plan
Predictors of complex trajectories include high baseline pain intensity, neuropathic features, depression/anxiety, somatization, and others. Tools such as validated pain scales and screening instruments guide the intensity of follow-up and the layering of modalities. Our steps: more frequent early visits, tight coordination, and rapid titration of adjuvants, regenerative options, and behavioral strategies before considering opioids.
Functional Medicine Contributions: Metabolic Terrain and Inflammation
We assess contributors that amplify pain and fatigue: micronutrient insufficiencies, glycemic dysregulation, gut barrier integrity, sleep disorders. Anti-inflammatory dietary patterns, protein sufficiency, and targeted supplementation (when medically appropriate) support tissue repair, mitochondrial function, and neuroplasticity. Dr. Cardenas oversees medical safety for supplements and potential interactions.
How Our Team Integrates Care in Real Time
- Medical oversight (Dr. Cardenas): Medication and regenerative selection (including PRP appropriateness), taper planning, comorbidity management, lab monitoring, guarding against interactions.
- Chiropractic, rehabilitation, and regenerative procedures (Dr. Jimenez): Mechanism-based manual care, ultrasound-guided PRP, progressive exercise, ergonomic/movement coaching, lymphatic/breath training, balance and sensory integration.
- Shared decision-making: Goals that matter to the patient (sleep, mobility, return to activities) measured with validated tools.
- Safety checkpoints: Imaging to identify red flags, clearance before manual or injection techniques, and immediate coordination for any concerning changes.
This integration ensures treatments are safe, mechanism-targeted, and aligned with the patient’s priorities.
Practical Framework You Can Use Today
- Acute post-injury or post-surgical pain: Start multimodal non-opioids; if opioids are used, short course with taper. Add gentle mobilization, breathing, and sleep support, and consider early regenerative options to enhance healing.
- Neuropathic or mixed pain: Consider duloxetine or gabapentinoids with topicals; pair with neuromotor retraining, graded sensory exposure, and chiropractic optimization. Add PRP if soft tissue/joint contributors are present.
- MSK/joint or tendinopathic pain (e.g., knee OA, epicondylitis): Non-opioid agents + PRP (when indicated) + chiropractic mobilization and strengthening. Evidence shows meaningful gains in pain and function.
- Long-term/chronic management: Screen for mood/sleep/deconditioning; integrate exercise, nutrition, manual care, and regenerative support to prevent chronicity and build resilience.
Documentation and consent: Some uses of adjuvants or regenerative therapies involve individualized application. We document the rationale, review the risks/benefits, and obtain informed consent in accordance with current guidelines.
Closing Perspective: Less Opioids, More Precision and Regeneration, Better Lives
“Less opioids first” means we respect mechanism, time course, and the whole person. We deploy precise non-opioid pharmacology, integrative chiropractic care, regenerative PRP therapy for tissue healing, rehabilitation, and psychosocial support—under vigilant medical direction—to reclaim function and quality of life. In our El Paso clinic, this multidisciplinary model has helped many patients reduce reliance on opioids, improve movement, and move forward with strength and hope.
To learn more about our integrated strategies and clinical observations:
- WellnessDoctorRX: https://wellnessdoctorrx.com/
- LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/dralexjimenez/
References
- Bensa, A., et al. (2025). PRP injections for knee osteoarthritis meta-analysis.
- Calder, P. C. (2017). Omega-3 fatty acids and inflammatory processes.
- Campbell, J. N., & Meyer, R. A. (2006). Mechanisms of neuropathic pain. Neuron.
- Chou, R., et al. (2016). Effectiveness and risks of long-term opioid therapy. Annals of Internal Medicine.
- Colloca, L., et al. (2017). Neuropathic pain. Nature Reviews Disease Primers.
- Dowell, D., et al. (2022). CDC clinical practice guideline for prescribing opioids for pain. MMWR.
- Fitzpatrick, J., et al. (2017). Meta-analysis on PRP for tendinopathy.
- Häuser, W., et al. (2020). Opioid considerations.
- IASP. (2020). Revised definition of pain.
- Naugle, K. M., et al. (2014). Hypoalgesic effects of exercise meta-analysis.
- Shah, J. P., & Gilliams, E. A. (2008). Biochemical milieu of myofascial trigger points.
- Additional meta-analyses and reviews on PRP for MSK pain and tendinopathy (2024–2025).
SEO tags: pain management, non-opioid pain management, integrative chiropractic care and PRP, regenerative PRP therapy, chronic pain management El Paso, neuropathic pain, myofascial pain, post-surgical pain, post-traumatic pain, knee osteoarthritis PRP, tendinopathy treatment, Dr. Alex Jimenez DC, Dr. Maria Guadalupe Cardenas MD, Injury Medical Clinic PA, multidisciplinary pain care, functional rehabilitation, evidence-based chiropractic, Mission Plaza Injury Medical Clinic
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Professional Scope of Practice *
The information on this blog site is not intended to replace a one-on-one relationship with a qualified healthcare professional or licensed physician and is not medical advice. We encourage you to make healthcare decisions based on your research and partnership with a qualified healthcare professional.
Blog Information & Scope Discussions
Welcome to El Paso's Premier Wellness and Injury Care Clinic & Wellness Blog, where Dr. Alex Jimenez, DC, FNP-C, a board-certified Family Practice Nurse Practitioner (FNP-BC) and Chiropractor (DC), presents insights on how our team is dedicated to holistic healing and personalized care. Our practice aligns with evidence-based treatment protocols inspired by integrative medicine principles, similar to those found on this site and our family practice-based chiromed.com site, focusing on restoring health naturally for patients of all ages.
Our areas of chiropractic practice include Wellness & Nutrition, Chronic Pain, Personal Injury, Auto Accident Care, Work Injuries, Back Injury, Low Back Pain, Neck Pain, Migraine Headaches, Sports Injuries, Severe Sciatica, Scoliosis, Complex Herniated Discs, Fibromyalgia, Chronic Pain, Complex Injuries, Stress Management, Functional Medicine Treatments, and in-scope care protocols.
Our information scope is limited to chiropractic, musculoskeletal, physical medicine, wellness, contributing etiological viscerosomatic disturbances within clinical presentations, associated somato-visceral reflex clinical dynamics, subluxation complexes, sensitive health issues, and functional medicine articles, topics, and discussions.
We provide and present clinical collaboration with specialists from various disciplines. Each specialist is governed by their professional scope of practice and their jurisdiction of licensure. We use functional health & wellness protocols to treat and support care for the injuries or disorders of the musculoskeletal system.
Our videos, posts, topics, subjects, and insights cover clinical matters and issues that relate to and directly or indirectly support our clinical scope of practice.*
Our office has made a reasonable effort to provide supportive citations and has identified relevant research studies that support our posts. We provide copies of supporting research studies available to regulatory boards and the public upon request.
We understand that we cover matters that require an additional explanation of how they may assist in a particular care plan or treatment protocol; therefore, to discuss the subject matter above further, please feel free to ask Dr. Alex Jimenez, DC, APRN, FNP-BC, or contact us at 915-850-0900.
We are here to help you and your family.
Blessings
Dr. Alex Jimenez DC, MSACP, APRN, FNP-BC*, CCST, IFMCP, CFMP, ATN
email: [email protected]
Licensed as a Doctor of Chiropractic (DC) in Texas & New Mexico*
Texas DC License # TX5807
New Mexico DC License # NM-DC2182
Licensed as a Registered Nurse (RN*) in Texas & Multistate
Texas RN License # 1191402
ANCC FNP-BC: Board Certified Nurse Practitioner*
Compact Status: Multi-State License: Authorized to Practice in 40 States*
Graduate with Honors: ICHS: MSN-FNP (Family Nurse Practitioner Program)
Degree Granted. Master's in Family Practice MSN Diploma (Cum Laude)
Dr. Alex Jimenez, DC, APRN, FNP-BC*, CFMP, IFMCP, ATN, CCST
(Board Certified: Family Practice Nurse Practitioner—Multistate)*
(Licensed Nurse Practitioner & Chiropractor - Multistate)*
Clinical Director
Digital Business Card
Dr. Maria Cardenas, MD
(Board Certified: Internal Medicine)
(Licensed Medical Doctor)
Medical Director, Clinical Director & Collaborative Physician
NPI # 1164426749
MD License #: J2933
Licenses and Board Certifications:
MD: Medical Doctor
DC: Doctor of Chiropractic
APRNP: Advanced Practice Registered Nurse
FNP-BC: Family Practice Specialization (Multi-State Board Certified)
RN: Registered Nurse (Multi-State Compact License)
CFMP: Certified Functional Medicine Provider
MSN-FNP: Master of Science in Family Practice Medicine
MSACP: Master of Science in Advanced Clinical Practice
IFMCP: Institute of Functional Medicine
CCST: Certified Chiropractic Spinal Trauma
ATN: Advanced Translational Neutrogenomics
Memberships & Associations:
TCA: Texas Chiropractic Association: Member ID: 104311
AANP: American Association of Nurse Practitioners: Member ID: 2198960
ANA: American Nurse Association: Member ID: 06458222 (District TX01)
TNA: Texas Nurse Association: Member ID: 06458222
NPI: 1205907805
| Primary Taxonomy | Selected Taxonomy | State | License Number |
|---|---|---|---|
| No | 111N00000X - Chiropractor | NM | DC2182 |
| Yes | 111N00000X - Chiropractor | TX | DC5807 |
| Yes | 363LF0000X - Nurse Practitioner - Family | TX | 1191402 |
| Yes | 363LF0000X - Nurse Practitioner - Family | FL | 11043890 |
| Yes | 363LF0000X - Nurse Practitioner - Family | CO | C-APN.0105610-C-NP |
| Yes | 363LF0000X - Nurse Practitioner - Family | NY | N25929 |
Dr. Alex Jimenez, DC, APRN, FNP-BC*, CFMP, IFMCP, ATN, CCST
(Board Certified: Family Practice Nurse Practitioner—Multistate)*
(Licensed Nurse Practitioner & Chiropractor - Multistate)*
Clinical Director
Digital Business Card
Dr. Maria Cardenas, MD
(Board Certified: Internal Medicine)*
(Licensed Medical Doctor)*
Medical Director, Clinical Director & Collaborative Physician
NPI # 1164426749
MD License #: J2933
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