Discover pain management combined with non-opioid strategies that can improve your quality of life while reducing dependency on opiates.
Abstract
Chronic pain—especially when it involves musculoskeletal structures, nerve irritation, or persists after injury—is complex, personal, and often continues well beyond the initial event. In this educational post, I, Dr. Alex Jimenez, DC, APRN, FNP-BC, CFMP, IFMCP, ATN, CCST, guide you through a modern, evidence-based, and integrative approach to managing chronic and neuropathic pain syndromes. I explain how our multidisciplinary team in El Paso, Texas—anchored by Internal Medicine oversight from Dr. Maria Guadalupe Cardenas, MD (Board Certified in Internal Medicine; NPI #1164426749; Texas MD License #J2933), our Medical Director and Collaborative Physician—combines integrative chiropractic care, functional medicine, personal injury rehabilitation, and regenerative PRP (platelet-rich plasma) therapy to address the biological, psychological, and social dimensions of pain.
You’ll learn how to differentiate nociceptive from neuropathic pain, why precise classification guides smarter therapy choices, and how multimodal strategies that include chiropractic adjustments and PRP injections reduce risks while restoring function and quality of life. I detail common chronic pain presentations seen in our practice—such as persistent post-traumatic pain, radiculopathy and entrapment neuropathies, degenerative joint and tendon conditions, and myofascial pain syndromes—showing how targeted manual therapies, regenerative injections, and patient education create sustainable relief. Throughout, I highlight physiological mechanisms, share clinical observations, and present findings from leading researchers through an evidence-based lens.
Introducing Our Integrative Team in El Paso, Texas
I practice at Injury Medical Clinic PA (Mission Plaza Injury Medical Clinic) in El Paso, Texas, where our care model is intentionally multidisciplinary. I work closely with Dr. Maria Guadalupe Cardenas, MD—a Board-Certified Internist with over 40 years of experience, NPI #1164426749, Texas MD License #J2933—who serves as our Medical Director and Collaborative Physician. This structure supports safe, coordinated care for complex pain conditions.
Our integrated services include:
- Chiropractic Care (Dr. Jimenez): Biomechanical assessment, spinal and extremity adjustments, soft-tissue work, neuromuscular re-education, and posture correction to reduce nociceptive input, improve joint mechanics, and downregulate pain pathways.
- Internal Medicine Oversight (Dr. Cardenas): Medical diagnosis, imaging and laboratory coordination, prescription stewardship, safety screening, and referrals when needed.
- Functional Medicine: Systems-focused evaluation of inflammation, nutrient status (vitamin D, iron/ferritin, B vitamins), metabolic factors, sleep, and stress physiology that influence pain and healing.
- Personal Injury Care and Rehabilitation: Targeted physical therapy, activity pacing, ergonomic correction, graded reconditioning, and return-to-function programming—especially valuable after motor vehicle accidents, falls, or work injuries.
- Regenerative PRP Therapy: Ultrasound-guided preparation and injection of autologous platelet-rich plasma, concentrated with growth factors (PDGF, TGF-?, VEGF, and others) to stimulate tissue repair, reduce inflammation, promote angiogenesis, and support healing in tendons, ligaments, joints, and soft tissues. PRP is particularly useful for chronic degenerative or post-injury conditions that have not fully resolved with conservative care alone.
- Psychosocial Support and Chronic Pain Resilience: Patient education, coping strategies, cognitive-behavioral approaches, and resource navigation to address fear-avoidance, improve self-efficacy, and support long-term function.
This integrated model lets us match the right therapy to the dominant pain mechanism, minimize unnecessary opioid exposure, and elevate patient outcomes through coordinated, patient-centered care.
Understanding Pain Through the Biopsychosocial Model
Chronic pain is not merely a signal from damaged tissues. The International Association for the Study of Pain defines pain as an unpleasant sensory and emotional experience associated with, or resembling, actual or potential tissue damage. This definition underscores the interplay of biological, psychological, and social factors (Raja et al., 2020).
Key dimensions we assess:
- Biological factors: Tissue injury or degeneration, inflammation, nerve compression or irritation, altered biomechanics, and impaired healing.
- Psychological factors: Anxiety, depression, fear-avoidance, catastrophizing, and prior trauma history.
- Social factors: Caregiver support, financial or work strain, and social isolation.
Chronic pain affects approximately 21% of U.S. adults, with higher rates among those with musculoskeletal conditions, post-injury states, and neuropathic features; a substantial proportion report moderate to severe pain that limits daily activities and quality of life (Rikard et al., 2023). Recognizing this multidimensional reality helps us tailor multimodal strategies that relieve symptoms, restore function, and build resilience.
Total Pain: A Practical Framework for Comprehensive Assessment
I anchor evaluations in the concept of total pain—physical, psychological, social, and spiritual/existential components that intertwine to shape the lived experience. When reported pain seems disproportionate to visible structural findings, this cues us to screen for:
- Depression, anxiety, or fear-avoidance behaviors
- Sleep disruption and central sensitization
- Caregiver strain or social isolation
- Metabolic or nutritional factors affecting tissue health and pain thresholds
Psychological distress amplifies autonomic arousal, increases muscle guarding, disrupts sleep, and heightens central sensitization—mechanisms that intensify pain perception. Our team collaborates with mental health clinicians, rehabilitation specialists, and other providers to address these dimensions. Integrating these supports often transforms pain trajectories by calming limbic overactivity and restoring descending inhibitory control.
Classifying Pain: Nociceptive vs. Neuropathic, Acute vs. Chronic
The most pivotal step in selecting effective therapy is precise classification by mechanism, duration, and syndrome.
- Nociceptive pain: Activation of peripheral nociceptors by tissue injury, inflammation, or mechanical stress.
- Somatic: From skin, muscle, bone, joint, tendon, or ligament (e.g., whiplash, osteoarthritis, tendinopathy, facet or discogenic pain). Often sharp, aching, or throbbing and relatively well localized.
- Visceral-referred: Deep, diffuse, or referred patterns that can complicate musculoskeletal presentations.
- Neuropathic pain: Aberrant signaling from damaged or compressed nerves. Described as burning, tingling, numbness, electric shocks, or shooting—common in radiculopathy/sciatica, peripheral nerve entrapment, post-traumatic neuralgia, or mixed presentations after injury.
- Acute vs. chronic duration:
- Acute pain (<3 months) typically aligns with recent injury or procedural trauma; short-term analgesia may be appropriate while addressing the driver.
- Chronic pain (>3 months) often reflects central sensitization, nervous system plasticity, guarding patterns, and incomplete tissue healing; long-term opioid therapy carries risks and frequently underperforms compared with multimodal approaches.
Why classification matters: Neuropathic or mixed pain rarely responds well to opioids alone, while gabapentinoids, SNRIs, and regenerative options (such as PRP for associated tissue pathology) more effectively target underlying mechanisms. Chronic post-injury pain benefits from early pivots to reconditioning, nerve-calming strategies, biomechanical correction, and regenerative support.
How Integrative Chiropractic Care Combined with PRP Therapy Fits Into Modern Pain Management
As a chiropractor, I target the biomechanical and neuromuscular drivers that amplify pain signals. Pain alters movement patterns—guarding, asymmetry, compensation—that perpetuate nociception, tissue stress, and delayed healing. My goals are to restore motion, decompress irritated structures, normalize afferent input, reduce central sensitization, and create an optimal mechanical environment for tissue repair.
Core chiropractic strategies:
- Spinal and extremity adjustments: Improve joint mechanics, reduce aberrant proprioception, offload hypertonic muscles, and modulate segmental processing in the spinal cord to support descending inhibition.
- Myofascial release and soft-tissue techniques: Break taut bands, improve fascial glide, restore perfusion, and clear sensitizing metabolites. This reduces trigger point reactivity and pain referral.
- Neuromuscular re-education and posture correction: Retrain motor patterns, stabilize kinetic chains, and prevent recurrence by addressing upstream mechanics.
- Breathing mechanics and diaphragm training: Optimize thoracic and cervical stabilization, enhance lymphatic flow, and reduce sympathetic tone.
PRP therapy complements chiropractic care beautifully. While adjustments and soft-tissue work correct mechanics and reduce nociceptive bombardment, PRP delivers concentrated autologous growth factors directly to damaged tendons, ligaments, joints, or soft tissues to stimulate collagen synthesis, modulate inflammation, and accelerate healing. Chiropractic ensures proper alignment and loading so that the biological repair stimulated by PRP is not undermined by compensatory patterns or ongoing mechanical stress. This synergy is especially powerful for chronic tendinopathies, post-traumatic ligamentous laxity, degenerative joint conditions, and mixed pain presentations where both structure and function need attention.
Common Chronic Pain Syndromes and Evidence-Based Management
I see several recurring presentations in personal injury, post-traumatic, and degenerative care. Each has distinct pathophysiology that guides specific interventions.
Chronic Musculoskeletal Nociceptive Pain from Injury and Degeneration
This includes osteoarthritis, tendinopathy, ligamentous instability, facet-mediated pain, and discogenic pain—often following motor vehicle accidents, repetitive strain, or age-related wear. Pain is typically aching or sharp with mechanical aggravation.
Management pillars:
- Chiropractic adjustments and mobilization to restore joint play, reduce aberrant loading, and improve proprioception.
- PRP injections (ultrasound-guided) to introduce growth factors that promote tissue repair and reduce local inflammation—particularly useful in tendons, ligaments, and joints showing poor healing response.
- Rehabilitation focused on strengthening stabilizers, improving load distribution, and graded return to activity.
- Functional medicine support (nutrient repletion, anti-inflammatory nutrition) to optimize the healing environment.
This combination addresses both the mechanical dysfunction and the biological repair deficit.
Neuropathic Pain from Nerve Compression or Trauma
Common examples include lumbar or cervical radiculopathy (sciatica), thoracic outlet or peripheral entrapments, and post-traumatic neuralgia. Symptoms often include burning, shooting, or electric qualities, sometimes with sensory changes or weakness.
Management pillars:
- Chiropractic care emphasizing decompression techniques, segmental mobilization, and posture/neck or core stabilization to reduce mechanical compression and improve nerve gliding.
- Neuropathic agents (gabapentinoids, SNRIs) titrated carefully when indicated.
- Functional medicine: B-vitamin repletion, blood sugar optimization, and sleep support for nerve health.
- PRP as an adjunct in select cases to support perineural or surrounding soft-tissue healing, reduce adhesions, and address concurrent myofascial or joint contributors (evidence supports use in mixed or degenerative spinal presentations).
The DN4 questionnaire helps objectively identify neuropathic features even in mixed syndromes, guiding appropriate adjuvant therapy.
Chronic Post-Traumatic Pain and Guarding Syndromes
After significant trauma (MVAs, falls, sports injuries), patients may develop persistent pain from incomplete tissue healing, scar adhesions, altered biomechanics, central sensitization, and fear-avoidance. Rib, chest wall, shoulder, or spinal regions are frequent sites.
Our integrative approach:
- Medical oversight for safety and comorbidity management.
- Chiropractic and soft-tissue work (including scar mobility) to restore motion and reduce guarding.
- PRP for refractory ligamentous, tendinous, or joint pathology to accelerate regenerative healing.
- Graded rehabilitation with activity pacing and education on expected transient flares during reconditioning.
- Psychosocial support to break fear-avoidance cycles.
Early multimodal intervention helps prevent entrenchment and reduces reliance on long-term medications.
Myofascial Pain Syndrome
Trigger points in taut muscle bands produce localized tenderness, referred pain, and twitch responses. Physiological drivers include motor endplate dysfunction, localized ischemia, metabolite accumulation (substance P, bradykinin, CGRP), and central sensitization with convergent dorsal horn input.
Diagnosis integrates palpation of taut bands, reproduction of familiar pain, and recognition of referral patterns (Travell & Simons framework). We first rule out sinister or systemic contributors.
Integrative treatment:
- Chiropractic soft-tissue release, adjustments, and neuromuscular re-education to normalize mechanics and perfusion.
- Rehabilitation: Gentle lengthening, postural strengthening, and cardiovascular conditioning to improve tissue oxygenation and recalibrate central processing.
- Noninvasive modalities: TENS, acupuncture or dry needling, kinesio taping, and low-level laser/infrared for autonomic calming and circulation.
- PRP in select refractory cases involving associated tendon or ligamentous attachments/entheses contributing to the myofascial pattern, supporting structural healing while manual therapies address the muscular component.
Correcting biomechanics and local physiology reduces both peripheral and central amplification.
Diagnostic Precision: The DN4 Questionnaire for Neuropathic Features
We incorporate the DN4 questionnaire to help identify neuropathic signatures. It demonstrates strong psychometrics (sensitivity near 83%, specificity about 90%) and performs well in radiculopathy, entrapment neuropathies, and post-traumatic or mixed pain syndromes. A score> 4 supports documentation of neuropathic features and informs use of evidence-supported adjuvant analgesics or regenerative adjuncts.
Pharmacologic Strategy: Multimodal, Low-Dose Synergy
I emphasize combining agents at lower doses that act on different nodes of the pain pathway. This enhances analgesia while minimizing side effects.
Key classes:
- Gabapentinoids (gabapentin, pregabalin): Calm hyperexcitable neurons via calcium channel modulation. Start low, titrate gradually, and adjust for renal function.
- SNRIs (duloxetine, venlafaxine): Modulate descending inhibitory pathways. Duloxetine has robust evidence in chronic pain; monitor for common side effects.
- TCAs (e.g., nortriptyline): Used cautiously at low doses due to anticholinergic and other risks; reserved for select cases.
Adjuncts:
- Topical agents (lidocaine patches, topical NSAIDs): Localize relief with minimal systemic burden—ideal for focal pain.
- Short-course corticosteroids: For acute inflammatory flares or nerve compression, used judiciously.
- Regenerative PRP therapy: For appropriate candidates with identifiable tissue pathology (tendons, ligaments, joints), PRP offers a biologic approach that directly addresses structural contributors, often reducing long-term medication dependence when paired with chiropractic and rehabilitation.
Rehabilitation and Functional Medicine: Building Durable Outcomes
Movement is medicine. Deconditioning worsens pain; structured reconditioning restores capacity and resilience—especially critical after PRP procedures to guide tissue remodeling under controlled loads.
Rehabilitation priorities:
- Stretching and mobility work to lengthen shortened tissues and reduce trigger activity.
- Postural and core strengthening to share loads efficiently.
- Cardiovascular conditioning to enhance microcirculation and endogenous analgesia.
Functional medicine lens:
- Nutrient repletion (vitamin D, iron/ferritin, B vitamins) tied to myalgias, neuropathic stress, and healing capacity.
- Sleep and stress physiology optimization to reduce sympathetic tone and support repair.
- Anti-inflammatory nutrition to lower systemic cytokine load.
Combining physiologic restoration with mechanical normalization and regenerative support addresses both cause and consequence of chronic pain.
Medication Safety and Special Considerations
Chronic pain care often involves polypharmacy and unique risks. Internal Medicine oversight ensures safety:
- Acetaminophen: Limit chronic daily dose as appropriate; monitor liver function.
- NSAIDs: Use cautiously with renal, GI, cardiac, and thromboembolic risk screening; celecoxib may be preferred in select lower-risk cases.
- Opioids: Emphasize lowest effective dose, frequent reassessment, and clear taper plans when used short-term.
- Avoid benzodiazepine–opioid combinations due to increased risks.
PRP candidacy screening includes ruling out active infection, certain hematologic issues, or other contraindications.
Patient Education, Psychosocial Care, and Preemptive Support
Education is one of our most powerful tools. I explain diagnoses plainly, map pain patterns, and clarify why each therapy (including PRP timing and post-procedure expectations) is chosen. Setting realistic expectations—pain may transiently flare during rehabilitation or tissue remodeling phases—builds trust and adherence.
Psychosocial integration:
- CBT-informed coping strategies to reduce limbic hyperreactivity and break fear-avoidance.
- Support for meaning, community, and practical resources.
Preemptive strategies (topical analgesia, calm environments, pacing education) reduce procedural or flare-related escalation.
Clinical Observations From My Practice
From work with personal injury, post-traumatic, and chronic musculoskeletal cases in El Paso:
- Patients with chronic whiplash or post-MVA neck, shoulder, and thoracic pain with radiation or myofascial overlay benefit from cautious ROM restoration, cervical/thoracic stabilization, scapular strengthening, and posture work; TENS and soft-tissue techniques reduce sustained hypertonicity. PRP is valuable when ligamentous laxity or facet irritation persists.
- Individuals with chronic low back or leg pain from discogenic, radicular, or degenerative changes respond well to spinal decompression techniques, core stabilization, and PRP targeting annular or facet pathology in suitable candidates, followed by structured rehab.
- Desk-bound or postural-strain patients with SCM, upper trapezius, and levator trigger points, plus tension patterns, improve with chiropractic adjustments, ergonomics, micro-breaks, and self-care tools (Theracane); PRP helps when chronic tendinopathy or entheseal irritation is present.
- Patients with systemic factors (low vitamin D, iron/ferritin) or slower healing show more consistent gains in tissue response, pain reduction, and function when nutrient repletion is combined with chiropractic care and, when indicated, PRP.
Learn more from ongoing clinical perspectives: Personal Injury Doctor Group: https://personalinjurydoctorgroup.com/ LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/dralexjimenez/
Bringing It All Together: A Practical Care Pathway
Our stepwise approach:
- Assessment: Classify pain by mechanism, duration, and syndrome. Use DN4 for neuropathic features. Screen psychosocial, systemic (thyroid, vitamin D, iron, inflammation), and biomechanical contributors. Evaluate regenerative candidacy (imaging, failed conservative care, suitable tissue targets) under Internal Medicine oversight for safety.
- Foundational Interventions: Begin rehabilitation (stretching, posture strengthening, cardiovascular conditioning). Initiate integrative chiropractic care (adjustments, soft tissue, neuromuscular re-education, breathing mechanics). Introduce home tools (TENS, Theracane, kinesio taping, posture supports). Educate thoroughly on diagnosis, rationale, pacing, and expected course—including PRP phases if planned.
- Adjunct Therapies: Consider neuropathic agents with careful titration when indicated. Use topicals for focal pain; short-course steroids for acute flares. Employ acupuncture, low-level laser/infrared, or dry needling as appropriate. Introduce ultrasound-guided PRP for qualifying MSK pathology (tendons, ligaments, joints) to support biological repair.
- Supportive Care: Psychosocial support, CBT-informed strategies, functional medicine (nutrient repletion, sleep hygiene, anti-inflammatory nutrition).
- Follow-Up and Evolution: Track validated pain and function scores. Progress loads carefully—especially post-PRP during inflammatory and proliferative healing phases. Adjust pharmacology and regenerative plan based on response and safety labs. Maintain open communication; education remains the cornerstone.
A New Paradigm for Chronic Pain: Smarter, Integrative, and Patient-Centered
Chronic pain management has shifted from an opioid-centric model to an integrative, multimodal approach rooted in diagnostic precision, biomechanical optimization, and regenerative support. By combining Internal Medicine oversight with integrative chiropractic care, PRP therapy, functional medicine, and rehabilitation, we can reduce reliance on high-risk medications, address mechanical, inflammatory, neuropathic, and tissue-healing drivers at their source, and empower patients to reclaim function and quality of life—whether recovering from injury or managing long-standing degenerative or post-traumatic conditions.
References
- The revised International Association for the Study of Pain definition of pain: concepts, challenges, and compromises (Raja et al., 2020). Pain, 161(9), 1976–1982.
- Chronic Pain Among Adults — United States, 2019–2021 (Rikard et al., 2023). MMWR, 72(15), 379–385.
- Comparison of pain syndromes associated with nervous or somatic lesions and development of a new neuropathic pain diagnostic questionnaire (DN4) (Bouhassira et al., 2005). Pain, 114(1–2), 29–36.
- Antidepressants for pain management in adults with chronic pain: A network meta-analysis (Birkinshaw et al., 2023). Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews, 5(5), CD014682.
- Trigger points: Diagnosis and management (Alvarez & Rockwell, 2023). American Family Physician, 107(3), 279–286.
- Acupuncture for chronic pain: Individual patient data meta-analysis (Vickers et al., 2012). JAMA Internal Medicine.
- CDC Guideline for Prescribing Opioids for Chronic Pain (CDC, 2022).
SEO tags: Integrative pain management, chiropractic care and PRP therapy, platelet-rich plasma injections, regenerative medicine, chronic musculoskeletal pain, neuropathic pain, radiculopathy, sciatica, post-traumatic pain, myofascial pain syndrome, trigger points, ultrasound-guided injections, multimodal therapy, non-opioid analgesia, gabapentin, pregabalin, duloxetine, DN4 questionnaire, functional medicine, rehabilitation, Internal Medicine oversight, Dr. Alex Jimenez, Dr. Maria Guadalupe Cardenas, Injury Medical Clinic PA, Mission Plaza Injury Medical Clinic, El Paso Texas, personal injury care, evidence-based integrative medicine, TENS, acupuncture, kinesio taping, posture correction, tendinopathy, degenerative joint pain
Post Disclaimers
General Disclaimer, Licenses and Board Certifications *
Professional Scope of Practice *
The information herein on "Non-Opioid Strategies for Chronic Pain Management" is not intended to replace a one-on-one relationship with a qualified health care 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 Multi-State board-certified Family Practice Nurse Practitioner (FNP-BC) and Chiropractor (DC), presents insights on how our multidisciplinary 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 on this site and on our family practice-based chiromed.com site, focusing on naturally restoring health for patients of all ages.
Our areas of multidisciplinary 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 multidisciplinary, focusing on musculoskeletal and 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 licensure jurisdiction. We use functional health & wellness protocols to treat and support care for musculoskeletal injuries or disorders.
Our videos, posts, topics, and insights address clinical matters and issues that directly or indirectly relate to 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 upon request to regulatory boards and the public.
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]
Multidisciplinary Licensing & Board Certifications:
Licensed as a Doctor of Chiropractic (DC) in Texas & New Mexico*
Texas DC License #: TX5807, Verified: TX5807
New Mexico DC License #: NM-DC2182, Verified: NM-DC2182
Multi-State Advanced Practice Registered Nurse (APRN*) in Texas & Multi-States
Multi-state Compact APRN License by Endorsement (42 States)
Texas APRN License #: 1191402, Verified: 1191402 *
Florida APRN License #: 11043890, Verified: APRN11043890 *
Colorado License #: C-APN.0105610-C-NP, Verified: C-APN.0105610-C-NP
New York License #: N25929, Verified N25929
License Verification Link: Nursys License Verifier
* Prescriptive Authority Authorized
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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