Precision, patience, and the time it takes to do this well.
Dr. Danny Clark is a naturopathic physician and Director of Orthobiologics at Protea Performance Center in Tempe, Arizona. His practice is built on listening to his patients, taking the time to get the diagnosis right and delivering precise, high-quality orthobiologic injections.
Treat the fire, not the alarm.
Most pain treatments go after the signal: the inflammation, the nerve, the symptom. Quiet the signal, the pain may improve. However, if the underlying tissue is damaged, the signal will come back.
A different approach is to address the damage directly. PRP, bone marrow concentrate, and nerve hydrodissections are designed to stimulate the body's own healing response at the site of injury. That work requires precise diagnostics, quality orthobiologics, and time, because healing doesn't happen in a fifteen-minute appointment.
"We take our time to get it right. Shortcuts never lead to long term results."
Procedural depth, not breadth.
- Licensed Naturopathic Doctor (ND)
- Director of Orthobiologics at Protea Performance Center
- Residency-trained in regenerative medicine
- Ultrasound-focused procedural training
- Research-oriented and data-driven clinical practice
Regenerative medicine and the field of orthobiologics are evolving very quickly. We pride ourselves on staying ahead of the curve and adopting the most up-to-date scientific protocols to help you heal.
Four principles the work doesn't move without.
Diagnosis first
We take the time to evaluate all patients thoroughly. Understanding your pain and getting to the correct diagnosis is a critical first step.
Comprehensive treatments
Pain is rarely isolated. Movement patterns, surrounding musculature, and joint mechanics all contribute. Treatment addresses the full functional unit, not just the loudest structure.
Optimize biology
Healing requires the right environment — nutritional sufficiency, hormonal balance, inflammation management, nervous system regulation. Injections don't work in isolation.
Long-term thinking
The goal is to reduce recurrence, improve tissue quality, restore function, and extend longevity. Short-term relief that trades away tissue health isn't the trade we make.