Abstract In this educational post, I walk you through how we use modern, evidence-based laser therapy safely and effectively for spine and joint pain in a multidisciplinary, medically directed chiropractic setting. I explain why patient comfort and positioning matter, how we calibrate and dose based on energy density, and how robotic and handheld laser delivery can be combined to target joints, fascia, and trigger points in a single, seamless workflow. I then map the mechanisms of action across acute and chronic timelines—highlighting neuromodulation, inflammatory modulation, microcirculation, and mitochondrial responses—and present how these physiologic changes integrate with chiropractic care, functional medicine, rehabilitation, and orthobiologic strategies such as platelet-rich plasma (PRP). Throughout this post, I showcase how our team at Injury Medical Clinic PA (Mission Plaza Injury Medical Clinic) in El Paso, Texas, aligns chiropractic care (Dr. Alex Jimenez, DC, APRN, FNP-BC, ...
Why Hot Weather Makes Driving More Dangerous El Paso summers can be intense. Triple-digit heat is not just uncomfortable. It can also make driving more dangerous. Scientific studies and safety reports show that extreme heat and heat waves are associated with an increased risk of motor vehicle accidents. Heat affects the driver, the vehicle, and the road environment simultaneously. Research on extreme hot days shows that crashes can increase when temperatures rise, especially when heat stress affects attention, reaction time, and decision-making (Hsu, 2026; Gu et al., 2025). Safety reviews also note that heat can make drivers tired, impatient, dehydrated, and less focused (Valentine, 2023). In a city like El Paso, where summer heat can last for long stretches, this becomes an important road safety concern. The danger is not only about one hot afternoon. It is about how heat builds up in the body and in the vehicle. A driver may start the day feeling fine, then become tired, thirsty, irr...