Frequency-Specific Micro-current (FSM) is a noninvasive, painless therapy that uses low-level electrical currents—similar to the body’s natural signals—to support healing and reduce pain. By targeting specific tissues with precise frequencies, FSM promotes repair, reduces inflammation, and can help break down scar tissue. FDA-approved, FSM treats conditions like arthritis, fibromyalgia, sports injuries, and tendinopathy. It may also support recovery from migraines, burns, concussions, kidney stones, and shingles. Practitioners like Danielle offer holistic, personalized care plans to address the root causes of imbalance.

The frequencies appear to change a variety of conditions and tissues and change pain and function in a large number of clinical conditions. FSM is especially effective at treating nerve and muscle pain, inflammation and scar tissue. Please click the research page for published papers on FSM.
There is no treatment that is 100% effective for every person even if that treatment has worked on the condition for other people. FSM is no exception, but it is painless and it might help! FSM is generally not a time time treatment, especially if your condition is chronic for many years. It stimulates the body’s natural ability to heal so that healing can happen faster, but often more than one visit is necessary to fully heal or maintain results. We will talk about a treatment plan during your visit.
Here is a short list of conditions that we can treat with FSM. This list is ever expanding:
- Acute (sudden) and chronic (long-term) musculoskeletal injuries
- Acute and chronic neuropathic (nerve) pain
- Arthritis
- Asthma
- Burns
- Chronic fracture and bone pain
- Concussions
- Diabetic neuropathy
- Disc injuries
- Disc injuries/discogenic- and facet-based pain
- Ehlers-Danlos Syndrome
- Fibromyalgia
- Headaches including Migranes
- Irritable bowel syndrome
- Kidney stones
- Nerve Pain
- Neuromas (overgrowth and scarring to a nerve after an injury)
- Plantar fasciitis (pain in the heel and foot)
- Scars and adhesions
- Shingles
- Sports injuries
- Tendinopathy (inflammation and/or swelling of the tendon)
- Torticollis (the head is tilted to one side)
- Viscerally-referred pain
- Wounds
Here’s a video published by PBS on FSM


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