Jeanne Marais Physiotherapy

Jeanne Marais Physiotherapy Private physiotherapy for relief & rehabilitation. McKenzie Credentialed clinician. Medical aid rates Private Physiotherapy practice - Dunkeld West.

Medical Aid rates. Secure parking. Qualified therapists including manipulations, dry needling and strapping.

10 reasons to either hold off on having imaging or to take what yours showed with a punch of salt an a deep breath.Dont ...
10/06/2026

10 reasons to either hold off on having imaging or to take what yours showed with a punch of salt an a deep breath.

Dont let your internal grey hairs and wrinkles determine your destiny. We all have them and they are rarely related to your symptoms 🤗

Degeneration and 'syndromes', bulges and arthritis, mishapen bones and chronic muscle tears are seen all over with no co...
05/06/2026

Degeneration and 'syndromes', bulges and arthritis, mishapen bones and chronic muscle tears are seen all over with no confirmed association to a symptom of any kind - because we see them in the completely asymptomatic population 👌🏼 They are normal and should never be used as a reason to be ushered into theatre.

You deserve to know if your symptoms have a structural origin before the structure is altered / removed / injured further (to stimulate healing 🤨) / replaced in the hopes of gaining relief 😵‍💫🤗

We can help you there 👍🏼 and if it IS structural, we'll support you through the decision making process because you'll typically still have a choice between surgery and conservative management 🙂

I’ve seen it time and time again throughout my career: a new patient walks into my office with knee pain, shoulder pain, or an MRI showing a meniscus tear, rotator cuff tear, arthritis, or “degeneration.” The implication is often immediate but that something is damaged, worn out, and in need of fixing.

But pain is rarely that simple.
One of the hardest and most important lessons I’ve learned in 30 years as an orthopedic surgeon is that imaging does not reliably tell us what hurts. Structural changes on an MRI do not automatically mean there is tissue damage requiring surgery. In fact, many of the so-called “abnormalities” we see on scans are often age-appropriate findings, not a sentence about your future.

I’ve seen far too many people rush into surgery because of frightening words on an X-ray report. But imaging alone should never guide the entire decision-making process. I run with people who have “bone-on-bone” knee X-rays and remain active, strong, and functional. There is far more to the story than what appears on a scan.

That realization changed the way I think about osteoarthritis. In the summer of 2025, I published a book here on Substack about knee osteoarthritis (OA), built from decades of clinical experience and conversations with thousands of patients living with knee pain. This series challenges the outdated “wear and tear” narrative and the myth that arthritis means you need to stop moving and start resting.

Instead, it explores what the evidence actually shows: how metabolic health, strength training, movement, recovery, and lifestyle profoundly influence pain, function, and long-term outcomes. It walks readers through the treatment process step by step and helps them understand if and when surgery should truly be considered.

If you’ve been told you’re “bone on bone,” that your joints are “worn out,” or that you need to stop being active, this is where I would encourage you to start.

The link is here: https://howardluksmd.substack.com/p/knee-osteoarthritis-book?utm_source=publication-search

It's Crazy Socks Day!RAising awareness of healthcare workers' mental health.Today is a reminder that those who care for ...
05/06/2026

It's Crazy Socks Day!
RAising awareness of healthcare workers' mental health.
Today is a reminder that those who care for others may need support too 🤗

I cringe whenever I hear that a tendon was deemed to require rest. No! No! No!Load it! Just learn how 👌🏼
26/05/2026

I cringe whenever I hear that a tendon was deemed to require rest. No! No! No!
Load it! Just learn how 👌🏼

Tendons respond to load. Most people already know this intuitively. What many do not realize is that tendons respond very poorly to prolonged rest, especially the kind of rest that leads to deconditioning from avoiding movement entirely.

This is one of the most consistent findings in tendon biology research, and yet it remains one of the most misunderstood concepts in everyday practice.

Complete rest weakens tendons.

Appropriate loading does the opposite. It stimulates collagen synthesis, improves tendon organization, and gradually rebuilds the tissue capacity needed to tolerate daily life and exercise again. Tendons heal through progressive loading, not through being completely protected from movement forever.

And yet, many people immediately strap, brace, or immobilize the area because they are afraid something serious is happening or worried they will make it worse. Sometimes temporary support is necessary if symptoms are severe, but prolonged avoidance often creates a different problem: the tendon becomes less capable of handling stress once normal activity returns.

In many cases, the tendon heals better when it continues moving and receives the right amount of progressive load.

I go much deeper into tendon rehab, loading principles, pain science, and evidence-based recovery strategies on my subscriber page. If you want the full discussion and practical guidance, the link is in the comments.

A bright and busy Sunday morning which left the edge of Delta Park a little neater.Thanks to the rest of the team and RH...
17/05/2026

A bright and busy Sunday morning which left the edge of Delta Park a little neater.
Thanks to the rest of the team and RHS for the use of the brush cutters!
Result in the comments 😎

Helping out as a model today
17/05/2026

Helping out as a model today

Logical insights into why release / massage / needles will never address the cause. They provide temporary relief but we...
07/05/2026

Logical insights into why release / massage / needles will never address the cause. They provide temporary relief but we can and must do better 💪🏼

From a physiologic standpoint, higher-intensity work increases both mechanical load and metabolic stress per session. Ground reaction forces rise with speed, the rate of force development increases, and tissue loading becomes more rapid and less forgiving. At the same time, metabolic demand shifts toward greater glycolytic contribution, increasing lactate production, sympathetic activation, and overall recovery burden.

The cardiovascular system adapts quickly to these stresses, which often gives my patients a false sense of readiness. Connective tissues, however, adapt more slowly. Tendons require a long duration of progressive loading to increase stiffness and tolerance. Bone responds over time to impact through remodeling. Cartilage health is influenced by load, but also by the surrounding muscular system that distributes that load.

When intensity is introduced before these adaptations occur, the system becomes unbalanced. Patients often present with achilles tendinopathy, patellofemoral pain, proximal hamstring irritation, or bone stress injuries after a relatively short period of increased training intensity. The onset is described as sudden, but the underlying issue is a mismatch between applied load and tissue capacity that developed over time.

From a programming perspective, most recreational athletes benefit from a distribution in which the majority of training occurs at lower intensities, with limited, intentional exposure to higher-intensity work. This allows for continued development of aerobic capacity while preserving the ability to recover and maintain consistency.

The clinical goal is not to reduce intensity, but to ensure it is introduced into a system that is prepared to tolerate it.

06/05/2026

MOVE!!! 🤨🤨🤨

🫡👌🏼😎

I expect we'll soon have confirmation that osteoarthritis develops primarily due to the deconditioning caused by sedentary hours (with or without bursts or exercise to keep fit in the modern working environment) than the old wear and tear which we already know wasn't ever the issue.

Stop fearing movement after a diagnosis of arthritis. Start using your movement system (that's why we have muscles and joints, right?) more regularly and consistently to restore the health of your movement system 👌🏼

The McKenzie journey takes clinicians from knowing a bunch of things to excellent clinical reasoning. Worth every minute...
05/03/2026

The McKenzie journey takes clinicians from knowing a bunch of things to excellent clinical reasoning. Worth every minute and cent 👌🏼
Physios, Chiros, Osteos and Doctors can all attend

Hands down the best thing I've done for my patients 🤗 and my brain 🤩

https://www.instagram.com/reel/DVgoKWpCNRO/?igsh=MXh6bTlma3Z4dTBydg==

Changing the terminology to usual findings as we've already started doing with spinal degeneration (normal age related c...
25/02/2026

Changing the terminology to usual findings as we've already started doing with spinal degeneration (normal age related changes 👌🏼) will save countless patients from unnecessary surgeries and crippling anxiety for some who do not have access to surgery.

Keep surgeries for the likes of visceral organs, acute MSK injuries and cosmetics.

Chronic MSK (musculoskeletal conditions) don't belong here 🫣

Address

The Valley Centre Offices, 396 Jan Smuts Avenue
Craighall Park

Opening Hours

Monday 08:00 - 18:00
Tuesday 07:00 - 17:00
Wednesday 08:00 - 18:00
Thursday 08:00 - 17:00
Friday 07:00 - 14:00

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