Cryotherapy in Oakville | Cold Therapy Physiotherapy | RCP Health
3
Cryotherapy Modalities
48 h
Optimal Acute Window
10–20
Minutes Per Application
50+
Conditions Supported
Understanding the Modality

What Is Cryotherapy — And Is It a Type of Physiotherapy?

Cryotherapy is a treatment modality, not a type of physiotherapy. It is a clinical tool your registered physiotherapist selects and integrates into a broader treatment plan — always alongside assessment, manual therapy, and active rehabilitation at RCP Health.

The term cryotherapy derives from the Greek kryo (cold) and therapeia (treatment). In clinical physiotherapy, it refers to the controlled application of cold to living tissue to achieve specific therapeutic outcomes: reducing pain, swelling, and inflammation.

Cold application causes vasoconstriction — narrowing of blood vessels — which limits blood flow to the injured area, slows tissue metabolism, reduces inflammatory mediator activity, and desensitizes local pain receptors (nociceptors). The result is measurable reduction in acute pain and swelling.

At RCP Health in Oakville, cryotherapy modalities are selected based on your specific injury type, tissue involved, stage of healing, and contraindication profile. Your physiotherapist makes an evidence-based clinical decision about which cold modality — if any — is appropriate for your assessment findings.

Cryotherapy is not a type of physiotherapy — it is one of several modalities your physiotherapist may integrate into your plan. At RCP Health, no patient receives cryotherapy as a passive-only session.

Clinical Decision Making

When Does Your Physiotherapist Use Cryotherapy?

The decision to apply cryotherapy — and which modality — is always made by your RCP Health physiotherapist based on your tissue healing stage, injury type, and clinical presentation findings.

Phase 1

Acute Phase (0–72 Hours)

  • Active swelling and inflammation present
  • Sharp, localized pain at the injury site
  • Tissue warmth, redness, and bruising visible
  • Cold packs and cold compression are primary choices
  • Goal: limit secondary tissue damage and control oedema
Phase 2

Subacute Phase (3–21 Days)

  • Swelling and pain beginning to resolve
  • Residual oedema limiting range of motion
  • Tissue repair and regeneration underway
  • Cold packs or ice massage for targeted relief
  • Goal: manage residual swelling and restore movement
Flare-Up

Chronic Flare-Up Management

  • Tendonitis or arthritis flare with acute pain
  • Post-exercise soreness and joint irritation
  • Localized swelling in a chronically irritated area
  • Ice massage for precise, localized cold application
  • Goal: calm flare, restore function, resume rehab
Cryotherapy Toolkit

3 Cryotherapy Modalities Used at RCP Health Oakville

Each modality applies cold in a distinct way. Your physiotherapist selects the most appropriate technique based on injury site, tissue depth, healing phase, and individual clinical goals.

01
Primary Modality

Cold Packs / Ice Packs

Gel cold packs or crushed ice in a protective cloth barrier applied over the injured area for 10–20 minutes. Cold packs reduce tissue temperature to the therapeutic range (10–15°C), triggering vasoconstriction, slowing inflammatory activity, and providing analgesic relief. The most widely used and evidence-supported cryotherapy modality in physiotherapy practice.

Used For

  • Acute muscle strains and ligament sprains
  • Joint swelling following sports injury
  • Post-surgical swelling management
  • Tendonitis and arthritic acute flare-ups
  • Bruising and soft-tissue contusions
02
Targeted Cold

Ice Massage

A frozen water cylinder applied directly to the skin in slow circular or stroking motions over a small, precisely defined area for 5–10 minutes. Ice massage achieves deeper and more rapid tissue cooling than a static pack, and the mechanical pressure of application additionally stimulates local circulation and can desensitize hypersensitive nerve endings at the treatment site.

Used For

  • Localized tendonitis — Achilles, patellar, elbow
  • Trigger point and myofascial desensitization
  • Superficial and localized muscle strains
  • Pre-cryokinetics — cold before active exercise
  • Scar tissue hypersensitivity and adhesions
03
Advanced Cold

Cold Compression Therapy

Combines simultaneous cold application and pneumatic compression in a single clinical device (e.g. cryo-cuff or compression sleeve). The compression layer augments the cold's vasoconstrictive effect by physically limiting oedema formation — providing superior swelling control compared to cold alone. Particularly effective immediately post-injury and post-surgery where fluid control is critical.

Used For

  • Immediate post-surgical swelling — knee, ankle, shoulder
  • Severe acute sprains with marked joint oedema
  • Post-fracture and orthopaedic rehabilitation
  • High-impact sports injury recovery
  • Ankle and knee joint effusion management
When to Seek Cryotherapy

Signs & Symptoms That May Indicate Cryotherapy

If you are experiencing any of the following, your RCP Health physiotherapist may incorporate a cryotherapy modality as part of your initial assessment and treatment plan.

Sudden onset of sharp, localized pain following an impact or awkward movement

Visible swelling or puffiness around a joint or limb within hours of injury

Warmth or heat radiating from the injured area — a sign of active tissue inflammation

Bruising or discolouration developing within 24–48 hours of the incident

Post-surgical swelling and pain in the days following orthopaedic procedures

Tendonitis flare — localized tendon pain, stiffness, and swelling after activity

Delayed muscle soreness and inflammation 24–48 hours after intense physical exertion

Chronic joint swelling that recurs with physical activity or prolonged weight-bearing

Persistent oedema in a limb more than 72 hours after a sprain or strain

Sports injury causing inability to bear weight or significant loss of range of motion

Arthritic joint flare with acute pain, redness, and active tissue inflammation

Post-exercise joint heat and swelling that does not resolve with rest alone

Related Conditions

Conditions Where Cryotherapy Is Used at RCP Health

Cryotherapy supports acute and subacute recovery across a broad range of musculoskeletal and soft-tissue conditions — always as one component of a complete physiotherapy treatment plan.

Your Treatment Journey

How RCP Health Integrates Cryotherapy Into Your Physiotherapy Plan

Cryotherapy is never applied in isolation — it is one purposeful step within a structured, individualized physiotherapy program designed entirely around your assessment findings and recovery goals.

01

Comprehensive Assessment

Your physiotherapist evaluates the injury, healing stage, pain level, and contraindications to determine whether cryotherapy is appropriate and which modality to apply.

02

Modality Selection

Cold pack, ice massage, or cold compression therapy is chosen based on your specific diagnosis, injury site, and clinical presentation.

03

Safe Application

The modality is applied with a protective barrier, monitored continuously, and adjusted for your skin response. Sessions run 5–20 minutes depending on modality.

04

Integrated Treatment

Cryotherapy is combined with manual therapy, therapeutic exercise, electrotherapy, and patient education for a complete and progressive recovery plan.

05

Progress Monitoring

Swelling, pain, and range of motion are tracked each session. Cryotherapy is phased out and replaced with active modalities as healing progresses.

Clinical Assessment

Assessment Tools & Outcome Measures

Before applying cryotherapy and throughout your rehabilitation, RCP Health physiotherapists use validated clinical tools to accurately assess your condition, select the right intervention, and objectively measure your progress.

Numeric Pain Rating Scale (NPRS / VAS)

Pain intensity scored 0–10 before and after each cryotherapy application, providing an objective measure of modality effectiveness and guiding ongoing treatment decisions.

Oedema & Circumference Measurement

Figure-of-eight tape measure and volumetric displacement assessments track swelling reduction across sessions, quantifying the clinical effect of cold pack and cold compression applications.

Goniometry — Range of Motion

Joint angle measurements document gains in mobility as swelling and pain resolve — particularly important in post-surgical and post-acute sprain recovery timelines.

PSFS / LEFS / DASH Functional Scales

Patient-Specific Functional Scale, Lower Extremity Functional Scale, and DASH questionnaires capture real-world functional recovery across different body regions and injury types.

Skin & Sensation Assessment

Light touch and temperature discrimination testing screens for impaired skin sensation before every cryotherapy application — eliminating risk of frostbite or cold injury at the treatment site.

Palpation & Tissue Assessment

Hands-on palpation identifies areas of point tenderness, tissue temperature asymmetry, and oedema depth to guide cryotherapy placement, pressure, and duration at every session.

Safety & Precautions

Contraindications & Safety Considerations

Cryotherapy is very safe when applied by a registered physiotherapist. Every RCP Health session begins with a full contraindication screen and skin sensation check. Protective barriers are always used between the cold source and your skin.

Raynaud's disease or syndrome
Cold hypersensitivity / urticaria
Peripheral vascular disease
Impaired skin sensation
Open wounds or active skin infection
Cryoglobulinaemia
Active malignancy at treatment site
Over regenerating peripheral nerves

✦ Why Choose RCP Health for Cryotherapy?

  • Registered Physiotherapists Only — All cryotherapy is applied exclusively by College of Physiotherapists of Ontario (CPO) registered practitioners. No unregulated staff.
  • Full Contraindication Screening — Every session begins with a skin sensation assessment and safety screen, eliminating risk of frostbite or cold injury at the treatment site.
  • Clinical-Grade Equipment — We use professional cold compression devices, clinical gel packs, and dedicated ice massage tools — not consumer-grade alternatives.
  • Active, Not Passive — Cryotherapy at RCP Health is always one component of an active rehabilitation plan. We do not offer passive-only treatment sessions.
  • WSIB, MVA & Extended Health Accepted — We accept most extended health benefit plans, WSIB, and Motor Vehicle Accident insurance claims for physiotherapy including modality-integrated treatment.
Common Questions

Frequently Asked Questions About Cryotherapy

Cryotherapy is a treatment modality — not a type of physiotherapy. It is a clinical tool applied by your registered physiotherapist as one component of a broader, individualized treatment plan. At RCP Health, cryotherapy is always combined with assessment, manual therapy, and active exercise — it is never a standalone passive session.

RCP Health uses three cryotherapy modalities: cold packs / ice packs (for broad area cold application), ice massage (for precise, localized cold with mechanical effect), and cold compression therapy (combining cold and pneumatic compression for superior oedema control). The appropriate modality is always selected by your physiotherapist based on your clinical assessment findings.

Cryotherapy is most effective in the acute phase of injury — generally within the first 48–72 hours — when active inflammation, swelling, and acute pain are present. It is also appropriate during tendonitis and arthritic flare-ups, in the days following orthopaedic surgery, and when managing subacute residual swelling after soft-tissue injuries.

Under physiotherapist guidance, cold packs are typically applied for 10–20 minutes with a protective cloth barrier between the pack and your skin. Ice massage sessions run 5–10 minutes over a focused area. Applying ice directly to skin or for longer than recommended risks frostbite — always follow your RCP Health physiotherapist's specific instructions for your injury.

Yes, cryotherapy is very safe when applied correctly by a registered physiotherapist. At RCP Health, a full contraindication screen and skin sensation check is performed before every cryotherapy session. Protective barriers are always placed between the cold source and your skin, and patients are monitored throughout. Properly supervised cryotherapy does not cause frostbite.

Cryotherapy at RCP Health is applied as part of your physiotherapy treatment session and is covered under most extended health benefit plans that include physiotherapy. We also accept WSIB and Motor Vehicle Accident (MVA) insurance claims. Contact our Oakville clinic or call 1-888-332-7372 for specific coverage details.

Find Us

Getting to RCP Health from Across the Region

Suite 304, 700 Dorval Drive, Oakville, ON — easily accessible from Oakville, Burlington, and Mississauga.

From Oakville

From Oakville Place Mall

Head west on Upper Middle Road, turn left onto Dorval Drive. RCP Health is at 700 Dorval Drive, Suite 304 — approximately 5 minutes.

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From Burlington

From Joseph Brant Hospital

Head north on Brant Street, take QEW East, exit at Dorval Drive North. RCP Health is at 700 Dorval Drive, Suite 304 — approximately 15 minutes.

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From Mississauga

From Square One Shopping Centre

Take Hurontario Street south to QEW West, continue to the Dorval Drive exit. RCP Health is at 700 Dorval Drive, Suite 304 — approximately 20 minutes.

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Ready to Control Your Pain and Swelling? Book Your Cryotherapy Assessment at RCP Health Oakville.