Syntruvia in Grantville operates an integrative acupuncture and sports medicine practice at 4780 Mission Gorge Place Suite C in San Diego's 92120 ZIP, blending traditional Chinese medicine with functional medicine, exercise science, and Western nutritional assessment. The registered trademark practice (Syntruvia®) specializes in lower back pain, muscle and joint dysfunction, chronic conditions, and preventive care, using an intake process that evaluates both Eastern diagnostic markers and Western biomechanical indicators. Treatment modalities span acupuncture, Chinese herbal medicine, therapeutic massage, and exercise-based rehabilitation protocols — an integrative combination that positions the practice alongside the combat-sport training community at 10th Planet San Diego Jiu Jitsu and Training Center on the same Mission Gorge corridor, where grappling athletes generate a steady flow of joint, tendon, and soft-tissue complaints. The Mission Gorge Place address places Syntruvia in Grantville's medical-office cluster near the I-8 and Fairmount Avenue interchange, within two miles of SDSU and the broader College Area health-services network. The clinic's medical anthropology training layer adds a cultural-competency dimension to patient intake, enabling treatment plans that account for dietary traditions, movement patterns, and health beliefs across the ethnically diverse population that the Mission Gorge corridor serves. Appointment scheduling runs Tuesday and Thursday as full-day blocks and Monday and Wednesday as morning sessions, with credit and debit card processing and wheelchair-accessible entry at the suite. The sports medicine designation extends to recreational athletes managing overuse injuries from trail running, cycling, and climbing at Grotto Climbing & Yoga in Grantville, where route-climbing load patterns produce the finger-flexor and shoulder impingement cases that motor-point acupuncture targets. Syntruvia's integrative model treats the exercise-science component as equal to the needle work, prescribing corrective movement sequences alongside meridian-based protocols to prevent injury recurrence rather than only addressing acute symptoms.