Arroyo Neuromuscular Integration

Spa & MassageVerified

About

Arroyo Neuromuscular Integration in Grantville operates a San Diego structural-integration practice from 6612 Mission Gorge Rd, near the intersection with Zion Ave, inside a multi-practitioner chiropractic office in the 92120 commercial corridor. Practitioner Louie Arroyo, CMT, built the practice around fascial manipulation rooted in the Rolfing tradition, systematically reorganizing the body's connective-tissue matrix through a progressive series of deep manual sessions. The technique addresses holding patterns caused by physical trauma, repetitive motion, and postural compensation, working layer by layer from superficial fascia to the deeper intrinsic structures surrounding the spine and pelvis. Combat-sport athletes training at 10th Planet San Diego Jiu Jitsu and Training Center in Grantville represent a consistent referral stream, as grappling produces joint-capsule restrictions and fascial adhesions that structural integration specifically targets. Clients typically progress through a multi-session protocol, with each visit targeting a different anatomical region — sleeve fascia in early sessions, core structures in later ones — to produce cumulative alignment changes. Mission Gorge Road funnels traffic between Mission San Diego de Alcala and Mission Trails Regional Park, and the Grantville section of the corridor houses a concentration of recovery-focused practitioners who serve athletes and manual laborers from the east side. Scar-tissue mobilization is a core application, with Arroyo using cross-fiber and myofascial unwinding techniques on post-surgical adhesions and fracture-recovery sites. Rehabilitation cases that require both structural integration and guided therapeutic exercise coordinate with San Diego Physical Therapy on the same Mission Gorge corridor for a combined soft-tissue and movement-retraining protocol. The neuromuscular component maps peripheral-nerve pathways through palpation, identifying areas where fascial compression creates referred-pain patterns that mimic joint or disc pathology.