When you’re living with chronic pain, it’s easy to feel like you’re stuck in a loop. Pain leads to less movement. Less movement leads to stiffness, weakness, and even more pain. This is known as the pain cycle. And for millions of people, it’s what turns a short-term injury into a long-term condition.
But there’s a way out.
Understanding the Pain Cycle
The pain cycle is a self-reinforcing loop that can cause you to move differently or avoid movement altogether. Maybe you stop going for walks or start favoring one leg. Over time, your muscles weaken, your joints stiffen, and your biomechanics become less efficient. This makes movement feel harder and more painful…which leads to even more avoidance.
Eventually, the original source of the pain might heal, but the compensatory habits, muscular imbalances, and nervous system sensitivity persist.
Over time, chronic pain changes not just how your body moves—but how it feels, thinks, and functions. It affects your confidence, your energy levels, your mood, and your overall quality of life1.
Interrupting the Cycle with Movement
One powerful way to break the pain cycle is with movement. Not just any movement, but the kind that’s gradual, safe, biomechanically aligned, and personalized to your needs.
This is where Apos® comes in.
Apos® is an FDA-cleared, at-home medical device that you wear on your feet during daily activity. It’s designed to shift pressure away from painful joints and retrain your body’s movement patterns while you go about your day. No clinics. No apps. No high-impact workouts.
Just you, moving better bit by bit.
Why It Works
When you wear Apos®, you’re not just walking. You’re retraining and helping your muscles, joints, and nervous system remember what pain-free, functional movement feels like. Over time, those new patterns become the default.
In a real-world outcomes study, patients using Apos® experienced a 57% reduction in pain and a 67% improvement in function over a 20-month period2. These gains were sustained without surgery, injections, or daily supervision. Another study showed that Apos® therapy helped improve gait mechanics and reduce disability scores in knee osteoarthritis patients3.
And because the treatment fits into your normal routine, adherence stays high.
Movement Rewires the Brain
One often-overlooked aspect of chronic pain is its impact on the central nervous system. Research shows that chronic pain alters the way the brain processes movement and sensation—a process called central sensitization⁴. Over time, the brain begins to interpret even normal movements as painful or threatening.
The good news is that the brain can also be retrained.
By supporting safe, consistent movement, Apos® may help reverse those neural changes, lowering pain perception and rebuilding trust in your body again.
Relief That Builds Over Time
Most chronic pain treatments focus on symptom suppression: medications, injections, or braces. Apos® targets the root mechanics that keep the pain cycle alive. And it works with your body, not against it, to restore confidence, comfort, and quality of movement.
Over time, your steps feel easier. Your body starts to trust itself again. And the cycle that once kept you stuck begins to unwind.
You Don’t Have to Live in the Loop
If you’ve been caught in the pain cycle, it’s not because you’ve done something wrong. It’s because your body adapted to protect itself…and now it needs help finding a better path forward.
That’s what Apos® makes possible.
Sources
- Gatchel RJ, Peng YB, Peters ML, Fuchs PN, Turk DC. The biopsychosocial approach to chronic pain: scientific advances and future directions. Psychol Bull. 2007;133(4):581–624. https://doi.org/10.1037/0033-2909.133.4.581
- Bar-Ziv Y, Ran Y, Shidlovski A, et al. Value-based care for musculoskeletal pain: real-world outcomes using a foot-worn device in a large, risk-bearing provider network. JHEOR. 2024;11(1):24–33.
- Elbaz A, Mor A, Segal G, et al. A unique foot-worn device for treating knee osteoarthritis: a randomized controlled trial. J Clin Med. 2020;9(2):542.
- Woolf CJ. Central sensitization: implications for the diagnosis and treatment of pain. Pain. 2011;152(3 Suppl):S2–15. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.pain.2010.09.030