Trusted Joint Pain Care in Arkansas
Local Pain Management Care for Patients in Little Rock
Pain can start in one area but affect the whole routine of a person’s life. A patient may first notice lower back pain while sitting, neck pain while driving, shoulder pain while reaching, or nerve pain that travels into the arm or leg. When pain begins to affect sleep, movement, work, and independence, it deserves a careful medical evaluation.
At Arkansas Spine and Pain in Little Rock, pain management care is built around identifying the likely source of pain and understanding how it affects daily function. The clinic provides referral-based evaluation for patients dealing with spine-related pain, joint pain, nerve symptoms, injury-related pain, and chronic pain conditions.
For patients searching for a pain management doctor in Little Rock Arkansas, Amir M. Qureshi, MD brings more than 28 years of medical experience in Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation and pain management. His approach focuses on diagnosis, function, minimally invasive interventional options when appropriate, and patient-centered treatment planning.
The Impact of Joint Pain
Why Pain Management Matters When Pain Becomes Ongoing
Ongoing pain is different from short-term soreness. It can change the way a person walks, sits, sleeps, works, lifts, drives, and interacts with family. It may also create a cycle where limited movement leads to stiffness, weakness, frustration, and reduced quality of life.
A pain management doctor looks at the full pain pattern. That includes where the pain started, where it travels, what makes it worse, what improves it, and how it affects function. This helps separate muscle-related discomfort from spine-related pain, joint pain, nerve irritation, inflammation, or chronic pain conditions.
At Arkansas Spine and Pain, evaluation is not based on a one-size-fits-all approach. Each care plan is shaped by the patient’s symptoms, referral information, medical history, imaging when available, and daily limitations
Conditions Evaluated by a Pain Management Doctor in Little Rock
Pain management care may be appropriate when symptoms continue, return often, or interfere with normal activity. In Little Rock, patients may be referred to Arkansas Spine and Pain for back pain, neck pain, shoulder pain, hip pain, knee pain, joint pain, headaches, sciatica, radiculopathy, arthritis-related discomfort, sports injuries, work injuries, car accident injuries, fibromyalgia, spinal stenosis, degenerative disc disease, and chronic pain.
Back and Neck Pain
Back and neck pain may involve the spine, discs, joints, muscles, ligaments, or nerves. Some patients feel pain in one area, while others experience symptoms that travel into the arms, shoulders, hips, or legs. A proper evaluation helps clarify whether the pain is mechanical, nerve-related, injury-related, or chronic.
Joint and Musculoskeletal Pain
Joint pain may affect the shoulder, hip, knee, elbow, or other areas of the body. It may be connected to arthritis, inflammation, injury, repetitive strain, or changes in movement. Pain management care helps evaluate whether the joint is the main source or part of a wider pain pattern.
When to Seek Care
When Should You See a Pain Management Doctor?
A patient may need pain management care when pain lasts longer than expected, keeps returning, or begins to interfere with daily living. Pain should also be evaluated when it spreads, causes numbness or tingling, follows an injury, or limits normal movement.
Referral-based care at Arkansas Spine and Pain helps patients receive specialized evaluation after another medical provider has reviewed their condition and determined that pain management may be appropriate.
Pain That Limits Daily Activity
Pain that affects walking, sitting, standing, lifting, driving, sleeping, working, or household tasks may need focused medical review. These limitations help show how pain is affecting real life.
Pain That Travels Into the Arm or Leg
Pain that moves into the arm, hand, hip, leg, or foot may suggest nerve irritation or referred pain. These symptoms should be evaluated carefully, especially when they include tingling, numbness, or weakness.
Pain After an Injury or Accident
Pain after a fall, sports injury, work injury, or car accident should be assessed when it continues, worsens, or limits movement. Injury-related pain can involve the spine, joints, muscles, or nerves.
Pain That Keeps Returning
Recurring pain may mean the underlying source has not been fully identified. A pain management doctor can help review the pattern and guide the next step in care.
Meet Your Physician
Meet Dr. Amir Qureshi, MD
Amir M. Qureshi, MD is a board-certified physician specializing in Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation with a focus on pain management. He practices in Little Rock, Arkansas, and has more than 28 years of medical experience.
His specialty is important for pain management because Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation focuses on function, movement, recovery, and quality of life. For patients with persistent pain, this means the evaluation considers not only the painful area, but also how symptoms affect mobility, sleep, independence, and daily activity.
Amir M. Qureshi, MD completed residency training in Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation at the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences and fellowship training in Interventional Spine Pain Management at Portner Orthopedic Rehabilitation. His clinical approach includes diagnostic evaluation, multidisciplinary care, minimally invasive interventional techniques when clinically appropriate, and functional restoration.
Credentials
Board-Certified MD
Experience
30+ years in pain
Specialties
Referral-Based Care
- Physical Medicine & Rehabilitation
- Pain Management
Testimonials
What Our Clients Say About Us
GOOD Based on 604 reviews Posted on Jeffrey PhillipsTrustindex verifies that the original source of the review is Google. I love my doctor lisa you does magnificent job wouldn't trade you for the worldPosted on K CTrustindex verifies that the original source of the review is Google. The doctor herself told me if I ever need injections or whatever they’re called to just walk in because you don’t need an appt for that. Then after I walk in like I’m told I was told to wait an hr all for them to come back and say I have to have an appt. This is also not the first time they’re not caring. I will not be back too many problems.Posted on Diana Thigpen-JonesTrustindex verifies that the original source of the review is Google. Michelle was professional and caring I enjoyed my time with her she was legitimately concerned about me and my painPosted on Brandon McKimTrustindex verifies that the original source of the review is Google. Been going there for years, and Nisa is the best!!!Posted on Billy HopsonTrustindex verifies that the original source of the review is Google. She works with mePosted on Deborah GreenTrustindex verifies that the original source of the review is Google. She listens and offers methods that work for your life and other conditions. I felt well cared for…Posted on Sandy FrodinTrustindex verifies that the original source of the review is Google. Thank you for or your help with managing my pain, you’re very helpful. Staff was very kind , professional, n efficient!Posted on Chemer BeeneTrustindex verifies that the original source of the review is Google. Rude a don't care about her patience I'm very open and understanding but she is rude and need some guidance
Known by many patients as “Dr. Q,” Amir M. Qureshi, MD speaks English, Arabic, Hindi/Urdu, Punjabi, and Spanish, helping patients communicate symptoms more clearly during care.
Detail | Information |
Physician | Amir M. Qureshi, MD |
Specialty | Physical Medicine & Rehabilitation, Pain Management |
Experience | 28+ years |
Practice Location | 5700 W Markham St, Little Rock, AR 72205 |
Languages | English, Arabic, Hindi/Urdu, Punjabi, Spanish |
Affiliation | Central Arkansas Surgery Center |
Interventional Pain Management in Little Rock
Interventional pain management focuses on targeted treatment options for specific pain sources. These options may be considered when symptoms are connected to the spine, joints, nerves, or other pain-generating structures.
Depending on the diagnosis, treatment planning may include epidural steroid injections, joint injections, nerve blocks, radiofrequency ablation, or other minimally invasive procedures when clinically appropriate. The right option depends on the patient’s symptoms, imaging when available, medical history, referral details, and physician judgment.
At Arkansas Spine and Pain, procedures are not treated as automatic solutions. They are considered as part of a broader care plan designed to help patients understand their condition and work toward better daily function.
A Little Rock-Based Approach to Pain Care
Local care matters when pain requires ongoing evaluation, communication, and coordination. Patients in Little Rock and nearby Arkansas communities often need a pain management doctor who understands the practical impact of pain on work, driving, family responsibilities, and daily movement.
The Little Rock location of Arkansas Spine and Pain is listed at 5700 W Markham St, Little Rock, AR 72205. This location supports referral-based care for patients who need specialized pain management evaluation after their condition has been reviewed by another medical provider.
Patients and referring providers can contact the clinic at (501) 227-0184 or email refer@arkansasspineandpain.com.
Why Patients Choose Arkansas Spine and Pain
Patients choose Arkansas Spine and Pain because pain management often requires more than a quick explanation. It requires listening carefully, reviewing the pain pattern, considering multiple possible sources, and selecting treatment options that match the patient’s actual condition.
With Amir M. Qureshi, MD, patients receive care from a physician whose background combines Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation, pain management, interventional spine training, and practical experience with complex pain conditions.
The goal is not to make broad promises. The goal is to provide thoughtful evaluation, explain the likely source of pain, and support a care plan that helps patients move, function, and live with greater confidence.
FAQ
Frequently Asked Questions
Amir M. Qureshi, MD is a board-certified Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation physician focused on pain management in Little Rock, Arkansas. He evaluates chronic pain, spine pain, joint pain, nerve symptoms, and functional limitations.
A pain management doctor may evaluate back pain, neck pain, joint pain, shoulder pain, hip pain, knee pain, headaches, sciatica, radiculopathy, arthritis-related pain, injury-related pain, and chronic pain that affects daily function.
Pain should be evaluated when it lasts longer than expected, keeps returning, travels into the arm or leg, affects sleep, limits movement, or interferes with work, driving, walking, lifting, or normal daily responsibilities.
Yes, Arkansas Spine and Pain operates as a referral-based practice. This helps patients receive specialized pain management evaluation after another medical provider has reviewed their condition and determined that referral care may be appropriate.
Amir M. Qureshi, MD evaluates nerve-related symptoms such as radiating pain, tingling, burning, numbness, and weakness. These symptoms may be linked to sciatica, radiculopathy, spinal stenosis, or other nerve irritation patterns.
Interventional pain management uses targeted procedures to help evaluate or treat specific pain sources. Depending on the diagnosis, this may include injections, nerve-related procedures, radiofrequency ablation, or other minimally invasive options.
No. Pain management begins with evaluation, diagnosis, and treatment planning. Injections or procedures may be considered only when clinically appropriate and based on symptoms, imaging, medical history, and physician judgment.
Arkansas Spine and Pain’s Little Rock location is listed at 5700 W Markham St, Little Rock, AR 72205. Patients and referring providers can contact the clinic at (501) 227-0184 for referral-based pain management support.
Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation focuses on movement, function, and quality of life. In pain management, this helps connect symptoms with mobility, nerve involvement, work limits, sleep disruption, and practical recovery goals.
Yes, chronic pain can affect sleep, walking, sitting, working, lifting, driving, mood, and independence. A pain management evaluation helps identify contributing factors and supports a plan focused on function and quality of life.
