Bradenton · Manatee County
Concussion & Vestibular Rehab Physical Therapy in Bradenton, FL
In-home concussion rehab delivered by Florida-licensed Doctors of Physical Therapy, billed through PIP and MedPay. No drive to a clinic, no waiting room, no missed visits.

Concussion — clinically a mild traumatic brain injury (mTBI) — is dramatically underdiagnosed after motor vehicle collisions. CDC surveillance counted approximately 2.5 million emergency department visits for traumatic brain injury in a recent year, with motor vehicle crashes the second-leading mechanism[1]. The patient doesn't have to lose consciousness, and most don't; the diagnostic criteria are any alteration in mental status (feeling dazed, brief confusion, post-traumatic amnesia) at the time of impact[2]. By the time the patient is discharged from the ER, the adrenaline has worn off and the headache, light sensitivity, brain fog, and dizziness that show up over the next 24–72 hours are often dismissed as stress. They are not.
In Bradenton, most concussion patients we treat were injured on I-75 through Manatee County or one of the surrounding Manatee County corridors and were discharged from HCA Florida Blake Hospital (Level II trauma) within 24–72 hours of the collision. By the time the discharge paperwork is filed, our intake team is often already on the phone with the patient — and our Bradenton-based DPTs can usually have a first in-home evaluation on the calendar within 48 hours.
Symptoms we see in Bradenton patients
The Amsterdam 2022 Consensus Statement on Concussion in Sport[3] and the CDC HEADS UP clinical guidance[2] have both shifted away from prolonged rest. Current best practice is light cognitive and physical activity within 24–48 hours, sub-symptom-threshold aerobic exercise prescribed using the Buffalo Concussion Treadmill Test[4], and early vestibular-oculomotor rehab when symptoms warrant. A 2014 randomized trial demonstrated that cervical and vestibular physiotherapy meaningfully accelerated medical clearance compared with standard care[5]. The cervical spine is almost always involved in a crash-mechanism concussion, which is why a physical therapist with vestibular training is the right clinician — not just a neurologist or primary care doctor.
- Headache (most common — often pressure-type, worse with screens or reading)
- Dizziness, vertigo, or motion sensitivity in busy environments
- Difficulty concentrating, slowed thinking, or brain fog
- Light or noise sensitivity
- Sleep disturbance — both insomnia and hypersomnia
- Emotional lability, irritability, or low mood
- Balance problems, especially in low light or on uneven surfaces
Key data points
Sourced from peer-reviewed clinical practice guidelines and government health data. Click any figure for the underlying citation.
- 2.5M
annual U.S. TBI-related ED visits (CDC)
Source [1] - 24–48h
current rest recommendation before resuming light activity
Source [3] - 15–30%
develop persistent symptoms beyond 3 months without active rehab
Source [7] - ~50%
faster medical clearance with vestibular + cervical PT (RCT)
Source [5]
How in-home PT treats concussion in Bradenton
In-home concussion evaluation uses the Vestibular/Ocular-Motor Screening (VOMS)[6], a Buffalo Treadmill or Bike Test adapted to the home setting[4], a cervical exam (cervicogenic dizziness mimics central vestibular dysfunction), and a balance battery (BESS or modified CTSIB). The DPT sets a sub-symptom-threshold heart rate target and prescribes graded aerobic activity the patient can do safely at home.
Subsequent visits add gaze stabilization (VOR x1/x2), smooth pursuit and saccade training, habituation exercises for motion sensitivity, and progressive dynamic balance work[5]. The cervical component — sub-occipital release, upper cervical mobilization, deep neck flexor activation — is woven in throughout. Patients who follow the protocol typically see symptom reduction within 2–3 weeks; without it, post-concussive symptoms can persist for months — roughly 15–30% of mTBI patients develop persistent symptoms beyond 3 months[7].
Bradenton's residential mix runs from older single-story homes west of US-41 to large family homes in Lakewood Ranch and the planned communities along SR 64. Both ends of that spectrum have the same problem after a crash: stairs, narrow halls, and bathrooms that suddenly become daily hazards. Our PTs assess those exact obstacles on the first visit, then build a treatment plan around the patient's documented injuries and the home they actually live in. For Anna Maria and Holmes Beach patients, we work in beachfront condos and standalone homes alike, with bridge logistics handled on our end.
Typical recovery timeline
Most post-crash concussions resolve in 8 to 12 visits over 4 to 8 weeks when treatment starts within the first 2 weeks of injury. Delayed presentations (>4 weeks post-injury) often need 12 to 20 visits. Median sport-related concussion recovery in adults is roughly 10–14 days[3], but post-MVA cases tend to run longer.
Where Bradenton concussion patients come from
I-75 through Manatee County — particularly the SR 64 (Exit 220) and University Parkway (Exit 217) interchanges — is the dominant source of severe crashes in our local file. SR 70 from I-75 east into Lakewood Ranch produces high-volume rear-end and intersection collisions during the commute, and US-41 / US-301 through downtown Bradenton and across the Manatee River carries the surface-street load. Cortez Road and Manatee Avenue handle the beach-bound traffic that spikes in season. Crash victims are most often taken to HCA Florida Blake Hospital — a Level II trauma center — or to Manatee Memorial Hospital.
Hospitals
- · HCA Florida Blake Hospital (Level II trauma)
- · Manatee Memorial Hospital
- · HCA Florida Lakewood Ranch Hospital
- · AdventHealth Sebring (transfers from inland Manatee)
Crash corridors
- · I-75 through Manatee County
- · SR 70 (Lakewood Ranch corridor)
- · SR 64 / Manatee Avenue
- · US-41 / US-301
When to escalate
These signs are not routine and warrant immediate physician contact or an ER visit.
- ·Worsening headache, repeated vomiting, or new focal neurologic signs
- ·Seizure activity
- ·Increasing confusion or change in level of arousal
- ·Pupillary asymmetry or new vision loss
PIP & MedPay for Manatee County residents
Manatee County residents in a Florida-registered vehicle have access to Florida's $10,000 PIP benefit, which we bill directly. When the patient's auto policy includes MedPay, we bill MedPay as secondary. PT Near Me does not bill commercial health insurance — if PIP and MedPay are both exhausted before the plan of care is complete, we discuss options with the patient before continuing treatment.
Concussion FAQ — Bradenton
- Isn't rest the best treatment for a concussion?
- Only for the first 24–48 hours. The current consensus statements (Amsterdam 2022, CDC) recommend introducing sub-symptom-threshold aerobic activity within 48 hours and active vestibular/cervical rehab within 1–2 weeks. Prolonged rest is associated with worse outcomes.
- Why does the PT also work on my neck?
- The same force that concussed your brain almost always sprained your upper cervical spine. Cervicogenic dizziness and cervicogenic headache mimic — and often coexist with — central vestibular dysfunction. Treating only one half of the problem leaves you symptomatic.
- Will screens make my concussion worse?
- Total screen avoidance isn't necessary or helpful after the first few days. We typically prescribe graded screen exposure with built-in visual breaks (the 20-20-20 rule) and adjust based on symptom response.
- Do you treat patients on Anna Maria Island or Longboat Key?
- Yes. Anna Maria, Holmes Beach, Bradenton Beach, and Longboat Key are all inside our standard coverage area. We coordinate bridge access and building parking ahead of the first visit.
- Can you coordinate with Blake or Manatee Memorial surgeons?
- Yes. We accept referrals from both hospital systems and from independent orthopedic practices across the county. Initial evaluations, progress notes, and discharge summaries return to the referring physician on the same schedule a clinic would use.
References & clinical evidence
All statistics on this page are sourced from peer-reviewed journals, clinical practice guidelines, or U.S. government health agencies.
- [1]Traumatic Brain Injury & Concussion — surveillance data— CDC
- [2]HEADS UP — Clinical guidance on mild TBI— CDC
- [3]Amsterdam 2022 Consensus Statement on Concussion in Sport— British Journal of Sports Medicine, 2023
- [4]Buffalo Concussion Treadmill Test — exercise tolerance after concussion— Clin J Sport Med, 2010
- [5]Cervicovestibular rehabilitation in sport-related concussion: a randomised controlled trial— BJSM, 2014
- [6]Vestibular/Ocular-Motor Screening (VOMS) for concussion— American Journal of Sports Medicine, 2014
- [7]Persistent post-concussive symptoms — clinical overview— NIH / StatPearls, 2023
Related reading
Whiplash After a Florida Car Accident: What to Expect in Recovery
Most whiplash recovers within 6 to 12 weeks with early, active physical therapy. A smaller share develops persistent symptoms past three months. Here's what whiplash actually is, what the realistic timeline looks like, and how PT should approach it after a crash in Florida.
How Soon Should You Start PT After a Car Accident in Florida?
In Florida, the practical answer is within 14 days — both because the PIP statute requires initial care in that window and because the clinical evidence strongly favors early intervention for soft-tissue and cervical-spine injuries.
What to Expect at Your First In-Home Physical Therapy Visit
A minute-by-minute breakdown of what happens at your first in-home physical therapy visit in Florida — what the therapist brings, how the evaluation works, and what you should have ready.
Get a Bradenton concussion patient seen at home — usually within 48 hours.
500+ Physical Therapists covering 35+ counties in Florida.
Our clinician network reaches major metros and rural communities alike — from the Panhandle to the Keys. If a patient is in a highlighted county, we can usually see them at home within 24–72 hours of intake.
- Clinicians in network
- 500+
- Florida counties covered
- 35+

