In 40 seconds
Groin strain (adductor strain) is the second-most-common football injury after hamstring. The rapid changes of direction, kicking, and sliding tackles all stress the adductor and pubic tendon-bone interface. PEMF therapy reduces inflammation in this notoriously stubborn area and supports tendon-bone healing. Used widely in football medical care alongside Copenhagen adduction protocol and structured loading.
Quick facts
- Football injury rank: #2 — adductor + pubic-related
- Mechanism: Cutting, kicking, sliding tackles
- Grade I return: 1–3 weeks
- Grade II return: 4–6 weeks
- PEMF role: Reduces tendon-bone inflammation, supports healing
- Pairs with: Copenhagen adduction protocol
Why this injury happens in this sport
The adductor longus is the most-injured muscle. The injury often involves the tendon-bone junction at the pubic ramus, which is poorly perfused and slow to heal — a perfect application for PEMF's microcirculation effects.
Recovery and return to sport
Daily PEMF in the first 7–10 days, then 3× per week alongside the Copenhagen adduction loading protocol. Most footballers return faster with PEMF added to standard care due to reduced inflammation around the pubic tendon-bone interface.
Contraindications
Hard exclusions — do not have PEMF if any apply:
- Pacemaker, implantable cardioverter-defibrillator (ICD), or any cardiac electronic device
- Cochlear implant or other implanted electronic hearing device
- Spinal cord stimulator, deep-brain stimulator, vagus nerve stimulator
- Intrathecal pump or implanted drug pump
- Insulin pump (continuous glucose monitors are usually fine — confirm with the clinic)
- Active infection at the treatment site
- Pregnancy — when treatment would be over the abdomen, lumbar spine, or pelvis
Discuss with your GP or specialist before booking if any apply:
- Active malignancy or recent cancer history (oncologist clearance required)
- History of seizures or epilepsy
- Multiple sclerosis or other neurological condition under specialist care
- Anticoagulant therapy (PEMF itself does not thin blood, but bruising risk if local circulation is already compromised)
- Children under 14 (most UK clinics will not treat under-18s without paediatric specialist input)
- Recent surgery within the last 14 days at the treatment site (confirm with surgeon)
NOT contraindications — these are commonly misunderstood:
- Plates, rods, screws and other passive metal orthopaedic hardware
- Dental implants and dental crowns
- Joint replacements (hip, knee, shoulder)
- IUDs (copper or hormonal)
- Tattoos and piercings (jewellery should be removed for the session)
Specific to this condition: pacemakers, defibrillators, cochlear implants, insulin pumps, electronic implants; active malignancy without specialist clearance; pregnancy (over the abdomen); active infection; epilepsy without GP clearance.
Frequently asked questions
Difference between groin strain and osteitis pubis?
Groin strain is acute muscle/tendon injury. Osteitis pubis is chronic inflammation at the pubic symphysis from repeated overload. Both respond to PEMF — the latter often needs longer programmes.
Best PEMF placement for groin?
Localised applicator over the affected adductor and pubic ramus area, often combined with full-body mat for systemic effect.
Can I keep training through it?
Modified yes — non-aggravating activities (cycling, swimming, controlled gym work) can continue. Sport-specific work returns gradually based on pain-free testing.
Looking for a PEMF clinic near you?
We list every credible PEMF therapy provider in the UK so you can find one near home.