Healthcare

Fyzical Therapy & Balance Centers opens new Fall Creek location

FYZICAL’s new Fall Creek clinic opened with free balance screenings, bringing rehab and vestibular care closer to Lake Houston seniors and injury patients.

Dr. Elena Rodriguez··2 min read
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Fyzical Therapy & Balance Centers opens new Fall Creek location
Source: communityimpact.com

Fyzical Therapy & Balance Centers hosted a soft opening at its new Fall Creek clinic at 8525 N. Sam Houston Pkwy. E., Ste. 401 in Humble, adding balance-focused rehabilitation close to home for patients in eastern Harris County.

The location is owned by Sean and Nikia Upchurch and is part of FYZICAL’s larger network, which the company says spans more than 525 locations in 46 states. In the Houston region, FYZICAL describes its specialty as balance and vestibular therapy, and the Fall Creek clinic says it provides orthopedic rehabilitation, neurological therapy, vestibular rehabilitation and balance-disorder treatment.

AI-generated illustration
AI-generated illustration

That makes the new office relevant for seniors, people recovering from injury or surgery, and patients dealing with dizziness, mobility problems or recurring balance issues. The clinic also advertises free balance screenings, giving residents a simple first step toward finding out whether therapy might help with walking, standing or returning to normal activity.

The opening comes as Fall Creek continues to grow inside the Lake Houston area. The broader Lake Houston region increased from 285,668 residents in 2019 to 320,106 in 2024, a gain of about 12.1 percent. Fall Creek itself is a 2,300-acre master-planned golf community that first welcomed residents in 2003 and now includes about 2,500 homes, with more commercial space planned nearby.

That local growth matters in a county where repeated therapy visits can become a real burden if care is too far away. A clinic in Fall Creek can cut drive time for families balancing work, school and medical appointments while making specialized rehabilitation more accessible to people who may need weeks or months of follow-up care.

The need is especially clear for older adults. The CDC says falls are the leading cause of injury for adults 65 and older, and more than 14 million older adults, or 1 in 4, report falling each year. For Harris County residents trying to age in place, a nearby clinic focused on balance and rehabilitation can make the difference between delaying care and getting help before a minor mobility problem becomes a larger setback.

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