
Advanced 3-In-1 Therapy
To Break the Stenosis Loop
NASA-Derived Red and Near-Infrared Light
Photobiomodulation at the exact wavelengths that switch mitochondria back on inside the deep multifidus muscle, reaching two to three inches down to recharge the cells that pills, injections, and heating pads never touch.
Clinical-Strength Deep Heat
Adjustable targeted thermal therapy that drives blood and oxygen two to three inches into the suffocated paraspinal tissue, forcing the locked multifidus to relax its grip and stop pulling the vertebrae into the narrowing canal.
Pulsing Vibration Massage
Multiple modes that mechanically break the spasm-pain-spasm cycle and pump the stagnant paraspinal tissue, flushing the inflammatory waste trapped against the nerve root that has been burning your legs like acid for years.
Up to 500x cheaper than the surgery they scheduled.
The ThermaPro pays for itself in days, not years. One laminectomy bills Medicare $30,000 to $50,000 and leaves the muscle locked. One epidural injection runs $600 to $2,000 and wears off in six weeks, then three, then one. One round of physical therapy costs more than this device, and the relief never holds. No appointments. No co-pays. No six-week wait. No walker. Fifteen minutes at home, in your own chair, as often as your back needs it.
Adjust every session to how you feel
Pick the heat level. Pick the massage intensity. The red and near-infrared light does its work on every setting. Whether your lower back wants gentle warmth before bed or a deeper release on a stiff morning, it adjusts with one button. No app, no menus, nothing to program. If you can use a heating pad, you can use this.
What real users say
The ThermaPro is used by people who had already tried everything: injections, physical therapy, a drawer full of gadgets, a cane by the door. Most of them were told it was just their age. Here's what they say about it.
Compare it with different solutions on the market
Let's compare the Revive ThermaPro with other devices on the market (such as heating pads, TENS units, massagers...) and the treatments the system keeps offering you.
ThermaPro
Frequently asked questions
Need more answers?How is the ThermaPro different from cheaper back devices I've seen on Amazon?
Will it actually work for my specific problem?
I've already tried physical therapy, chiropractors, and pain meds. Why would this be different?
How long until I'll feel a difference?
How is this different from a regular heating pad?
Can I use it if I've had a laminectomy, or if I'm on the surgery list?
How long should I use it per session, and how often?
I'm not good with technology. Will I manage it on my own?
What if it doesn't work for me?
I did a lot of research before letting my daughter order this, mainly because I have a drawer full of gadgets that did not work. Heating pads, creams, a TENS unit I used twice. I even saw a cheaper lookalike on Amazon and almost fell for it. I was skeptical that something like this would work on stenosis I have had for eight years. Was I ever wrong. By the second week the morning stiffness was easing, and last Sunday I walked the whole grocery store without sitting down once. It is the first thing from the internet that did what it said. On damp days I do two sessions instead of one. I wish I had found it before the injections.
The burning down my legs is almost gone and I am sleeping through the night for the first time in years. Even my daughter noticed. I'm so much happier!
I'm 73 with spinal stenosis at L4-L5. Heat has always been the only thing that helps, but heating pads sit on the surface and quit, and mine wouldn't even lay flat anymore. This reaches deeper. I use it in my chair after dinner, fifteen minutes, one button. The relief holds past breakfast, which no pad ever did. My legs don't go numb at night like they used to either.
Bought this for my mom, 76, after her doctor told her it was just her age and to take Aleve. She's stubborn and told me not to waste the money. She now calls me to talk about her garden instead of her back. You're the favorite kid now, as she puts it. Easy enough that she set it up herself, which says a lot.
My wife has spinal stenosis and the surgeon said at her age the best plan was to manage it. That word did not sit well with either of us after 45 years of marriage. Six weeks in, she is back to kneeling in her garden and I have to wait my turn for the device after yard work. The narrowing is still on her scan. The pain that came with it is mostly not. We should have ordered two.
Two epidural injections, each one shorter than the last. My son sent me the MRI tech's article and I figured this was another gadget. I kept a log anyway. Day 9 I walked to the end of my driveway and back, plain and simple. Haven't been back to the pain clinic since October.