
Scheduling your first appointment with an orthopedic specialist can be surprisingly uncertain. What will they ask? Will there be imaging? Do I need a referral? How long will it take? And perhaps most importantly, what happens after?
For many patients, the unknown is enough to delay making the call altogether, even when they’ve been dealing with pain or limited mobility for weeks or months. At Advanced Bone & Joint, we want to remove that uncertainty. Here is exactly what to expect when you schedule your first orthopedic visit at our St. Peters, O’Fallon, or Wentzville practice, from what to bring to how your diagnosis and treatment plan will be communicated.
How to Prepare for Your First Orthopedic Visit: What to Bring and What You’ll Be Asked
A well-prepared patient gets more out of their first appointment. Before you arrive at Advanced Bone & Joint, we recommend gathering the following:
- Insurance card and a valid photo ID
- A list of all current medications, including dosages and how long you’ve been taking them
- Any previous imaging related to your injury or condition, X-rays, MRI, or CT scans on disc or accessible digitally
- A referral document if your insurance plan requires one (check with your insurer in advance if you’re unsure)
- A brief summary of your symptoms, when they started, what makes them better or worse, whether there was a specific incident that caused them, and how they are currently affecting your daily life and activity
New patient intake forms are available on our website and can be completed before your visit, which helps streamline the check-in process on the day of your appointment. The more context your provider has walking into the room, the more productive and efficient your appointment will be.
You will also be asked about your activity level, work demands, health history, and treatment goals. This last point, your personal goals, matters more than many patients realize. A 65-year-old who wants to walk comfortably and garden without pain has different treatment priorities than a 35-year-old competitive athlete. Both deserve individualized care, and your provider at Advanced Bone & Joint will factor your goals into every recommendation.
What Happens During an Orthopedic Evaluation: Imaging, Diagnosis, and Treatment Planning
Your first appointment at Advanced Bone & Joint typically follows several structured steps, each designed to lead to an accurate diagnosis and a practical treatment plan.
Medical History and Symptom Review
Your provider will begin by reviewing your completed intake forms and asking follow-up questions about your symptoms, how they have evolved, what treatments you’ve already tried, and how they’ve worked. Understanding the history of your condition is just as important as the physical examination that follows.
Physical Examination
The physical exam is tailored to your specific complaint. For a knee injury, your provider will assess range of motion, joint stability, swelling, alignment, and strength. For a spine concern, they’ll evaluate posture, nerve function, reflexes, and the specific movements that provoke your symptoms. Specialized clinical tests are used to evaluate structural integrity, for example, the Lachman test for ACL integrity or the straight leg raise test for nerve root involvement.
Imaging
At Advanced Bone & Joint, we have on-site X-ray capabilities, which means imaging can often be completed during your first visit rather than requiring a separate appointment. Weight-bearing X-rays are particularly valuable for assessing joint space, alignment, and bone quality. At our St. Peter’s location, patients also have access to an advanced imaging facility, creating a convenient one-stop shop experience for both initial evaluation and more detailed diagnostic needs. If your provider determines that an MRI or CT scan is warranted, they will arrange a referral and explain exactly what they’re looking for and why.
Diagnosis and Treatment Recommendations
At the end of your visit, your provider will walk you through their findings in plain language, no medical jargon, without explanation. They will outline a recommended treatment plan, which may include physical therapy, medications, a bracing or activity plan, injection therapy, or surgical consultation. You will have dedicated time to ask questions, express concerns, and discuss what each option involves before any decisions are made.
We never pressure patients toward a particular treatment. Our role is to give you the clearest possible picture of your condition and your options, and to support whatever decision aligns with your health and your life.
How to Choose the Right Orthopedic Specialist for Your Injury or Condition in St. Charles County
Orthopedics is a broad field, and the right provider for a complex spine case may not be the same as the one for a sports knee injury or a foot and ankle problem. At Advanced Bone & Joint, our team includes board-certified, fellowship-trained specialists across multiple subspecialties, including spine, joint replacement, sports medicine, hand and wrist, and foot and ankle.
When you call to schedule, our team will ask about your specific concern and match you with the appropriate provider. You don’t need to know exactly which specialist you need; we’ll figure that out together. What matters is that you make the call and get the process started.
Book Your First Appointment at Advanced Bone & Joint
If you’ve been putting off seeing an orthopedic specialist because you weren’t sure what to expect, we hope this helps. At Advanced Bone & Joint, we serve patients throughout St. Peters, O’Fallon, and Wentzville, MO, and are committed to making every first visit efficient, informative, and focused on providing you with real answers.
Carol Owen
Alma Gayle