Dr. Lorna Ciccone
Agile Integrated Health
Dr. Lorna Ciccone, ND, (she/her) offers whole-person, graded care grounded in a bio-psycho-social lens. She is passionate about helping people shift their relationship to pain and complex chronic symptoms through a collaborative, trauma-informed approach that meets each person where they are. Special Interests: Chronic pain and neuroplastic pain Athletic and performance health including injections (PRP, HA, steroid, prolotherapy) Mental health including anxiety, depression, phobias, panic disorder, OCD, BPD Complex chronic illness Long-haul viral symptoms MCAS and dysautonomia Hypermobile spectrum disorders and Ehlers–Danlos syndromes (EDS/HSD) Perimenopause and menopause Migraines and TMJ dysfunction including prolotherapy and therapeutic Botox IV iron therapy IV nutrient therapy including NAD and glutathione LGBTQ2SIA+ health Her approach begins with the least invasive options first, including nutrition, lifestyle, and emotional health support, then expands to botanical medicine, supplements, acupuncture, and manual therapies. When appropriate, she uses pharmacotherapy and injection therapies as part of a personalized treatment plan to help accelerate healing and improve function. Dr. Lorna’s injection-based treatments include prolotherapy, PRP, hyaluronic acid/viscosupplementation, steroid, therapeutic Botox for TMJ dysfunction and migraine, and IV iron for iron deficiency. She also integrates Pain Reprocessing Therapy, mind-body medicine, therapeutic journaling, and other evidence-informed approaches to support healing from the root. With a strong focus on collaboration and empowerment, she helps patients better understand their symptoms and actively participate in their care. In her free time, she enjoys the outdoors, animal rights and social justice advocacy, and a whole foods, plant-based diet. She lives in Esquimalt with her wife and daughter. Dr. Lorna currently lives on stolen land from the lək̓ʷəŋən peoples, also known as the Songhees and Esquimalt First Nations communities also known as Victoria, British Columbia, and she is grateful to be allowed to be on their land through the Douglas Treaties. She supports the continued negotiations between the Te’mexw Treaty members and the Canadian government. She also acknowledges naturopathic medicine’s role in oppression and colonization and will continue to educate herself on the origins of the practices misappropriated from Indigenous and Asian medical systems.
1109 Fort Street, Victoria, BC, V8V 3K9
3520 Quadra St, Victoria, BC, V8X 1G9