Symptom

Neck pain & headaches.

A surprising amount of headache pain originates in the neck — tension headaches, cervicogenic migraines, and stiffness from desk posture all trace back to the cervical spine. Find the source, treat it directly.

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Cervical adjustment photo
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Cervical adjustment for neck pain and tension headache relief at Spine and Wellness Center Lakewood Ranch
Tech neck vs. neutral spine

Drag to see the difference.

The same head, the same shoulders — two postures. Slide the handle to compare what your cervical spine is loading every day.

Before vs. afterFor every inch the head juts forward, the cervical spine carries roughly an additional 10 lbs of load. A "tech neck" head can load the neck with up to 60 lbs. Stacking the head back over the shoulders cuts that load to its natural 10–12 lbs and lets the deep cervical flexors and upper traps relax.

This is what we work on directly. Cervical adjustments + posture work →

Common causes

What's actually causing it.

Forward-head posture

Phone use, desk work, driving — load up the upper neck and trigger tension headaches.

Cervical disc issues

Disc bulges in the neck can refer pain into shoulder, arm, or head.

Joint dysfunction

Stuck cervical segments at C1-C3 are classic headache triggers.

Trigger points

Knots in trapezius, sub-occipitals, and SCM muscles refer pain to the head.

Whiplash residuals

Old auto-injury can leave cervical instability and recurring headaches.

Stress & jaw tension

Sustained clenching can lock down cervical muscles. The neck and jaw are connected.

How we treat it

Address the cervical cause.

Common questions

Quick answers.

Aren't migraines a brain thing?

Migraines have neurological mechanisms, but cervicogenic factors often trigger or worsen them. Patients with both classical migraines and a cervical contribution often see meaningful improvement with chiropractic care.

Is cervical adjusting safe?

Yes — performed correctly, with screening for the rare contraindications. Dr. Banman's 23+ years of practice make him exceptionally calibrated for cervical work.

How fast can I expect relief?

Many tension headache patients feel meaningfully better within a few visits. Severe or chronic cases need longer.

What's the difference between a tension headache and a migraine?

Tension headaches typically feel like a steady band of pressure around the head, often paired with neck pain and tight shoulders, and rarely include nausea or visual symptoms. Migraines are usually one-sided, throbbing, and often come with light sensitivity, nausea, or aura. The two can overlap — many patients with chronic neck pain develop a mix of both, and addressing the cervical contribution can be a meaningful part of the plan.

Can a misaligned neck cause headaches?

Evidence suggests yes — these are called cervicogenic headaches. When upper-cervical joints (C1–C3) are stuck or moving poorly, the surrounding nerves and muscles can refer pain into the head, especially the base of the skull and behind the eyes. Many patients report meaningful headache relief once the cervical movement is restored through targeted chiropractic adjustments.

How fast will I get neck pain relief?

Many patients with simple tension-pattern neck pain feel a noticeable shift within the first one to three visits. Whiplash, chronic disc-related cases, or long-standing posture problems usually need a more structured plan. We'll set realistic expectations during your evaluation rather than promising a quick fix that won't last.

Is it safe to crack my own neck?

Self-cracking moves segments that already move freely, leaving the actually stuck ones untouched — that's why the relief is brief. A trained adjustment targets the specific segment that needs motion.

Insurance?

Chiropractic is sometimes covered. Decompression typically isn't. HSA/FSA accepted. Payment options →

Common causes

Common causes of neck pain and tension headaches.

Most chronic neck pain doesn't come from one moment of injury — it builds from daily habits and unresolved stresses on the cervical spine. Understanding the source is the first step to lasting headache relief.

Text neck & forward-head posture

Looking down at a phone or hunching over a laptop for hours pulls the head forward of its natural balance point. The deep cervical muscles fatigue, the upper trapezius overworks, and the upper-cervical joints stiffen. It's one of the most common drivers of modern neck pain and tension headaches that flare by mid-afternoon.

Whiplash & old auto injuries

Even minor rear-end collisions can leave the cervical spine with subtle joint dysfunction, scarred soft tissue, and recurring instability. Many patients with stubborn headaches trace them back to a car accident months or years earlier — see auto / whiplash for how those cases are evaluated.

Poor sleep posture & pillow setup

Sleeping on too many pillows, on your stomach with your head turned, or on a mattress that no longer supports the spine can lock the neck up overnight. Many patients see real neck pain treatment progress just by addressing the sleep setup alongside in-office care.

Stress, jaw clenching & sub-occipital tension

Sustained stress shows up physically — clenched jaw, raised shoulders, locked sub-occipital muscles where the skull meets the neck. That sub-occipital tightness is one of the most reliable triggers for cervicogenic headaches, and addressing it with manual therapy and adjustments can help break the pattern.

How chiropractic helps

How chiropractic care helps cervicogenic headaches.

Cervicogenic headaches start in the neck — so any plan that ignores the cervical spine is treating downstream symptoms. Chiropractic care goes upstream.

Restoring cervical motion at C1–C3

The upper three cervical segments share nerve pathways with the trigeminal nerve, which is heavily involved in head pain. Specific chiropractic adjustments aim to restore motion at these levels, which evidence suggests may help reduce both the intensity and frequency of cervicogenic headaches in many patients.

Releasing sub-occipital tension

The small muscles where the skull meets the neck often hold chronic tension that refers pain straight into the head. Targeted manual therapy combined with adjustments can calm these muscles down, and many patients report that their headaches change quality almost immediately once those muscles release.

Decompression for disc-related headaches

When a cervical disc is bulging and irritating an upper nerve root, the pain can radiate into the head, shoulder, or arm. Cervical spinal decompression may help take pressure off the disc gradually, complementing the adjustment work and laser therapy.

Address the actual cause

Don't just medicate — find the source.

Quickest path is a phone call.