Most chronic headaches are not random. They start in the neck. The upper cervical vertebrae sit just below the base of the skull, and when one of them shifts out of place, it pulls on the muscles, irritates the nerves running into the head, and restricts blood flow. The result feels like a headache, but the source is structural.
Migraines work on a similar pattern, with added factors like vascular changes and sensory triggers. Patients often spend years cycling through medications that mask the pain without addressing why it keeps coming back. The headaches return because the underlying alignment problem never got corrected.
Dr. Lena Hartwell starts with a careful look at the upper cervical spine. The exam identifies which vertebra is involved and which direction it has moved. The adjustment is specific to that joint and only that joint. When the alignment is restored, the nerve and vascular pressure eases, and the headache pattern usually changes within a few visits. Patients who have lived with daily or weekly headaches for years sometimes notice the difference quickly. Others take more time, especially if the pattern is decades old. Either way, the goal is the same: address the source instead of chasing the symptom.
Take the first step toward better health. Schedule your new patient visit today.

Pain, numbness, or weakness in the limbs caused by nerve compression at the spine.
Learn More
Sensation of spinning or imbalance, often linked to upper cervical or inner ear dysfunction.
Learn More
Bulging, herniated, or extruded spinal discs that compress nerves and limit movement.
Learn More
Hand and wrist pain, numbness, or weakness from median nerve compression.
Learn More
Spinal misalignment, disc problems, or muscle strain limiting daily movement and quality of life.
Learn More
Sharp, radiating pain down the leg caused by irritation of the sciatic nerve at the spine.
Learn More
Abnormal sideways curvature of the spine that affects posture, motion, and long-term function.
Learn More
Injuries from job-related accidents, repetitive motion, or sustained poor posture on the job.
Learn More
Neck injury from sudden back-and-forth motion, most often from rear-end collisions.
Learn More
Persistent shoulder pain, stiffness, or limited motion that interferes with daily activity.
Learn More
A physiologic state that shifts posture, weight, and ligament tension in ways that strain the spine.
Learn More
Stiffness, soreness, or sharp pain in the cervical spine that limits motion and daily activity.
Learn More