Whiplash happens when the head and neck snap forward and back faster than the muscles and ligaments can stabilize. Rear-end car collisions are the most common cause, but the same injury occurs in contact sports, falls, and physical assaults. The damage is often invisible on the day of the accident. Symptoms can take hours, days, or weeks to fully appear.
The injury is rarely just to the muscles. The forceful motion can shift vertebrae out of alignment, irritate the discs, stretch ligaments, and inflame the nerves running through the neck. Patients report neck pain, headaches, shoulder and arm pain, blurred vision, dizziness, ringing in the ears, fatigue, and trouble sleeping. Some develop symptoms that linger for years if the original injury was never properly addressed.
Dr. Lena Hartwell takes a thorough approach to whiplash because the pattern of injury is rarely simple. The exam looks at every level of the cervical spine, identifies which joints have shifted, and uses X-rays to confirm what is going on structurally. The Gonstead adjustment is delivered specifically to the joints that need correction, not generally across the neck. This matters because aggressive or non-specific manipulation of an injured neck can prolong the problem rather than help it. When the alignment is restored, the soft tissue gets the chance to heal in the right position. Many patients who address whiplash early avoid the long-term symptoms that come from leaving it alone.
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Pain, numbness, or weakness in the limbs caused by nerve compression at the spine.
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Sensation of spinning or imbalance, often linked to upper cervical or inner ear dysfunction.
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Bulging, herniated, or extruded spinal discs that compress nerves and limit movement.
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Hand and wrist pain, numbness, or weakness from median nerve compression.
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Spinal misalignment, disc problems, or muscle strain limiting daily movement and quality of life.
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Sharp, radiating pain down the leg caused by irritation of the sciatic nerve at the spine.
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Abnormal sideways curvature of the spine that affects posture, motion, and long-term function.
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Injuries from job-related accidents, repetitive motion, or sustained poor posture on the job.
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Persistent shoulder pain, stiffness, or limited motion that interferes with daily activity.
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A physiologic state that shifts posture, weight, and ligament tension in ways that strain the spine.
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Stiffness, soreness, or sharp pain in the cervical spine that limits motion and daily activity.
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Recurring head pain often driven by tension and misalignment in the upper neck.
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