Knowledge Center

Explore Your Health Concerns.

Clear, reliable information about the musculoskeletal concerns, injuries, movement challenges, and everyday stresses our patients commonly ask us about.

Pain & Spinal Conditions

Back, neck, and nerve-related discomfort — where mechanical and postural factors are often part of the picture.

Pain & Spinal

Back Pain

Back pain can arise from many factors, including joint irritation, muscle strain, disc involvement, posture, inactivity, repetitive stress, injury, or underlying medical conditions. Learn how individualized evaluation can help identify the likely contributors and guide appropriate care or referral.

Learn About Back Pain

Pain & Spinal

Neck Pain

Neck discomfort may be associated with posture, prolonged screen use, joint restriction, muscle tension, injury, repetitive activity, or other conditions. A careful assessment helps determine which movement, neurological, or musculoskeletal factors may be involved.

Learn About Neck Pain

Pain & Spinal

Sciatica

Sciatica describes pain or neurological symptoms that travel along the path of the sciatic nerve. Because similar symptoms may have different causes, proper evaluation is essential before recommending care.

Learn About Sciatica

Pain & Spinal

Disc Injuries

Spinal discs can be affected by degeneration, repetitive strain, trauma, loading, and other factors. Symptoms may include local pain, stiffness, radiating discomfort, numbness, tingling, or weakness. Progressive neurological symptoms require timely medical evaluation.

Learn About Disc Injuries

Pain & Spinal

Headaches

Some headaches may be associated with neck dysfunction, muscle tension, posture, or cervicogenic factors. Because headaches can also signal other medical concerns, evaluation and appropriate referral are important.

Learn About Headaches

Pain & Spinal

Migraines

Migraine is a complex neurological condition. Chiropractic care should never be presented as a cure. A musculoskeletal assessment may be appropriate when neck pain or mechanical factors coexist, while medical management remains essential.

Learn About Migraines

Movement & Joint Concerns

Shoulder, hip, knee, wrist, and postural challenges that affect how well you move through everyday life.

Movement & Joint

Shoulder Pain

Shoulder discomfort may involve the joint, muscles, tendons, nerves, posture, neck, or movement mechanics. Evaluation should consider the entire shoulder complex and its relationship to the spine and upper body.

Learn About Shoulder Pain

Movement & Joint

Hip Pain

Hip pain can arise from the joint, surrounding muscles, tendons, pelvis, lower back, or movement patterns. Understanding when and how symptoms occur helps guide assessment and appropriate care.

Learn About Hip Pain

Movement & Joint

Knee Pain

Knee symptoms may reflect local injury, overuse, strength imbalance, foot and hip mechanics, training demands, or other medical conditions. Assessment should consider the entire lower-extremity movement chain.

Learn About Knee Pain

Movement & Joint

Carpal Tunnel

Carpal tunnel syndrome involves compression of the median nerve at the wrist. Symptoms may include numbness, tingling, weakness, or discomfort. Evaluation should also consider the neck, shoulder, elbow, and other possible sources of nerve symptoms.

Learn About Carpal Tunnel

Movement & Joint

Posture Correction

Posture is not about maintaining one perfect position. It involves how the body adapts to work, movement, habits, fatigue, and daily demands. Posture-focused care should emphasize awareness, mobility, strength, variation, and individual needs.

Learn About Posture Correction

Recovery & Ongoing Care

Post-injury care, workplace ergonomics, and long-term maintenance for people who want to stay well.

Recovery & Ongoing

Personal Injury

Personal-injury care may involve evaluation, documentation, communication with other providers, and individualized treatment following an accident or injury. The page should clearly explain the process without making legal promises.

Learn About Personal Injury

Recovery & Ongoing

Workplace Ergonomics

Workplace ergonomics examines how workstation setup, job demands, tools, posture, movement, and repetition affect the body. Practical adjustments and education can help employees work more comfortably and efficiently.

Learn About Workplace Ergonomics

Recovery & Ongoing

Maintenance Care

Maintenance care is an individualized approach for patients who choose periodic musculoskeletal care after completing an initial phase of treatment. It should be presented as optional and based on the patient's goals, history, response, and preferences.

Learn About Maintenance Care

Not sure where to start?

A thorough consultation is often the fastest way to clarity. We'll listen, evaluate, and build a plan around your body.