Neck pain
chiropractor
in San Diego
Tech neck. Pinched nerves. Disc herniations. Whiplash. Cervicogenic headaches. Dr. Jordan Loewenstein treats the full spectrum of cervical spine conditions — finding the structural cause and fixing it, not just managing symptoms.
What does a chiropractor
do for neck pain?
Neck pain is one of the most common reasons people seek chiropractic care — and one of the conditions that responds best to it. Here's what the research says and what to expect.
Why neck pain is an
epidemic in this zip code
San Diego's neck pain problem has a specific geography — and it starts right here in the UTC corridor.
your neck pain?
7 causes of neck pain —
explained
Most neck pain has a specific structural cause. Understanding which one applies to you determines how treatment is structured and how quickly you recover.
Tech Neck
Tech neck, formally known as forward head posture (FHP), develops when the head migrates forward of its neutral alignment over the shoulders due to prolonged screen use. For every inch the head shifts forward, approximately 10 additional pounds of compressive force is transferred to the cervical spine — meaning a head that drifts 3 inches forward subjects the neck to the mechanical load equivalent of a 40-pound weight.
Over time, this postural deformation compresses the anterior cervical joints, overstretches the posterior musculature including the upper trapezius and levator scapulae, and creates chronic myofascial trigger points. A 2025 study in Scientific Reports confirmed that forward head posture reduced rehabilitation success by 13% for every inch of displacement — making early structural correction critical, not optional.
Cervical Disc
A cervical disc herniation occurs when the soft nucleus pulposus of an intervertebral disc pushes through a tear in the annulus fibrosus and contacts an adjacent nerve root or the spinal cord. The C5–C6 and C6–C7 segments are most commonly affected, reflecting the high mechanical load and range of motion demands at the cervicothoracic junction. Symptoms range from localized neck pain and stiffness to pain, tingling, or weakness that radiates into the shoulder, arm, and fingers.
Disc herniations are frequently misunderstood as automatically surgical — but the evidence consistently shows otherwise. Studies demonstrate that 90% of symptomatic cervical disc herniations improve with conservative care. The herniated material itself often undergoes spontaneous resorption over 6–18 months; conservative treatment accelerates neurological recovery and restores function during this window.
Pinched Nerve
Cervical radiculopathy occurs when a nerve root in the neck is compressed or chemically irritated — most commonly from a herniated disc or foraminal stenosis from bone spurs. The C6 nerve root (between C5–C6) and C7 nerve root (between C6–C7) are the most frequently affected. C6 compression causes pain and tingling into the thumb and index finger; C7 affects the middle finger and triceps, often with noticeable grip weakness.
The prognosis for cervical radiculopathy with conservative treatment is excellent. According to the Cleveland Clinic, over 85% of cervical radiculopathy cases resolve without surgery. The key is accurate diagnosis — determining which nerve root is affected and applying the specific decompression strategy for that level — rather than generic neck treatment.
Cervicogenic
Headache
Cervicogenic headaches (CGH) originate from dysfunction in the upper cervical spine — specifically the C1, C2, and C3 joints — rather than from primary brain pathology. They are typically unilateral, begin at the base of the skull, and radiate forward toward the eye and temple, often mimicking migraine. The clinical differentiator is that CGH is provoked by neck movement, sustained postures, or manual pressure at the suboccipital region — a finding absent in primary migraine.
The mechanism involves convergence of cervical and trigeminal pain pathways in the trigemino-cervical nucleus — meaning genuine cervical joint dysfunction is interpreted by the brain as head pain. A 2025 network meta-analysis in Frontiers in Neurology confirmed cervical spine manipulation as the most effective short-term intervention for reducing pain and disability in cervicogenic headache, outperforming exercise therapy, trigger point injections, and medication management.
Whiplash
Whiplash is a rapid acceleration-deceleration cervical injury — the head is thrown forward and backward with force exceeding the normal physiological range of motion, injuring muscles, ligaments, facet joints, and intervertebral discs simultaneously. Rear-end motor vehicle collisions are the most common cause, but the mechanism also occurs in sports collisions, falls, and direct impacts. A critical and widely misunderstood aspect of whiplash: symptoms frequently do not emerge until 24–72 hours post-injury, when the initial adrenaline and inflammation suppression clears.
Untreated whiplash is one of the primary drivers of chronic neck pain. The reason is mechanical: without early restoration of joint motion, scar tissue forms in injured soft tissue structures and compensation movement patterns develop — both of which perpetuate dysfunction long after the acute injury has resolved. Early chiropractic intervention within the first 72 hours significantly reduces chronic pain risk and creates a contemporaneous medical record critical for insurance claims.
Facet Joint
Dysfunction
Cervical facet joints are the paired synovial joints connecting adjacent vertebral arches along the posterior spine, functioning as the spine's motion guides. When these joints become inflamed, mechanically restricted, or degenerated — through injury, sustained poor posture, or degenerative joint changes — they produce characteristic localized neck pain and stiffness that can refer pain into the shoulders and upper back in predictable patterns.
Facet joint pain is typically provoked by neck extension, rotation, and sustained static postures. It is often described as deep, aching, and difficult to localize precisely. Unlike radiculopathy, it does not typically produce radiating arm symptoms unless the disc is also involved. Facet-mediated pain is the primary driver in a significant percentage of chronic neck pain cases — and spinal manipulation is specifically designed to restore motion to restricted facet joints, making chiropractic a highly targeted treatment.
Trigger
Points
Myofascial trigger points are hyperirritable taut bands within muscle tissue that produce both local tenderness and referred pain to distant areas. In the cervical region, the upper trapezius, levator scapulae, splenius capitis, suboccipital muscle group, scalenes, and sternocleidomastoid (SCM) are the primary sites. Trigger points in these muscles develop from postural overload, repetitive strain, direct trauma, or as secondary compensation following a primary joint injury.
The referred pain patterns from cervical trigger points are clinically significant and frequently misattributed. Upper trapezius trigger points refer pain to the lateral neck and temple, mimicking tension headache. Suboccipital trigger points create a "band around the head" headache pattern. SCM trigger points produce symptoms that can include dizziness and visual disturbances. Accurate identification of the specific trigger point source guides treatment precision and dramatically accelerates results.
Choosing the right
provider for neck pain
Different providers take different approaches. Here's an honest comparison — because the right choice depends on your specific condition and goals.
Your treatment
timeline
No open-ended care. Every patient receives a clear, phased plan at their first visit — with defined milestones and a reassessment built in at week four.
When neck pain needs
emergency care
Most neck pain is benign and mechanical. But certain symptoms are red flags requiring immediate medical evaluation — not chiropractic care. Every new patient at this practice is screened for these before any treatment.
Neck pain chiropractic
FAQs
The most common questions patients in UTC, La Jolla, Sorrento Valley, and Carmel Valley ask before their first visit for neck pain.
Neck pain arises from many sources. The most common include muscle strain from poor posture or prolonged screen use, joint dysfunction in the cervical facets, herniated or bulging discs pressing on nerve roots, and whiplash injuries from car accidents or sports. Sleeping in an awkward position, stress-driven muscle tension, and degenerative changes from aging also cause or worsen neck pain. Because causes vary significantly, a proper examination is essential to identify the specific driver of your symptoms so treatment can be accurately targeted.
Tech neck — also called text neck or forward head posture — develops when you hold your head forward of your shoulders while looking at screens, phones, or devices for extended periods. For every inch your head shifts forward, it adds approximately 10 additional pounds of stress to your cervical spine. If you work at a computer, spend significant time on your phone, or drive long distances, you are at elevated risk. Over time, tech neck compresses the cervical joints, overstretches the posterior neck muscles, and can lead to chronic pain, headaches, and even disc problems if not addressed.
Cervical radiculopathy occurs when a nerve root in the neck is compressed or irritated — most often from a herniated disc or bone spur. Symptoms include sharp or burning pain that radiates from the neck into the shoulder, arm, or hand, along with tingling, numbness, and sometimes weakness in the grip or arm. The C6 and C7 nerve roots are most commonly affected: C6 compression produces symptoms into the thumb and index finger, while C7 causes middle finger symptoms and tricep weakness. Over 85% of cervical radiculopathy cases resolve with conservative care, making chiropractic an appropriate first-line treatment before considering injections or surgery.
Cervicogenic headaches originate from dysfunction in the upper cervical spine (C1–C3) rather than from the brain itself. They are typically one-sided, start at the base of the skull, and radiate forward toward the eye or temple. Unlike migraines, they are provoked by neck movement, sustained postures, or pressure on specific points at the top of the neck — this reproducibility with palpation is the key clinical differentiator. A chiropractic examination can identify the cervical source and distinguish this headache type from tension or migraine presentations, ensuring treatment is targeted appropriately.
If left untreated, whiplash injuries can progress to chronic neck pain, restricted range of motion, and persistent headaches due to scar tissue formation and ongoing joint dysfunction. Studies show that approximately 50% of untreated whiplash injuries develop into chronic pain syndromes lasting longer than 6 months. Early chiropractic care within the first 72 hours significantly reduces this risk by restoring proper joint mechanics and addressing soft tissue damage before compensation patterns and adhesions develop. Even if your pain seems mild initially — whiplash symptoms are frequently delayed — an evaluation is warranted to document injury and begin treatment.
Yes — cervical chiropractic adjustments are considered safe when performed by a licensed chiropractor after a proper examination. Serious adverse events are extremely rare, estimated at fewer than 1 in 5.85 million cervical manipulations in the literature. Every new patient at this practice undergoes a thorough orthopedic and neurological examination, including screening for contraindications to cervical manipulation, before any treatment is performed. If your presentation warrants a gentler approach — gentle mobilization rather than HVLA manipulation — that determination is made clinically at the first visit.
A medical doctor typically manages neck pain with pain medication, muscle relaxers, or anti-inflammatory injections — these reduce symptoms but do not address the underlying structural cause. A chiropractor performs a hands-on diagnosis to identify which specific joints, nerves, or soft tissues are driving the pain, then treats the root cause through spinal manipulation, soft tissue therapy, and corrective exercise. For most mechanical neck pain (not caused by infection, cancer, or fracture), chiropractic offers a more direct, targeted approach. Some cases benefit from co-management — this practice coordinates with your medical provider when appropriate.
For most patients, cervical chiropractic adjustments are comfortable and often immediately relieving. The adjustment involves a precise, controlled movement to a specific joint — you may hear a "pop" (gas releasing from the joint), which is normal and painless. Some patients feel mild muscle soreness for 12–24 hours after the first visit, similar to post-workout soreness, as tissues adapt. Patients with acute inflammation or very restricted range of motion are treated with gentler mobilization techniques first until they are ready for more specific adjustments. If anything feels uncomfortable during treatment, we modify immediately.
This depends on the severity, chronicity, and type of condition. Acute muscle strain or joint sprain may resolve in 4–8 visits over 2–4 weeks. Chronic neck pain with a structural component — disc herniation, radiculopathy, or significant postural deformation — typically requires 12–20 visits over 6–12 weeks, with a formal reassessment at the 4-week mark. Open-ended care is not the approach here: at your first visit you receive a clear, phased treatment plan with defined goals and milestones. Most patients feel significant improvement within the first 2–3 weeks.
Yes. Chiropractic care is one of the most effective non-surgical options for cervical radiculopathy. Spinal adjustments and traction decompress the affected nerve root, reducing pain, tingling, and arm weakness. Studies consistently show over 85% of cervical radiculopathy cases resolve with conservative care. Treatment begins with Spurling's test and neurological examination to confirm which nerve root is involved, then applies level-specific decompression. Neurological status is monitored at every visit; if symptoms progress rather than improve, imaging and specialist referral are initiated promptly.
Yes — sleeping position is one of the most overlooked contributors to neck pain. Sleeping on your stomach forces extreme cervical rotation for hours at a time, straining facet joints and posterior muscles. Sleeping on your side without proper pillow support drops or elevates the head, creating lateral flexion stress. The optimal position is on your back or side with a pillow that maintains cervical neutral alignment. At this practice, sleep posture is assessed at the first visit and specific pillow height recommendations are made based on your shoulder width and body type — this simple change eliminates a significant source of ongoing irritation for many patients.
X-ray is indicated for: trauma with concern for fracture (assessed using Canadian C-Spine Rules and NEXUS criteria), chronic pain where degenerative changes or instability may guide treatment decisions, and any presentation with neurological signs. MRI is indicated for: suspected disc herniation with radiculopathy that has not responded to 4–6 weeks of conservative care, red flag symptoms, progressive neurological deficits, or when surgical consultation is being considered. Most routine mechanical neck pain does not require imaging to begin treatment — but if imaging is clinically warranted, you will be referred for it at this practice before proceeding.
No referral is needed for most insurance plans — you can call or book directly without going through your primary care doctor first. PPO plans including Aetna, Blue Shield, UnitedHealthcare, and Anthem do not require a referral for chiropractic. VA patients do require an approved Community Care Network referral from their VA provider. Some HMO plans also require referral. If you are unsure, call the office at (858) 558-3111 and we'll verify your benefits before your first visit.
Ideally within 24–72 hours, even if your pain feels mild. Whiplash injuries frequently have delayed symptom onset — adrenaline and initial inflammation suppression can mask pain for hours to days after the accident. The sooner you are evaluated, the better the documentation of injury (important for insurance claims) and the lower the risk of chronic pain developing from untreated soft tissue and joint damage. An examination at this practice includes orthopedic and neurological testing, and imaging referral when indicated. Same-day appointments are available for post-accident evaluations — call (858) 558-3111.
Monitor height should position the top of the screen at or slightly below eye level, keeping the cervical spine in neutral rather than flexed. Chair height should allow your feet flat on the floor and elbows at 90 degrees. Laptop users should use an external monitor or a laptop stand with a separate keyboard — working directly on a laptop screen creates inevitable cervical flexion. The 20-20-20 rule reduces static load: every 20 minutes, look 20 feet away for 20 seconds and do 3 cervical retractions (chin tuck). These adjustments are reviewed and customized at your first visit based on your specific work setup.
Ready to fix
your neck?
Same-day appointments available in UTC San Diego. Most major insurance plans accepted — Aetna, Blue Shield, UnitedHealthcare, Anthem, and more.