Neurological ReliefGonstead Method

Headache & Migraine Treatment

Most recurring headaches are not random. They originate from upper cervical dysfunction, muscle tension, or nerve irritation that no amount of paracetamol will fix. We find the source.

Understanding the Condition

What Is Headaches & Migraines?

Headaches are one of the most common conditions chiropractors treat — and one of the most mismanaged. The majority of recurring headaches seen in clinical practice are either cervicogenic (originating from upper cervical joints and muscles) or tension-type (driven by suboccipital and trapezius tightness). Migraines, while neurologically driven, are frequently triggered or worsened by cervical dysfunction at C1–C3, where the trigeminal nucleus caudalis receives convergent input from upper cervical nerves. This is why many migraineurs notice neck stiffness before or during attacks. Precision Gonstead adjustment of the upper cervical spine addresses the mechanical contributors to headache that medication cannot.

Clinical Review

Medical note before you book

Reviewed by Bewell Chiropractic's Gonstead-trained clinical team.

Care is delivered by T&CM / ACM-registered chiropractors with rehabilitation support where appropriate.

This page is educational and not a diagnosis. Seek urgent medical care for severe weakness, loss of bladder or bowel control, fever, or trauma.

Root Causes

What Triggers Chronic Headaches?

Headaches have many drivers, but recurring patterns almost always involve a structural or postural component that makes the nervous system chronically sensitised to triggers.

Upper Cervical Dysfunction

Subluxations at C1 (Atlas) and C2 (Axis) irritate the upper cervical nerves that refer pain to the head, scalp, and behind the eyes — the hallmark of cervicogenic headache.

Forward Head Posture

Every centimetre the head shifts forward adds ~5 kg of effective load to the cervical spine. The resulting muscular strain in the suboccipital and trapezius muscles is a primary tension headache driver.

Trigeminocervical Sensitisation

Chronic irritation of C1–C3 nerve roots sensitises the trigeminal nucleus, lowering the threshold for migraine attacks and explaining why many migraineurs also have neck pain.

Muscle Tension & Trigger Points

Active myofascial trigger points in the suboccipital, sternocleidomastoid, and trapezius muscles reproduce referred headache patterns that closely mimic primary headache disorders.

Poor Sleep Posture

Sleeping with too many pillows, on the stomach, or in a fixed position for hours compresses cervical joints and wakes patients with morning headaches that ease throughout the day.

Stress & Autonomic Dysregulation

Psychological stress increases trapezius and suboccipital tone, compresses upper cervical joints, and amplifies central pain sensitivity — a self-reinforcing headache cycle.

Progression

How Headaches Become Chronic

Headaches exist on a spectrum from occasional episodes to daily chronic conditions. The progression is largely driven by how the underlying structural problem is — or isn't — managed.

Stage 1Mild

Episodic Headaches

Fewer than 15 headache days per month. Often triggered by specific events — stress, poor sleep, long screen time. Pain resolves fully between episodes. Structural dysfunction is present but not yet self-sustaining.

Stage 2Moderate

Frequent Episodic Headaches

10–14 headache days per month. Triggers become harder to identify as the baseline cervical tension is now constant. Medication use increases. The window for conservative care narrowing.

Stage 3Severe

Chronic Daily Headache

15 or more headache days per month for over 3 months. The nervous system is now centrally sensitised. Medication overuse headache (MOH) often develops alongside the primary condition, creating a second layer of daily pain.

Stage 4Critical

Medication Overuse Headache

Analgesics or triptans taken more than 10–15 days per month paradoxically cause rebound headaches. Breaking this cycle requires addressing both the overuse pattern and the underlying structural cause simultaneously.

Episodic headaches treated at Stage 1 rarely become chronic.

Every month of untreated cervical dysfunction raises central sensitisation and increases medication dependence. A cervical assessment at Bewell takes 30 minutes and often reveals a correctable structural driver.

Recognition

Do You Experience These Symptoms?

If your headaches are worse in the morning, come with neck stiffness, or reliably follow long screen sessions — these are structural signals, not random chemistry. That pattern is treatable.

One-sided or bilateral head pain

Pain focused at the base of skull, temples, forehead, or wrapping around the whole head

Neck stiffness before or during headache

Limited cervical rotation or occipital tightness that precedes or accompanies the headache

Eye pain or light sensitivity

Pressure behind or around the eye, often with photophobia — common in both migraine and cervicogenic headache

Nausea or dizziness

Vestibular disturbance or nausea accompanying severe headache episodes

Morning headaches

Waking with head pain that suggests sustained cervical compression or poor sleep position during the night

Real Results

I had migraines two or three times a week for five years. I tried everything — medication, acupuncture, cutting out caffeine. Bewell was the first place that X-rayed my neck and showed me my Atlas was rotated. Eight sessions later, I went from three migraines a week to one a month.

Siti Aisyah M.

Patient, Sunway Geo

Ready to heal

Get Your Spine Assessed Today

Book a Gonstead consultation at any of our three Klang Valley branches. No waiting, no forms — just fast WhatsApp booking.

Available every day · Walk-ins welcome

Frequently Asked

Common questions

Yes, neck dysfunction can contribute to headaches, especially when the upper cervical spine is involved. These headaches often start from the neck or base of the skull.

Chiropractic care can help when tension headaches are related to neck stiffness, posture stress, or spinal joint irritation. Gonstead care focuses on correcting the specific spinal area instead of only treating tight muscles.

Morning headaches may be related to neck posture during sleep, pillow support, jaw tension, or other health factors. If it happens often, it is worth getting checked properly.

You should worry when headaches start affecting your daily life, focus at work, sleep, or even walking. In Gonstead care, we aim to find the root cause instead of only covering the pain.

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