Many headache patients arrive here after years of managing symptoms rather than addressing cause. Medication helps, but if the underlying mechanics — cervical joint restriction, suboccipital muscle tension, forward head posture, breathing pattern dysfunction — are never treated, the headaches keep coming. That's where physical therapy has a specific, evidence-supported role. Not as a replacement for your neurologist or prescriber, but as the piece that addresses what's happening in your neck, jaw, and upper back.
Cervicogenic headaches, tension-type headaches, and even some migraines have a significant musculoskeletal component. The upper cervical spine, the suboccipital muscles, the temporomandibular joint, and the thoracic spine all refer pain directly into the head. When those structures are restricted or overloaded, they generate headache patterns that look identical to other types.
Standard PT often misses this because the assessment stays surface-level. You get heat, some stretches, a handout. Nobody spends time with hands on the upper cervical joints, assessing how your first rib moves, or examining whether your breathing mechanics are loading your neck all day.
Effective headache treatment requires a detailed mechanical assessment, skilled manual therapy to the structures actually driving symptoms, and retraining the postural and movement habits that reload those structures between sessions. That takes time and clinical attention most high-volume clinics can't provide.
Chronic pain requires three things most clinics can't deliver: time to actually work through the layers, continuity so the clinician understands the full pattern, and modality breadth to address tissue, movement, and nervous system together. That's the model Physica Medica was built on.
Not three separate protocols — one integrated session that addresses all three. The weight shifts depending on what's driving your headaches and where you are in recovery.
Hands-on joint mobilization to the upper cervical and thoracic spine, dry needling of suboccipital and upper trapezius trigger points, and soft tissue work to the structures most commonly involved in cervicogenic and tension headaches.
Forward head posture, shallow chest breathing, and sustained desk postures all load the cervical spine continuously. We identify which patterns are contributing to your headache frequency and retrain them directly — not with generic posture cues, but with specific corrections tied to your actual daily mechanics.
Chronic headache patterns involve a sensitized nervous system that amplifies input. Breathwork, graded exposure, and pain education are part of the treatment plan for patients whose headaches have become frequent or unpredictable — not as a substitute for manual work, but alongside it.
Each modality targets a specific part of the problem. Most headache patients benefit from two or three in combination, depending on what the assessment finds.
Suboccipital, upper trapezius, levator scapulae, and sternocleidomastoid trigger points are among the most common sources of referred headache pain. Dry needling resets these neuromuscular trigger points directly, often producing faster relief than manual pressure alone. If needles concern you, that's a reasonable question to raise — we'll explain what to expect before we do anything.
→Restricted upper cervical and thoracic joints are a primary mechanical driver in cervicogenic headache. Skilled joint mobilization restores movement, reduces local muscle guarding, and decreases referred pain into the head. This is hands-on, specific, and graded to your tolerance.
→Instrument-assisted soft tissue mobilization for chronic muscle tension and fascial restriction in the cervical and upper thoracic region. Useful when tissue has been tight for a long time and manual pressure alone isn't getting full release.
→Sustained forward head posture and dysfunctional breathing mechanics are mechanical loads on the cervical spine that run in the background all day. Correcting them reduces the baseline tension that makes headaches more frequent.
→For patients whose headache frequency is clearly amplified by stress and nervous system reactivity, structured breathwork can reduce the physiological load between sessions. This is offered as an adjunct, not a primary treatment.
→The first session is a full clinical hour with Dr. Maks — no tech handoff, no intake form and wait. You'll leave with a clear picture of what's driving your headaches and a treatment plan with honest timelines.
Headache onset, frequency, location, triggers, prior imaging, medications, and every treatment you've already tried. What helped, what didn't, and what made things worse all inform the assessment.
Cervical range of motion, thoracic mobility, resting head position, breathing pattern, and how you hold your neck under load. Often the mechanical contributors become obvious within the first few minutes of watching someone move.
Hands-on assessment of upper cervical joint mobility, suboccipital and upper trapezius trigger points, first rib position, and TMJ if relevant. This is where the specific drivers get identified.
You receive treatment at the first visit, not just an assessment. Joint mobilization, trigger point work, or dry needling — whatever the examination indicates — begins session one.
A straight answer on how many sessions you'll likely need, what insurance will probably cover, and what to expect in terms of soreness or symptom changes after the first few visits.
Headache treatment is detail work. It requires time to assess carefully, hands-on skill to treat the right structures, and consistency across sessions to retrain patterns. A 20-minute slot with rotating staff doesn't give any of that. Every visit at Physica Medica is one hour, one-on-one, with a doctoral-level physical therapist.
We are out-of-network with most insurance plans. Most patients pay between $145 and $220 per session, with partial reimbursement possible through out-of-network benefits. We'll help you figure out what your plan covers before you commit.
If cost is a real concern, start with a free 30-minute movement screen. It gives you a clearer picture of whether PT is the right next step for your headaches before you spend anything.
[ Real patient testimonial will be placed here — a headache or migraine success story, in the patient's own words ][Patient Name] · Chronic low back pain, Canton resident
How do I know if my headaches are coming from my neck? The honest answer: you may not know until someone does a proper mechanical assessment. Cervicogenic headaches often feel identical to tension headaches or migraines. Location, behavior with neck movement, and trigger point referral patterns help distinguish them. That's part of what the first visit establishes.
How many sessions will I need? Most patients with cervicogenic or tension-type headaches notice meaningful reduction in frequency by sessions 3 to 5. A full course of treatment is typically 8 to 12 sessions, depending on how long the pattern has been established and whether postural retraining is part of the plan.
Will I be sore after dry needling or joint mobilization? Possibly. Dry needling to the suboccipital muscles or upper traps can cause 24 to 48 hours of local soreness — similar to a deep muscle ache. Joint mobilization occasionally produces temporary stiffness. Neither is cause for concern, and both typically resolve quickly. We'll tell you what to expect before each treatment.
Can you work alongside my neurologist or headache specialist? Yes. We're set up to coordinate with your prescriber or neurologist and can provide documentation of findings and treatment if that's useful. PT and medical headache management aren't competing approaches — for most patients, they work better together.