Connected Pain: How Your Neck May Be Causing Your Headaches

If you have ever dealt with nagging neck pain, you are far from alone. In fact, research shows that roughly half of us will experience a significant episode of neck pain at some point in our lives.

Whether it stems from a sudden whiplash injury, age-related changes like arthritis, a pinched nerve, or simply the daily muscle strain of looking down at our phones or computer screens, neck pain is incredibly disruptive. It can present as a dull ache or a sharp, catching pain, and it often robs you of your ability to turn your head comfortably.

But there is another common symptom of neck stiffness that surprises many people: headaches.

What is a Cervicogenic Headache?

Headaches that actually originate from a structural issue in the neck are called cervicogenic headaches. While they only affect a small percentage of the general population, they are incredibly common for people who struggle with chronic neck issues, accounting for up to 15-20% of all recurrent headaches.

Unlike migraines or tension headaches, cervicogenic headaches are a type of “referred pain.” This means the true problem is located in your neck, but your brain perceives the pain to be in your head.

Common Signs of a Neck-Driven Headache:

  • One-Sided Pain: The headache is typically one-sided, matching the side of the injured tissue or joint in your neck.
  • A Distinct Path: The pain usually begins at the base of the skull or neck and radiates forward toward your forehead, temple, around your eye, or near your ear.
  • Clear Triggers: The headache can often be reproduced or worsened by continuous neck movement, staying in one posture for too long, or when a physical therapist presses on a tender “trigger point” in your neck muscles.

The most frequent culprit behind this discomfort is an issue with the C2 facet joint, one of the small, stabilizing joints at the very top of your spine.

How Physical Therapy Can Help

The good news is that cervicogenic headaches respond incredibly well to a personalized combination of physical therapy, targeted pain management, and everyday lifestyle tweaks.

At Sheltering Arms Institute, our physical therapists address the root cause of your headache using a comprehensive toolkit:

  • Manual Therapy: We use soft tissue mobilization (targeted massage and trigger point release) and spinal mobilization or manipulation to safely reduce joint stiffness and ease muscle tension.
  • Targeted Exercise: We guide you through postural stabilization exercises to strengthen the support system of your neck and upper back, alongside proprioception retraining to improve your neck’s position awareness and movement control.
  • Dry Needling: This can be a highly effective complement to your treatment, using thin needles to stimulate tight muscle bands, promote local blood circulation, and accelerate healing in the injured tissue.
  • Education & Lifestyle Tuning: We provide pain neuroscience education to help you understand how your nervous system processes pain. Together, we will also optimize your everyday habits—from setting up an ergonomic workstation to improving sleep hygiene and managing stress.

When to Seek Immediate Care

While most neck pain and headaches can be safely managed with physical therapy, you should seek immediate medical attention if your symptoms started right after a traumatic accident, are steadily worsening, or are accompanied by a fever, difficulty walking, or numbness and tingling in your arms or legs.

Find Relief at Sheltering Arms Institute

You do not have to live with a stiff neck and a constant headache. If you or a loved one is struggling to find relief, our team is here to help you move comfortably again.

Click here to schedule an evaluation with a Sheltering Arms Institute physical therapist or call (804) 764-1000 to learn more about our specialized rehabilitation programs.

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Connected Pain: How Your Neck May Be Causing Your Headaches

If you have ever dealt with nagging neck pain, you are far from alone. In fact, research shows that roughly half of us will experience a significant episode of neck pain at some point in our lives. Whether it stems from a sudden whiplash injury, age-related changes like arthritis, a pinched nerve, or simply the daily muscle strain of looking down at our phones or computer screens, neck pain is incredibly disruptive. It can present as a dull ache or a sharp, catching pain, and it often robs you of your ability to turn your head comfortably. But there is another common symptom of neck stiffness that surprises many people: headaches.

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