Nerve pain is a symptom. We look for the source.
Burning, numbness, tingling, and stabbing pain are most often driven by metabolic, circulatory, or compressive issues that conventional care treats with medication rather than investigation. We work the other way around.
The most common drivers we find.
Blood sugar dysregulation
Diabetic and prediabetic patterns are the most common driver. Not all of these cases show up as clearly abnormal on standard labs.
B-vitamin and cofactor gaps
B12, folate, and other B-vitamin deficiencies are often missed. So are mineral imbalances that nerves need to conduct properly.
Peripheral blood flow
Nerves need oxygen and nutrients delivered by microvascular circulation. When that is compromised, nerves struggle.
Nerve compression
Spinal or musculoskeletal compression of peripheral nerves is common and frequently missed in pure medical workups.
Chronic low-grade inflammation
Systemic inflammation from gut, food, or infectious drivers can maintain nerve irritation long after the initial insult.
Medication and treatment-related
Chemotherapy-induced neuropathy and statin-associated nerve issues respond well when the underlying physiology is supported.
Nerves respond to blood flow, nutrients, and time to heal.
Our protocol typically combines chiropractic adjustment for structural contributions, red light therapy for cellular support and microcirculation, nutritional intervention for deficiencies and blood sugar, and exercise with oxygen therapy where indicated. Not every patient needs every piece.
“Three neurologists told me there was nothing left to try. I have full feeling in my feet again. I did not think it was possible.”
Neuropathy, answered honestly.
Can neuropathy actually be reversed?
Some forms can improve significantly, especially when caught before nerve damage is extensive. We address the underlying metabolic, circulatory, or compressive drivers. Advanced cases may stabilize rather than fully reverse; even stabilization is meaningful when the alternative is progression.
What causes neuropathy?
The most common drivers are diabetes and blood sugar dysregulation, B-vitamin deficiencies, chemotherapy, chronic inflammation, autoimmune conditions, and nerve compression from spinal or musculoskeletal issues. Idiopathic cases often turn out to have a metabolic cause when investigated carefully.
Do you prescribe gabapentin or similar medications?
No. We work with your primary doctor to manage existing medications, but our approach focuses on correcting the underlying drivers rather than masking symptoms. Many of our patients are able to reduce medication dosage under their prescribing doctor's supervision once the root cause is addressed.
How many visits will I need?
Most patients commit to a 12 to 24 week protocol with 2 to 3 visits per week early on, tapering as symptoms improve. We re-evaluate every 4 weeks. If we are not getting results, we adjust or refer out.
A 60-minute conversation could change what you thought was possible.
Start with a free consultation. No pressure, no obligation.