Sciatica Resolved by a Neck Adjustment: What This Case Reveals About the Nervous System

May 2019  |  Rochet Family Chiropractic, Royal Palm Beach, FL
Just because you have a pain in the leg doesn't mean the problem is in the leg. This case is one of the most instructive I've seen in practice — because it demonstrates something that challenges how most people think about symptoms, diagnosis, and where healing actually comes from.

The Patient

She was referred to me by an existing practice member — a woman in her sixties who had been suffering from severe sciatica for three years. Three years of pain radiating through the hip and down the leg. Three years of medical intervention that produced no relief. No history of recent injury or trauma. No obvious explanation for why a relatively unremarkable health history had produced such persistent, debilitating lower extremity symptoms.

When I examined her cervical spine, I found the answer — and it had nothing to do with her lumbar spine or her sciatic nerve.

What the X-Ray Revealed

Lateral cervical X-ray showed significant vertebral stagger at C4 through C7. The bones were not stacking in smooth alignment — they were displaced relative to each other, creating direct mechanical pressure on the spinal cord at the cervical level. Moderate spondylosis and degeneration were also present, consistent with long-standing subluxation. The spine was compromised — but the damage was in the neck, not the low back.

Initial lateral cervical X-ray showing vertebral stagger at C4 through C7 with moderate spondylosis and spinal cord compression, Rochet Family Chiropractic Royal Palm Beach
Before — Initial Exam
C4–C7 stagger, degeneration
Follow-up lateral cervical X-ray showing improved vertebral alignment at C5 C6 C7 with significant reduction in spinal cord compression after corrective care, Rochet Family Chiropractic Royal Palm Beach
After Correction
C5–C7 aligned, cord decompressed

Structural Findings — Initial Examination

Cervical (lateral): Vertebral stagger at C4–C7. Bones displaced relative to each other, creating mechanical spinal cord compression.

Degeneration: Moderate spondylosis — consistent with long-standing subluxation.

Lumbar: Not the structural source of her sciatica.

How a Cervical Subluxation Produces Sciatica

This is the question worth understanding — because it reframes everything about how we think about symptoms and their origins.

The spinal cord is a continuous structure running from the brainstem down through the lumbar spine. When vertebral subluxation creates mechanical compression or interference at the cervical cord level — as the stagger at C4–C7 was doing in this case — it doesn't just affect the structures at that level. It disrupts the integrity of nerve signal transmission through the entire cord below it. The lumbar and sacral segments, which give rise to the sciatic nerve, receive degraded or interfered signals from above.

Three years of treatment directed at the lumbar spine and the sciatic nerve pathway produced no resolution because the source was never there. The interference was at C4–C7. Chase the sciatica and you find nothing. Correct the cervical subluxation and the nervous system restores itself.

The Corrective Approach and Results

My approach was to correct the vertebral subluxation in her cervical spine — specifically the stagger pattern at C4 through C7. Through specific corrective adjustments targeting those segments, we progressively restored alignment. Follow-up X-ray showed C5, C6, and C7 properly aligned. C4 retained some displacement, but the overall reduction in spinal cord compression was significant and measurable.

Structural Correction — Post-Care Results

C5, C6, C7: Properly aligned — stagger corrected, spinal cord decompressed.

C4: Improved but retains some displacement — ongoing correction in progress.

Nerve flow: Immense relief of pressure off the spinal cord. Restored nerve transmission.

Her sciatica resolved. Three years of medically unresolved lower extremity pain cleared after correcting a cervical subluxation. Not because we treated her sciatica — because we corrected the structural interference that was disrupting her nervous system, and her body did the rest.

Instead of trying to take away her sciatica, we corrected her subluxation. Her body healed itself.

Has Your Sciatica Been Treated in the Right Place?

If you've been managing sciatica without lasting resolution — especially without a clear lumbar injury or disc finding — the source may be elsewhere in your spine. A full structural assessment examines the entire spinal column, not just where the symptom appears. We serve patients across Royal Palm Beach, Wellington, and the greater West Palm Beach area.

Schedule a Structural Assessment

To learn more about how cervical subluxation affects nerve function throughout the body, visit our cervical subluxation resource page.

Rochet Family Chiropractic · Royal Palm Beach, FL

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