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Three Technologies. Three Questions. One Clear Plan.

  • Writer: FriscoUpperCervical
    FriscoUpperCervical
  • 2 days ago
  • 3 min read
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Most people who come to our office are not confused. They are frustrated.


They have tried stretching. Massage. Physical therapy. Maybe other chiropractic care.


Sometimes things helped for a while. Then the symptoms returned.


What they want is clarity.


What is happening?

What specifically needs to be addressed?

How will we know if it’s working?


We use three technologies, and each one answers a different question.


When those questions are answered in the right order, care becomes logical instead of trial and error.


1. NeckCare Testing

Question: Is your neck controlling movement the way it should?


Your upper neck plays a major role in stability, balance, and head position. The deep stabilizing muscles are designed to make small, precise corrections every time you move.


When that system is working well, rotation feels smooth. Posture feels effortless.


When it is not, people often notice things like:


  • Difficulty turning fully when backing out of the driveway

  • A neck that feels tight no matter how much they stretch

  • Symptoms that improve briefly but return

  • A sense that the head never quite feels centered


Some patients do not realize how limited their motion is until we measure it.


And we are not simply asking you to turn your head left and right and tell us if it feels stiff.


NeckCare testing provides objective data about range of motion, joint position control, and stability patterns. It measures how accurately your neck senses position and how consistently it controls movement.


That distinction matters.


If you only rely on how something feels, you miss what the system is actually doing.


We measure function first because long-term stability cannot be built on poor control.


2. Upper Cervical Imaging

Question: What does your anatomy actually look like?


The top two vertebrae, C1 and C2, are uniquely shaped and highly individual.


Small structural differences can change how forces move through the neck.


No two people share the same alignment blueprint.


When appropriate, upper cervical imaging allow us to analyze your anatomy directly. We measure angles and orientation so any adjustment is based on your unique structure, not a generalized model.


This is where precision comes from.


Instead of applying force and hoping for the best, we work from geometry. Adjustments are specific, gentle, and tailored to your individual anatomy.


We measure structure second because precision requires a blueprint.


3. Pre and Post Tytron Scans

Question: Did the adjustment create measurable change?


The Tytron C-5000 records thermal patterns along the spine.


We scan before an adjustment.

We adjust only when clinically appropriate.

We scan again afterward.


The purpose is simple: observe whether a measurable change occurred.


If the post-scan pattern shifts in the expected direction, we continue to monitor adaptation.


If it does not, that tells us something important as well.


Either way, decisions are guided by data.


We measure response third because feedback determines next steps.


The System

Each tool answers a different question:


NeckCare asks how well your neck is functioning.

Imaging defines your structural blueprint.

Tytron evaluates the body’s response.


Function.

Structure.

Response.


In that order.


That sequence means we are not adjusting on a schedule.


We are not relying on how someone feels in the moment.


We are not repeating the same input without feedback.


We identify measurable findings.

We apply a precise adjustment when indicated.

We verify the change and reassess over time.


Fewer assumptions.

Clear decision points.

Defined progress.


That is how care becomes precise, accountable, and easier to trust.

 
 
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