Getting started
Is chiropractic care safe? An honest look.
It’s one of the most common questions we hear, and it deserves a straight answer. For most people with everyday back, neck, and joint pain, chiropractic care is a low-risk way to feel and move better — but no honest overview would stop there. Here’s what the evidence says, where the real cautions are, and when you should see a medical doctor first.
The short version
Chiropractic adjustment of the spine and joints has been studied for decades and is widely regarded as a safe, conservative option for common musculoskeletal complaints — the aches in your low back, neck, and shoulders that come from how your body moves and holds tension. Serious complications do happen, but they are rare. The most common side effects are mild and short-lived: some soreness, stiffness, or tiredness for a day or two after a visit, a bit like how you feel after a good workout.
Safety isn’t a single yes-or-no answer. It depends on your health, what’s actually causing your pain, and the care being matched to it. A careful exam before any hands-on work is what keeps risk low.
What the common side effects actually are
The reactions most people notice are minor and pass on their own. Knowing what’s normal makes it easier to tell the difference between a routine response and something worth mentioning.
- Temporary soreness or aching in the area that was worked on
- Mild stiffness that eases within a day or two
- Feeling tired or a little washed-out after your first visit
- A brief headache, which usually settles quickly
These effects tend to lessen as your body adjusts over the first few visits. Gentle, low-force technique — the kind we favor here — is designed to keep even this mild soreness to a minimum, which is part of why it suits nervous first-timers, older patients, and people who are already in pain.
Where the real cautions are
Being honest about safety means naming the serious risks too, even though they’re uncommon. The rare but real ones tend to involve forceful, high-velocity manipulation of the neck, and they’re the reason a thorough history and exam come before any hands-on care.
The neck and the vertebral artery
Most of the serious-complication conversation centers on the neck. There has been long-running discussion in the research about a possible link between forceful neck manipulation and a rare tearing of an artery in the neck. The best current understanding is that such events are very uncommon, and that some people who experience them may already have been in the early stages of an artery problem — sometimes the neck pain or headache that brought them in was itself the first sign. That’s exactly why a careful screening matters, and why gentle, lower-force approaches to the neck are a sensible choice.
Conditions that change the plan
Certain conditions mean the usual adjustment either needs to be modified or set aside in favor of a different approach. This is not a reason to avoid care — it’s a reason to be seen by someone who asks the right questions first. A responsible chiropractor will adapt or refer you rather than push ahead.
- Thinning bone that makes the skeleton more fragile
- A known disc problem with progressing numbness or weakness
- Taking blood-thinning medication
- Recent trauma, fracture, infection, or a history of cancer
- Inflammatory joint disease affecting the neck
When to see a medical doctor first
Chiropractic care is for musculoskeletal pain — problems with how joints and muscles move. Some symptoms point to something that needs a medical evaluation before any adjustment, and a few are outright emergencies. If any of the following apply, please start with a physician or urgent care rather than a chiropractic visit.
- Sudden weakness in the legs, or any loss of bladder or bowel control — seek emergency care now
- A severe, sudden “worst ever” headache, or a headache with slurred speech, facial drooping, or vision changes
- Pain following a major accident, fall, or possible fracture
- Fever, unexplained weight loss, or night pain alongside back pain
- Numbness, tingling, or weakness that is spreading or getting worse
None of this means chiropractic and medical care are at odds. In practice they work well side by side — and part of a good chiropractor’s job is knowing when your situation belongs in someone else’s hands and saying so plainly.
How we keep your care low-risk
Safe care is mostly about what happens before the first adjustment. We take a full history, ask about your medications and health conditions, and examine how you actually move. If something suggests you’d be better served elsewhere first, we’ll tell you. Dr. Andy Marrone is a Doctor of Chiropractic (D.C.) and uses gentle, low-force technique rather than aggressive twisting — an approach chosen with comfort and caution in mind. We can’t promise a cure, and we won’t try to; what we can offer is a careful look at whether this kind of care is a good fit for you.
This article is general information, not medical advice. For guidance about your specific situation, please talk with a qualified provider.
How we can help
If you’ve been putting off getting help because you weren’t sure it was safe, a free consultation is a low-pressure place to start. We’ll listen to what’s going on, screen for anything that needs a medical eye first, and give you an honest read on whether gentle chiropractic care makes sense for you — no obligation either way. You can reach out through our contact page or call the clinic, and we’ll take it from there.
Have questions about whether it’s right for you?
Let’s talk it through. Book a free consultation and get an honest, no-pressure answer about whether gentle chiropractic care fits your situation.
