05/20/2026
She was doing so many of the right things.
As a busy mom of a young child, she was exercising regularly, eating pretty well, taking a multivitamin, using supplements, and doing her best to support a healthy lifestyle.
But even with all of that, the headaches kept coming back.
Sometimes they were weekly. Sometimes they were daily. And when they showed up, they could last a day or two at a time. Rest, sleep, time, and medication would help for a while, but the relief never seemed to last. Seasonal allergies and monthly hormone changes often made them even worse.
Eventually, she had enough.
After being referred by an existing patient, she scheduled with Dr. Matt and we took a closer look at how her nervous system was functioning.
Her new patient INSiGHT Scans showed severe nervous system dysfunction in her upper cervical region, along with mild dysfunction in her lower lumbar region. In other words, her body was working harder than it needed to especially in an area closely connected to how the body handles tension, stress, and head/neck patterns.
After several consistent adjustments in those first few weeks, her progress scans showed significant improvement:
✨ Upper thoracic region: severe dysfunction → normal function
✨ Lower lumbar region: mild dysfunction → normal function
✨ Upper cervical region: severe dysfunction → mild/moderate dysfunction
And just as importantly, she reported that her headaches had improved, and she was no longer needing medication for them.
This is such an important reminder. Healthy habits matter, but sometimes your body needs more than rest, supplements, workouts, and powering through.
Medication may help quiet the symptom, but Dr. Matt looks deeper at how your nervous system is functioning, adapting, and communicating.
So, if you’re a mom who is doing your best to live a healthy lifestyle but still struggling with recurring headaches, tension, poor sleep, or stress patterns that keep coming back, it may be time to look at the bigger picture.
Schedule with Dr. Matt at and let’s take a closer look at what your body has been trying to tell you.