El Paso Chiropractic for Dizziness and Wellness Strategies
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Integrative Chiropractic Care for Dizziness, Pelvic Health, Perimenopause, and Rehabilitation: An Evidence-Based Guide
Abstract
In this educational post, I share a clear, first-person journey through common clinical challenges I encounter at El Paso Back Clinic: dizziness and low energy in older adults; pelvic and urinary symptoms; perimenopausal changes and postmenopausal bleeding; rehabilitation planning; and individualized decisions around hormones and medications. I present actionable, evidence-based strategies emphasizing integrative chiropractic care, physical therapy, and functional movement, supported by modern research methods. You will learn the neurophysiology behind vestibular dizziness, how spinal and pelvic alignment influences urinary and pelvic symptoms, why perimenopause fluctuates, and how to structure safe, progressive rehab. Hormones and medications appear in the background to contextualize care, but the primary focus remains on chiropractic, neuromuscular, and lifestyle interventions that improve real-world outcomes.
I am Dr. Alexander Jimenez, DC, APRN, FNP-BC, CFMP, IFMCP, ATN, CCST. In our El Paso Back Clinic, we combine integrative chiropractic, functional rehabilitation, targeted soft-tissue therapies, and data-driven outcome tracking. My clinical observations, grounded in day-to-day practice and multidisciplinary collaboration, align with leading research, ensuring our patients receive practical care that respects physiology and personal goals.
Dizziness and Low Energy in Older Adults: Why Integrative Chiropractic Care Matters
Many older patients present with dizziness, fatigue, and reduced stamina. One gentleman in his eighties described persistent lightheadedness and low energy. While some might jump directly to hormone panels, I prioritize a careful neuromusculoskeletal and vestibular assessment and reserve hormone considerations for selected cases.
Key concepts
The vestibular-spinal connection
The vestibular system integrates signals from the inner ear (semicircular canals and otolith organs), visual input, and proprioception from the cervical spine and feet. When the upper cervical spine (C0–C2) loses normal joint mechanics, afferent input to the brainstem can become noisy, amplifying dizziness, unsteadiness, and visual dependence on motion cues (Persson et al., 2019).
Orthostatic and cardiovascular contributors
Dehydration, deconditioning, altered baroreflex sensitivity, and stiff thoracic cage mechanics can worsen orthostatic hypotension or blood pressure variability. Gentle thoracic mobility, diaphragmatic breathing, and graded aerobic activity improve venous return and autonomic balance (Lanser et al., 2021).
Sarcopenia and sensory loss
Loss of muscle mass and plantar mechanoreception reduces stability. Foot-ankle stiffness and hip weakness impair reactive balance. Addressing hip abductors, ankle dorsiflexion, and foot intrinsic strength improves sway control (Rubenstein, 2006).
What we do at El Paso Back Clinic
Cervical assessment and gentle mobilization
I perform focused upper cervical motion testing and, where appropriate, gentle high-velocity, low-amplitude (HVLA) or low-force mobilizations. Rationale: normalize mechanoreceptor input, reduce cervicogenic dizziness, and improve vestibulo-spinal integration.
Vestibular and gaze stabilization drills
We use VOR x1/x2 exercises, saccades, and visual-vestibular habituation drills to retrain the brain’s sensor fusion. Rationale: repeated exposure adapts the vestibular nuclei and cerebellum, lowering dizziness through central compensation (Herdman & Clendaniel, 2014).
Balance and lower-limb conditioning
Hip and ankle strengthening, foot intrinsic activation, perturbation training, and safe gait progressions. Rationale: improve center-of-mass control and reactive responses, reducing fall risk.
Breathing and autonomic retraining
Box breathing, paced respiration, and thoracic mobility to enhance rib mechanics and autonomic tone.
Outcome tracking
DHI (Dizziness disability Inventory), gait speed, and tandem stance metrics guide progression and discharge planning.
Clinical pearl
I have seen dizziness improve meaningfully within two weeks when upper cervical mechanics and vestibular drills are combined, especially in patients previously labeled “just fatigued.” Aligning the spine and retraining sensory systems changes function quickly when done consistently.
Safe, Structured Two-Week Rehabilitation Blocks: Why Focused Intensives Work
Rehabilitation succeeds when it is specific, measurable, and time-bound. I often design two-week intensive blocks for patients who need momentum and clarity.
How we structure a two-week block
Clear goals
Define one or two primary outcomes: fewer dizzy episodes, improved gait speed, and reduced pelvic pain.
Daily micro-dose therapy
Short, frequent sessions (15–25 minutes) are more effective than sporadic long workouts. Neuroplasticity favors regularity.
Multimodal approach
Combine manual therapy, motor control drills, and load progression. Example: cervical mobilizations paired with VOR drills and lower-limb strength on alternating days.
Check-ins and reassessment
We reassess mid-block to adjust dosing if symptoms flare or plateau.
Why it works physiologically
Repeated afferent normalization from spinal adjustments stabilizes sensorimotor loops.
Consistent motor practice strengthens cortical maps and cerebellar error correction.
Gradual loading induces tendon and muscle remodeling without provoking inflammation.
Pelvic and Urinary Symptoms: The Spine–Pelvis–Floor Axis
Patients ask whether recurrent urinary issues, pelvic discomfort, or postmenopausal bleeding relate to musculoskeletal function. While medical evaluation for infection or gynecologic causes is essential, we often find that lumbopelvic dysfunction and pelvic floor dyscoordination contribute to symptoms.
Key mechanisms
Lumbosacral mechanics
Facet joint restriction and sacroiliac asymmetry alter pelvic tilt and abdominal-pelvic pressure dynamics. This increases strain on the pelvic floor, promoting urgency, stress incontinence, or pelvic pain.
Diaphragm–pelvic floor synergy
The diaphragm, abdominal wall, and pelvic floor work as a pressure system. If the rib cage is stiff and breathing is shallow, intra-abdominal pressure spikes during lifting or coughing, overloading the pelvic floor.
Neural drivers
The pudendal nerve (S2–S4) can be irritated by hip rotator hypertonicity and sacral torsion. Normalizing hip mechanics can reduce neural irritability.
Restore symmetric motion, reduce torque through the pelvic floor.
Hip mobility and strength
Target external rotators, gluteus medius, adductors, and deep rotators; train eccentric control to manage intra-abdominal pressure.
Breathing retraining
Teach 360-degree diaphragmatic expansion and rib mobility; coordinate exhalation with effort to protect the pelvic floor.
Pelvic floor biofeedback (when indicated)
Low-tech cueing and coordinated contraction-relaxation drills improve timing more than brute strengthening.
Lifestyle adjustments
Bladder training schedules, caffeine moderation, and bowel regularity to reduce urgency triggers.
Clinical observation from El Paso Back Clinic
I have seen women in their 60s reduce stress incontinence within 6–8 weeks after we corrected pelvic alignment, restored hip elasticity, and coached breathing mechanics. The change often precedes any decisions about medications, illustrating how powerful biomechanics are.
Perimenopause Physiology and Practical Care: Highs, Lows, and What to Expect
Perimenopause is often called “no-man’s land” because symptoms fluctuate: hot flashes one month, regular cycles the next. This is not random; it reflects complex endocrine feedback.
As follicles decline, estradiol and inhibin vary, causing FSH and LH to oscillate. The hypothalamus and pituitary respond to inconsistent ovarian signals, producing the high-low pattern that patients experience (Santoro, 2020).
Thermoregulation and vasomotor symptoms
Hypothalamic thermoneutral zone narrows; small changes in core temperature trigger hot flashes. Sleep fragmentation and mood changes follow (Freedman, 2001).
Musculoskeletal influences
Estrogen modulates collagen synthesis, tendon stiffness, and joint lubrication. Fluctuations can transiently alter joint comfort and recovery rate.
Chiropractic and PT emphasis for perimenopause
Spine and joint care
Gentle thoracic and cervical mobilizations relieve stiffness and headaches related to sleep disruption and stress.
Strength and load tolerance
Progressive resistance training counters sarcopenia, stabilizes glucose, and improves mood.
Balance and gait
Vestibular and proprioceptive drills enhance confidence during periods of fatigue or fog.
Sleep hygiene and breathing
Nasal breathing, rib mobility, and pre-sleep routines reduce sympathetic arousal.
When postmenopausal bleeding occurs
This requires medical evaluation. We coordinate with gynecology, and if benign causes such as polyps or fibroids are identified and treated, we resume spine-pelvic rehabilitation to restore normal activity. Movement lowers anxiety and supports recovery.
ADHD, Anxiety, and the Gut–Brain–Movement Triad
Parents frequently ask about non-pharmacologic support for children and adults with ADHD or anxiety. While diagnosis and medication decisions are made by medical providers, we contribute gut–brain–movement strategies to improve resilience.
What we do
Movement breaks and vestibular input
Short vestibular and balance activities improve arousal regulation and attention by stimulating cerebellar circuits linked to executive control.
Postural optimization
Cervical alignment reduces headache and visual strain; thoracic mobility improves breathing and reduces anxiety signals.
Gut rhythm support
Consistent sleep-wake cycles, fiber and hydration for regular bowel motility, and gentle abdominal mobility reduce discomfort that can distract attention (Mayer et al., 2015).
Hormone and Medication Considerations: Kept in the Background, Used Thoughtfully
Although our emphasis at El Paso Back Clinic is chiropractic and physical therapy, many patients ask about hormones or medications in context.
Guiding principles
Risk–benefit balance
Oral contraceptives may carry risks like venous thromboembolism in certain populations; decisions must be individualized with medical providers (Curtis et al., 2016).
Testosterone and energy
For older men, fatigue and dizziness often have mechanical and autonomic drivers. We prioritize spinal and vestibular care, exercise, and sleep. Hormone testing is considered only when indicated.
UTI and infection questions
Group A Streptococcus is rarely a urinary pathogen; standard guidelines favor targeted diagnosis and treatment based on culture results (Hooton, 2012). Our role: improve pelvic mechanics and bladder habits to reduce symptom recurrence.
Sleep, Snoring, Rib Cage Mechanics, and Neck Size: Why Breathing Training Helps
Patients often notice snoring improves when weight drops and posture changes. Mechanistically:
Rib cage mobility and diaphragmatic descent
The diaphragm descends more effectively when thoracic joints move freely. Improved nasal airflow and reduced soft-tissue collapse decrease snoring.
Neck circumference and airway
Larger neck circumference correlates with airway narrowing. While changes are gradual, postural optimization and weight management help.
Several patients reported no longer snoring after weeks of thoracic mobility, weight loss, and nasal breathing practice. The subjective improvements were consistent with bed partner reports and sleep quality scales.
Priority Setting in Complex Cases: What Comes First, What Waits
Complex cases demand prioritization. We use an HTTP mindset informally: Hips, Thorax, Thoracic diaphragm, Pelvis. By restoring these four areas, many downstream symptoms improve.
Our prioritization flow
Stabilize the spine and pelvis
Correct lumbopelvic mechanics first to reduce pain and normalize pressure systems.
Normalize breathing
Thoracic mobility and diaphragm training decrease sympathetic load and improve motor control.
Add vestibular work
Once pain is lowered, vestibular drills are better tolerated and more effective.
Strengthen and condition
Progress, resistance, and endurance are gradually cemented.
Clinical Observations and Transformative Outcomes
Over the past 16 months, many patients described life-changing improvements using this integrative framework:
Waist circumference reductions and elimination of snoring are linked to breathing mechanics, thoracic mobility, and consistent strength training.
Return to safe activity in older adults after balance and vestibular programs, with fewer near-falls and better confidence.
Pelvic symptoms are improving after sacroiliac realignment, hip mobility work, and coordinated breathing.
These changes align with published research demonstrating that multimodal spine care, coupled with exercise, produces superior functional outcomes compared with passive approaches alone (Cochrane Back and Neck Group, 2018).
Practical Takeaways for Patients and Families
Dizziness
Focus on upper cervical alignment, vestibular drills, and balance. Track progress with simple scales.
Pelvic and urinary symptoms
Address lumbopelvic mechanics and breathing; add pelvic floor coordination.
Perimenopause
Expect fluctuations; support sleep, strength, and joint mobility; medically evaluate any postmenopausal bleeding.
ADHD and anxiety
Use movement breaks, posture care, and gut rhythm support alongside medical plans.
Sleep and snoring
Improve thoracic mobility and nasal breathing; pair with steady weight management.
Why This Integrative Approach Works
Neuromechanical alignment
Spinal adjustments optimize afferent input to the brain and spinal cord, reducing nociceptive signaling and improving motor control.
Central adaptation
Vestibular and motor practice builds more reliable neural maps, reducing symptom variability.
Pressure system synergy
Harmonizing the diaphragm, abdominal wall, and pelvic floor distributes load effectively, protecting joints and viscera.
Behavior and consistency
Frequent, small wins over two-week blocks empower patients and create sustainable change.
Next Steps at El Paso Back Clinic
If you recognize yourself in any of these scenarios, we can help. Our care plan will prioritize chiropractic and physical therapy, coordinate with your medical team as needed, and focus on measurable improvements you can feel within weeks.
What to expect
Thorough assessment of spine, pelvis, balance, and breathing
A personalized two-week intensive plan
Clear home exercises and progress tracking
Collaboration with specialists when medical issues need evaluation
Summary
Dizziness often improves with upper cervical care and vestibular drills.
Pelvic and urinary symptoms correlate with lumbopelvic mechanics and breathing dynamics.
Perimenopause is physiologically variable; movement and sleep support are powerful.
ADHD and anxiety benefit from movement, posture, and gut rhythm strategies.
Snoring and sleep issues respond to thoracic mobility and nasal breathing.
The information herein on "El Paso Chiropractic for Dizziness and Wellness Strategies" is not intended to replace a one-on-one relationship with a qualified health care professional or licensed physician and is not medical advice. We encourage you to make healthcare decisions based on your research and partnership with a qualified healthcare professional.
Welcome to El Paso's Premier Wellness and Injury Care Clinic & Wellness Blog, where Dr. Alex Jimenez, DC, FNP-C, a Multi-State board-certified Family Practice Nurse Practitioner (FNP-BC) and Chiropractor (DC), presents insights on how our multidisciplinary team is dedicated to holistic healing and personalized care. Our practice aligns with evidence-based treatment protocols inspired by integrative medicine principles, similar to those on this site and on our family practice-based chiromed.comsite, focusing on naturally restoring health for patients of all ages.
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Licensed as a Doctor of Chiropractic (DC) in Texas & New Mexico* Texas DC License #: TX5807, Verified: TX5807
New Mexico DC License #: NM-DC2182, Verified: NM-DC2182
Multi-StateAdvanced Practice Registered Nurse (APRN*) in Texas & Multi-States
Multi-state Compact APRN License by Endorsement (42 States)
Texas APRN License #: 1191402, Verified:1191402 *
Florida APRN License #: 11043890, Verified: APRN11043890 * Colorado License #: C-APN.0105610-C-NP, Verified: C-APN.0105610-C-NP New York License #: N25929, VerifiedN25929
DC: Doctor of Chiropractic APRNP: Advanced Practice Registered Nurse FNP-BC: Family Practice Specialization (Multi-State Board Certified) RN: Registered Nurse (Multi-State Compact License)
CFMP: Certified Functional Medicine Provider
MSN-FNP: Master of Science in Family Practice Medicine
MSACP: Master of Science in Advanced Clinical Practice
IFMCP: Institute of Functional Medicine
CCST: Certified Chiropractic Spinal Trauma
ATN: Advanced Translational Neutrogenomics
Memberships & Associations:
TCA: Texas Chiropractic Association: Member ID: 104311
AANP: American Association of Nurse Practitioners: Member ID: 2198960
ANA: American Nurse Association: Member ID: 06458222 (District TX01)
TNA: Texas Nurse Association: Member ID: 06458222
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