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ABC Chiropractic

Spine Education

Explore your spine level by level — what each vertebra's nerve supplies, the pain it can refer, and how we help.

Interactive guide

Click any vertebra to explore it

Rotate the 3D spine and click a vertebra — or pick one from the buttons — to see the nerve it carries, the areas of the body it affects, the symptoms a problem there can cause, and the conditions we help with.

Loading interactive 3D spine…

Click a vertebra on the model — or choose one below.

3D model: “The human spinal column” by @scratchi, licensed CC‑BY 4.0

Cervical Spine · C1 nerve root (dorsal branch becomes the suboccipital nerve)

C1

Areas of the body

No distinct dermatome; relates to the deep muscles at the base of the skull and the upper neck.

Nervous system

Exits between the skull and atlas; almost entirely motor via the suboccipital nerve, with a rudimentary skin root, so C1 has no significant dermatome.

Muscles & movement

Small suboccipital muscles that fine-tune nodding and stabilize the head on the neck.

Associated pain

With no true dermatome, problems present as upper-neck stiffness and cervicogenic headache at the base of the skull, not radiating arm pain.

Possible symptoms

Restricted head-on-neck motion, suboccipital tightness, and cervicogenic headache can occur; new or severe headaches need a physician.

When to seek urgent care: A sudden worst-ever or thunderclap headache, headache with fever or stiff neck, head or neck pain after major trauma, or headache with dizziness, slurred speech, vision changes, or weakness needs urgent medical care, not chiropractic.

This is general spine education, not a diagnosis. See a qualified clinician to evaluate your individual symptoms.

Medical disclaimer

This Spine Education guide is general educational information about spinal anatomy and the nerve, muscle, and skin patterns linked to each spinal level. It is not medical advice, a diagnosis, or a treatment plan, and should not be used to self-diagnose. The whatWeTreat links cover the musculoskeletal conditions a chiropractor legitimately manages (neck and back pain, pinched-nerve and disc-related symptoms, sciatica); they do not imply that adjusting any single vertebra treats internal-organ or systemic disease, for which there is no good evidence. Dermatome, myotome, and reflex maps overlap between levels and vary from person to person. Any chest, breathing, abdominal, or pelvic-organ symptoms, and red-flag signs such as new weakness, saddle numbness, or loss of bladder or bowel control, require prompt evaluation by a physician or emergency services, not chiropractic care. See a qualified clinician for an individual assessment of your specific symptoms.

Spine & chiropractic FAQs

What are the regions of the spine?+

The spine has five regions: the cervical (neck), thoracic (mid-back), lumbar (lower back), the sacrum, and the coccyx (tailbone). Each level has a spinal nerve with its own skin area (dermatome) and muscles (myotome).

How does chiropractic care help the spine?+

Gentle, targeted adjustments help restore normal motion to spinal joints, ease muscle tension, and reduce irritation of nearby nerve roots — which can lower pain and improve how you move. Care is always based on your exam findings.

Which part of the spine causes back pain?+

Most back pain comes from the lumbar (lower) spine, which carries the most load — though the neck and mid-back are common sources of pain and headaches too. A thorough exam pinpoints where your symptoms are coming from.

Does a problem at one vertebra cause disease in an organ?+

No. The idea that a single misaligned vertebra causes a specific organ disease is not supported by evidence. This guide sticks to well-established anatomy — the nerve, muscle, and skin patterns of each spinal level — and the musculoskeletal problems chiropractic care actually helps with.

Not sure where your pain is coming from?

A thorough exam pinpoints the source — and we explain what we find in plain English, with a clear plan to fix it.

Call: (616) 259-0012