Pinched Nerve Treatment in Hudsonville
Drug-free pinched nerve relief in Hudsonville, MI. Dr. Fischer treats nerve compression in the neck and low back with adjustments, decompression, and rehab.
Medically reviewed by Dr. Nick Fischer, DC · Chiropractor & Clinic Director
Chiropractic care for pinched nerve
Get to the root of your pinched nerve
Also known as: Nerve Impingement, Radiculopathy, Compressed Nerve
If you're dealing with sharp, radiating pain — or numbness and tingling that shoots down your arm or leg — a pinched nerve is likely the culprit. It's one of the most common conditions Dr. Nick Fischer treats for patients throughout Hudsonville and West Michigan. Whether the compression is in your neck, low back, or somewhere in between, the goal is always the same — relieve the pressure on that nerve with a clear, drug-free plan that fixes the cause, not just the symptom.
Symptoms of pinched nerve
- ✓Sharp, shooting, or burning pain that radiates into an arm or leg
- ✓Numbness or a "pins and needles" sensation along the nerve path
- ✓Weakness in a hand, arm, foot, or leg
- ✓Pain that worsens with certain positions — like looking down or sitting for long periods
- ✓Muscle fatigue or difficulty gripping objects
- ✓A dull ache at the neck or low back where the nerve originates
Common causes
- Bulging or herniated disc pressing on a nerve root
- Bone spurs from spinal arthritis narrowing the nerve canal
- Tight or inflamed muscles compressing a nerve (as in piriformis syndrome)
- Poor posture and forward-head position that load the cervical discs
- Repetitive strain or overuse injuries at work or in sport
- Auto-accident or sports trauma that shifts spinal alignment
- Degenerative disc changes that reduce space in the foramen
Our approach
How we treat pinched nerve in Hudsonville
- Step 1
Thorough exam
We take a detailed history and perform orthopedic, neurological, and movement testing to identify exactly which nerve is compressed and what structure is causing it — and refer for imaging only when it will change your care.
- Step 2
A clear, personalized plan
You leave the first visit with a plain-English explanation of what we found and a specific, time-bound plan — not open-ended treatment. We set honest expectations and tell you if your case needs a specialist.
- Step 3
Gentle treatment & rehab
We combine spinal adjustments, non-surgical decompression, and corrective exercise to relieve nerve pressure now and rebuild the stability that keeps compression from returning.
The basics
Understanding pinched nerve
A pinched nerve happens when surrounding tissue — a bulging disc, a bone spur, a tight muscle, or an inflamed joint — presses on a nerve root as it exits the spine. In the neck (cervical spine), that pressure typically sends pain, tingling, or weakness into the shoulder, arm, or hand. In the low back (lumbar spine), it usually radiates into the hip, buttock, or leg — a pattern most people recognize as sciatica. The medical terms radiculopathy and nerve impingement describe the same basic problem from different angles.
The encouraging part is that nerve compression responds well to conservative, drug-free care when caught early. Chiropractic adjustments restore proper joint motion and reduce the mechanical irritation driving the compression, while non-surgical spinal decompression gently creates space around the disc and nerve root. The key is an accurate exam that pinpoints exactly where the nerve is being compressed and why — so your care plan targets the source instead of chasing symptoms around.
New Patient Special
$49
Consultation, exam, and first adjustment (as clinically appropriate) for new patients.
New patients only. Excludes Medicare/Medicaid and personal-injury cases. Mention this offer when booking.
Types of pinched nerves we treat
Nerve compression can occur at several points along the spine, and the symptoms depend on exactly where the pressure is. We regularly help Hudsonville-area patients with:
- Cervical radiculopathy (neck) — a compressed nerve root in the neck that sends pain, numbness, or tingling into the shoulder, arm, or hand. Often related to a disc herniation or bone spur at C5–C7. Responds well to gentle cervical adjustments and spinal decompression. See also: neck pain and arm pain.
- Lumbar radiculopathy (low back) — nerve compression in the lumbar spine that radiates into the hip, buttock, or leg. The most recognized form is sciatica, which follows the path of the sciatic nerve. Decompression and targeted adjustments relieve the pressure without surgery.
- Disc-related nerve compression — when a bulging or herniated disc is the culprit, non-surgical decompression is often the most effective way to gently retract the disc material away from the nerve root. See our disc injury page for more on how we approach this.
- Foraminal stenosis — narrowing of the opening (foramen) where the nerve exits the spine, often from bone spurs or degenerative disc changes. Adjustments and targeted rehab slow the progression and restore as much space as possible.
- Muscle-related nerve entrapment — a tight piriformis or scalene muscle can compress a nearby nerve even without disc involvement. Soft-tissue work and corrective exercise are first-line here.
Your exam tells us which pattern fits — so your plan targets the actual source of compression.
When to see a chiropractor in Hudsonville
Early care usually means faster, more complete relief from nerve compression. Book an exam if you notice:
- Shooting, burning, or radiating pain in an arm or leg that has lasted more than a few days
- Persistent numbness or tingling in the fingers, hand, foot, or toes
- Weakness when gripping objects or climbing stairs
- Symptoms that get worse with sitting, bending forward, or looking down
- Nerve pain that started after a car accident, fall, or heavy lifting
- Recurring episodes of nerve pain that clear up briefly and then return
If you notice rapidly progressive weakness in a limb, or loss of bladder or bowel control, seek emergency care right away — these are red flags for a more serious spinal emergency that needs prompt evaluation.
What to expect at your first visit
Your first appointment is about 45–60 minutes and focused entirely on understanding what is compressing your nerve before we treat it. We’ll:
- Listen to your story — when symptoms started, what makes them better or worse, and exactly where the radiating pain or numbness travels.
- Examine thoroughly — orthopedic and neurological testing (reflexes, sensation, muscle strength) to map the nerve distribution and pinpoint the level of compression.
- Explain what we found — in plain English, with a specific, time-bound care plan and honest expectations for recovery — including a referral if your case warrants specialist evaluation.
- Start care when appropriate — many patients receive their first gentle adjustment or a decompression session the same day.
You’re never locked into open-ended treatment — just a clear plan with a real finish line.
Drug-free pinched nerve relief — without medication or surgery
Pain medication can dull the ache of a pinched nerve for a few hours, but it does nothing to remove the disc, bone spur, or tight muscle that is compressing the nerve in the first place. Surgery is sometimes necessary, but it’s rarely the first step — and most patients with nerve compression improve significantly with conservative chiropractic care. At ABC Chiropractic, we combine gentle chiropractic adjustments, non-surgical spinal decompression, and corrective exercise into one coordinated plan — relieving the pressure now while rebuilding the stability that prevents it from returning. If your exam ever reveals that you need imaging, specialist consultation, or surgical evaluation, we’ll tell you honestly and help coordinate that care right away.
Why Hudsonville-area patients choose ABC Chiropractic
Patients from Hudsonville, Jenison, Grandville, Georgetown Township, and Allendale trust ABC Chiropractic with nerve pain because we treat the compression, not just the symptoms. Dr. Nick Fischer takes the time to map exactly where and why the nerve is being irritated, then builds a plan specific to your spine — not a one-size-fits-all protocol. Whether you’re dealing with sciatica shooting down your leg, a disc injury pressing on a cervical root, or neck pain that radiates into your arm, we use the gentlest effective approach and screen honestly for anything that needs specialist care.
Ready to get started? Our New Patient Special makes your first visit easy, and you can book an appointment online in under a minute.
Why choose chiropractic
Chiropractic care vs. the typical pinched-nerve routine
| Comparison factor | Chiropractic Care | Pain Meds & Surgery |
|---|---|---|
| Addresses the root cause | ✓Relieves mechanical compression | ✕Masks the symptoms |
| Drug-free & non-invasive | ✓Always | ✕Rarely |
| Risk of side effects | ✓Minimal | ✕Higher (meds, surgery) |
| Personalized to you | ✓Custom care plan | ✕One-size-fits-all |
| Builds long-term stability | ✓Rehab included | ✕Seldom addressed |
| Typical recovery | ✓Active & gradual | ✕Often lengthy or recurring |
Treatment options
Services we use to relieve pinched nerve
Chiropractic Care
Gentle, precise chiropractic adjustments in Hudsonville, MI that restore motion to restricted joints and relieve back pain, neck pain, and headaches at the source.
Learn more →Spinal Decompression
Non-surgical motorized spinal traction in Hudsonville gently stretches the spine to relieve herniated discs, sciatica, and chronic neck and back pain — drug-free.
Learn more →Physiotherapy
Personalized corrective exercise and rehab in Hudsonville strengthen weak links, fix posture, and keep back pain, neck pain, and shoulder pain from coming back.
Learn more →Related conditions
Other conditions we treat in Hudsonville
Patient reviews
What our Hudsonville patients say
“I came in with months of low-back pain and felt real relief after the first week. Dr. Fischer actually listens and explains everything.”
“Best chiropractor in Hudsonville. The whole team is friendly and the adjustments are gentle — never rushed.”
“Helped my sciatica when nothing else did. I highly recommend ABC Chiropractic to anyone on the fence.”
What causes a pinched nerve in the neck or back?+
The most common causes are a bulging or herniated disc, a bone spur from spinal arthritis, or a tight muscle that compresses a nerve root as it exits the spine. Poor posture, repetitive strain, and old injuries can all contribute. Our exam identifies which structure is doing the compressing so we can target it directly.
Can a chiropractor help a pinched nerve?+
Yes — chiropractic care is one of the most effective conservative treatments for nerve compression. Adjustments restore joint motion and reduce the mechanical irritation driving the problem, while spinal decompression gently creates space around the disc and nerve root. Most patients notice meaningful improvement within the first few visits.
How many visits will I need for a pinched nerve?+
It depends on how long you've had it, what's compressing the nerve, and how far the symptoms have spread. After your exam, Dr. Fischer gives you a specific, time-bound care plan with a realistic endpoint — not open-ended visits with no finish line.
Will my insurance cover pinched nerve treatment?+
We accept many major insurance plans and offer affordable self-pay options. Share your coverage details before your first visit and we'll verify your benefits so there are no surprises.
Is chiropractic treatment for a pinched nerve safe?+
Yes. We screen every patient thoroughly before beginning care. If your exam suggests the compression is severe — or if you have progressive weakness or other red flags — we'll refer you to the appropriate specialist rather than proceeding with manual care.
Do I need an MRI before seeing a chiropractor?+
Not necessarily. Most nerve-compression cases don't require imaging before we can begin care. We screen for red flags on your first visit and order imaging only when it will genuinely change your treatment plan.
How is a pinched nerve different from sciatica?+
Sciatica is a specific type of pinched nerve — compression of the sciatic nerve, which runs from the low back through the buttock and down the leg. A pinched nerve is the broader category and can occur in the neck (causing arm symptoms) or anywhere along the spine. See our dedicated page on [sciatica](/symptoms/sciatica/) for more detail.
When should I go to the ER instead of a chiropractor?+
Seek emergency care immediately if you notice rapidly progressive weakness in an arm or leg, loss of bladder or bowel control, or numbness in the groin or inner thighs. These can signal a serious spinal emergency — cauda equina syndrome — that requires prompt surgical evaluation.
Can a pinched nerve go away on its own?+
Mild cases sometimes resolve with rest and time. But if symptoms have lasted more than a few days, are getting worse, or include weakness, conservative chiropractic care speeds recovery significantly and helps prevent the problem from becoming chronic or causing lasting nerve damage.
Do you treat neck-related pinched nerve pain that goes into the arm?+
Absolutely. Cervical radiculopathy — nerve compression in the neck that radiates into the shoulder, arm, or hand — is a common presentation we treat for patients across Hudsonville, Jenison, Grandville, and Allendale. It responds well to gentle cervical adjustments and targeted decompression.