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Anatomical anterior-view illustration of the spine and upper limb showing a continuous nerve pathway traced from the cervical spine through the shoulder outlet, axilla, and elbow to the wrist and hand, with amber target markers at injury sites along the cervical region and the wrist, illustrating the spine-to-limb concept in neuromyofascial science.
Research and Clinical Insights

Your Body Isn’t Failing in Five Separate Ways

June 16, 20260Comments
When a patient describes waking up with a stiff neck, a migraine by noon, a numb hand by evening, and a familiar ache down the…
Three-stage medical illustration showing the evolutionary injury response following whiplash. Stage 1 shows acute whiplash force hitting the cervical spine with immediate injury at the upper cervical region. Stage 2 shows fibrous protective tissue forming at C1-C2, labeled as not visible on standard MRI. Stage 3 shows chronic contracture with thickened fibrous tissue, nerve root compression in red, narrowed spinal canal, and spinal cord compression.
Injury and Recovery, NMF Science Explained

Super Contractures: The Invisible Aftermath of Spinal Injury

June 9, 20260Comments
When a spinal injury heals, most people assume the tissue returns to something close to its original state. Scar forms, the acute phase resolves, and…
Four-stage medical illustration showing the sequence from cervical motor neuropathy to lateral epicondylalgia. Stage 1 shows deep muscle scarring compressing C6-C7 nerve roots in the cervical spine. Stage 2 shows overactive contracted forearm extensor muscles from impaired nerve signal. Stage 3 shows chronic traction load at the extensor tendon origin with early calcium deposition. Stage 4 shows degenerative tendinopathy with fiber disruption and diseased enthesis.
Conditions, Performance and Sport

Why Athletes Keep Getting Re-Injured: The Spinal Origin of Tendinopathy

June 9, 20260Comments
Professional sports medicine has access to extraordinary resources. The best imaging available. Expert physiotherapists, surgeons, and rehabilitation specialists. Nutritional and biomechanical support at every level.…
Split anatomical illustration comparing standard patient and hypermobile patient cervical spine assessment. Left panel shows limited ROM arc in red with deep cervical muscle fibrosis and scarring visible in axial cross-section, with clinical implication that ROM loss signals underlying injury. Right panel shows full normal ROM arc in green with identical deep muscle fibrosis present, with clinical implication that normal ROM does not rule out deep muscle injury in hypermobile patients.
Conditions, NMF Science Explained

Hypermobility and Whiplash: Why Flexibility Can Hide Serious Spinal Injury

June 9, 20260Comments
One of the more consistent diagnostic patterns in complex chronic pain practice is the patient who presents with significant and persistent symptoms following a whiplash…
Split anatomical illustration showing normal airway versus post-whiplash airway in lateral cervical spine cross-section. Left panel shows open circular airway lumen with healthy pharyngeal muscles and labeled cervical vertebrae C1-C7. Right panel shows C3-C5 nerve disruption with amber highlight, dystonic pharyngeal muscles, and significantly narrowed oval airway lumen with amber highlight indicating obstruction.
Conditions, NMF Science Explained

When Whiplash Disrupts Sleep: The Cervical Spine and Sleep-Disordered Breathing

June 9, 20260Comments
Sleep disruption is one of the most commonly reported but least investigated consequences of whiplash injury. Patients describe difficulty falling asleep, frequent nighttime waking, unrefreshing…
Infographic showing five free fall heights and their equivalent road speeds calculated using Newton's laws. A 10-foot fall equals 17 mph. A 20-foot fall equals 24 mph. A 30-foot fall equals 30 mph, equivalent to residential street speed. A 60-foot fall equals 42 mph. A 120-foot fall from a 12-storey building equals 60 mph, equivalent to highway speed.
Conditions, NMF Science Explained

The Physics of Whiplash: Why 60 MPH Is a 12-Storey Fall

June 9, 20260Comments
Most people who have been in a car accident at highway speed do not fully appreciate what their body just experienced. This is not a…

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Recent Posts
Your Body Isn’t Failing in Five Separate Ways
Research and Clinical Insights
Your Body Isn’t Failing in Five Separate Ways
June 16, 2026
Super Contractures: The Invisible Aftermath of Spinal Injury
Injury and Recovery, NMF Science Explained
Super Contractures: The Invisible Aftermath of Spinal Injury
June 9, 2026
Neuromyofascial Science

Neuromyofascial Science is a precision-based clinical framework that maps the specific anatomical sources of chronic pain, neurological dysfunction, and structural pathology. Developed by Dr. G. Blair Lamb over 30 years of clinical innovation, NMFS uses a comprehensive neuromyofascial audit to build a patient-specific map of injury patterns and structural drivers, giving patients and their care teams a more precise picture of what is actually driving their condition.

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