Skip to contentSkip to sidebarSkip to footer
Neuromyofascial Science
Menu Close
  • HOME
  • CONDITIONS
    • MS
    • Fibromyalgia
    • Post-Concussion
    • TMJ & Tinnitus
    • Migraines
    • Elbow Pain
    • Foot Pain
    • Sciatica
  • PATIENTS
    • Browse All Conditions
    • Patient Success Stories
    • Shannon’s MS Story
    • David’s FSHD Story
    • Latest Videos
  • CLINICAL RESOURCES
    • Shannon: MS Case Report
    • David: FSHD Case Report
  • COLLABORATE
  • ABOUT
    • NMF Science Education
    • TNPC Treatment Info
    • NMF team
Close
  • HOME
  • CONDITIONS
    • MS
    • Fibromyalgia
    • Post-Concussion
    • TMJ & Tinnitus
    • Migraines
    • Elbow Pain
    • Foot Pain
    • Sciatica
  • PATIENTS
    • Browse All Conditions
    • Patient Success Stories
    • Shannon’s MS Story
    • David’s FSHD Story
    • Latest Videos
  • CLINICAL RESOURCES
    • Shannon: MS Case Report
    • David: FSHD Case Report
  • COLLABORATE
  • ABOUT
    • NMF Science Education
    • TNPC Treatment Info
    • NMF team
Neuromyofascial Science
  • Home
    • Hospital
      Doctor
      Medical Center
      Private Clinic
      Medical Lab
      Dentist
  • Pages
    • Our Mission
    • Services
    • Our Doctors
    • FAQ
    • Patient Success Stories
    • Pricing
    • 404 Page
    • Service Plus
  • Services
    • About Us

      Learn about our hospital and values

      Services

      Explore our wide range of medical services

      Departments

      Discover our specialized medical departments

      Blog

      Get the latest health news and tips

      Contacts

      Contact us for appointments or inquiries

      Testimonials

      Read patient stories and feedback

  • Blog
    • Blog – Standard
    • Blog – Grid
  • Contact Us
Split clinical illustration comparing standard WAD 1 assessment and neuromyofascial assessment of the same rear-end collision. Left panel shows normal cervical MRI with green checkmark and no injury detected. Right panel shows the same normal-appearing MRI but with deep neck muscle microtears, early fibrosis, and paraspinal soft tissue involvement highlighted in orange, with the notation that injury is present but not yet visible on imaging.
Conditions, NMF Science Explained

Why the WAD Classification Fails Whiplash Patients

June 9, 20260Comments
Whiplash is one of the most common injury mechanisms in modern medicine and one of the most poorly managed. Part of the reason is clinical.…
Posterior anatomical illustration of the human body showing the spine divided into four color-coded zones. Amber upper cervical zone with referral arrows toward the head, blue lower cervical zone with arrows toward the shoulders and arms, teal thoracic zone with arrows across the mid-back, and red lumbar zone with arrows sweeping into the hips and legs.
Conditions, NMF Science Explained

A Map of the Spine: How Spinal Injuries Generate Symptoms From Head to Foot

June 9, 20260Comments
One of the most consistent observations in thirty years of clinical practice is that patients with chronic pain often do not know where their pain…
Anatomical illustration of the right arm and upper torso showing the median nerve pathway from cervical nerve roots C6-C7-C8 through four numbered tethering points: cervical nerve roots, scalene and thoracic outlet region, pronator teres in the forearm, and the carpal tunnel at the wrist, with progressive orange-to-red coloring indicating cumulative nerve vulnerability.
Conditions, NMF Science Explained

Carpal Tunnel Syndrome: Why the Wrist Is Usually Not Where It Starts

June 8, 20260Comments
Carpal tunnel syndrome is one of the most commonly diagnosed and surgically treated conditions in upper limb medicine. The standard model is straightforward: the median…
Split illustration comparing healthy and pathological kinetic chains from the lumbar spine to the foot. Healthy side shows normal L5-S1 nerve roots, relaxed calf muscle, and normal plantar fascia. Pathological side shows compressed L5-S1 nerve roots driving calf muscle dystonia, increased Achilles tendon tension, and inflamed plantar fascia under load at the heel insertion.
Injury and Recovery, NMF Science Explained

Why Plantar Fasciitis Keeps Coming Back: The Spine and Hip Connection

June 8, 20260Comments
Plantar fasciitis is one of the most commonly treated foot conditions and one of the most commonly undertreated. Stretching, orthotics, corticosteroid injections, and rest produce…
Conditions, NMF Science Explained

Jaw Pain and Ringing in the Ears: Why the Neck Is Often the Missing Piece

June 8, 20260Comments
Jaw pain and ringing in the ears are treated as separate problems. One gets sent to a dentist or oral surgeon. The other goes to…
Conditions, NMF Science Explained

Spinal Concussion Syndrome: When the Spine Drives Post-Concussion Symptoms

June 8, 20260Comments
Post-concussion syndrome is one of the more poorly understood conditions in medicine. Patients present with headaches, dizziness, tinnitus, brain fog, light sensitivity, and fatigue. Imaging…

Posts pagination

<Page 1Page 2Page 3>
Search
Categories
  • Conditions
  • NMF Science Explained
  • Injury and Recovery
  • Performance and Sport
  • Research and Clinical Insights
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.

Links
  • Home
  • Conditions
  • Patient Stories
  • Clinical Resources
  • Collaborate
Get in Touch
X-twitter Youtube Instagram Linkedin Tiktok

© 2026. All Rights Reserved.

Site by Neuromyofascial Science