A Global Burden Hiding in Plain Sight
It’s striking, isn’t it? Migraine is the second leading cause of years lived with disability worldwide – and the leading cause among young women. Yet, despite its prevalence and disabling nature, cervical manual therapy (CMT) remains on the periphery of migraine care. When it comes to non-pharmacological management, where we could have real impact, we’re still in the shadows.
Uncertainty, Not Disinterest
In my experience teaching and working with manual therapists, the issue has never been a lack of interest; it’s uncertainty. What can we do? What should we do? Can we actually treat migraine and make a difference?
The answer, grounded in research and confirmed through clinical experience, is YES – but only if we are educated and confident in recognising the role we can play.
Uncertainty to Certainty
What is a ‘migraine’? It is essentially a defined constellation of signs and symptoms. However, while there are distinct diagnostic criteria for migraine, there is significant overlap with other primary headache conditions, raising the question of whether it is a genuine migraine or not. Does it matter?
Signs and symptoms in primary headache are exactly that – signs and symptoms; they don’t provide insight into what we are dealing with. The pathophysiology of migraine is clearly supported by central sensitisation (of the trigemino cervical complex), and fundamental neuroscience indicates that cervical afferents are a key player.
When manual therapists lack the training to identify and manage cervical relevance, we not only risk mismanaging the condition but also miss a deeper opportunity to change the trajectory of someone’s life.
We Have the Tools — Let’s Use Them
Migraine is multifactorial, with contributing factors including conditioned pain modulation, serotonergic influence, and activation of trigeminal and cervical afferents. While not dismissing orofacial afferents, cervical afferents represent a domain where manual therapists are uniquely trained to intervene. The interventions we provide – CMT, exercise therapy, education, postural, and sensorimotor retraining – are low-risk, non-invasive, and strongly evidence-informed.
However, CMT remains underutilised. Why? Because many manual therapists still feel unprepared, uncertain, or even fearful that they might exacerbate symptoms. This is not a knowledge gap; it’s a missed opportunity.
From Passive Referrers to Active Contributors
Without education, manual therapists may resort to referring migraine patients elsewhere, sometimes unnecessarily. However, with appropriate training, we take on a significant role within interdisciplinary care. We screen more effectively, collaborate more confidently, and become part of the solution rather than remaining outside observers.
Educated manual therapists can not only identify and treat relevant cervical dysfunction; they can also empower patients with strategies to address this dysfunction and maintain positive treatment outcomes. This exemplifies true, patient-centred care.
Confidence Changes Everything
Migraine education isn’t just about knowledge — it develops clinical reasoning, enhances assessment, and strengthens professional identity. Manual therapists who grasp migraine don’t avoid complex cases; they engage with clarity and confidence. That, in itself, can transform practice.
Conclusion: The Time is Now
So why is educating manual therapists about migraine so important?
Because migraine is common, disabling, and underdiagnosed. Because the people affected are already in our clinics. Because CMT has something powerful to offer. Because the research exists – but needs translating into practice. Because collaborative care requires an informed allied health workforce. And because when we step forward with knowledge and skill, we improve lives.
It’s time manual therapists stop asking, “Is this migraine?” and start asking, “How can I help?”
Why Educating Manual Therapists About Migraine Matters
A Global Burden Hiding in Plain Sight
It’s striking, isn’t it? Migraine is the second leading cause of years lived with disability worldwide – and the leading cause among young women. Yet, despite its prevalence and disabling nature, cervical manual therapy (CMT) remains on the periphery of migraine care. When it comes to non-pharmacological management, where we could have real impact, we’re still in the shadows.
Uncertainty, Not Disinterest
In my experience teaching and working with manual therapists, the issue has never been a lack of interest; it’s uncertainty. What can we do? What should we do? Can we actually treat migraine and make a difference?
The answer, grounded in research and confirmed through clinical experience, is YES – but only if we are educated and confident in recognising the role we can play.
Uncertainty to Certainty
What is a ‘migraine’? It is essentially a defined constellation of signs and symptoms. However, while there are distinct diagnostic criteria for migraine, there is significant overlap with other primary headache conditions, raising the question of whether it is a genuine migraine or not. Does it matter?
Signs and symptoms in primary headache are exactly that – signs and symptoms; they don’t provide insight into what we are dealing with. The pathophysiology of migraine is clearly supported by central sensitisation (of the trigemino cervical complex), and fundamental neuroscience indicates that cervical afferents are a key player.
When manual therapists lack the training to identify and manage cervical relevance, we not only risk mismanaging the condition but also miss a deeper opportunity to change the trajectory of someone’s life.
We Have the Tools — Let’s Use Them
Migraine is multifactorial, with contributing factors including conditioned pain modulation, serotonergic influence, and activation of trigeminal and cervical afferents. While not dismissing orofacial afferents, cervical afferents represent a domain where manual therapists are uniquely trained to intervene. The interventions we provide – CMT, exercise therapy, education, postural, and sensorimotor retraining – are low-risk, non-invasive, and strongly evidence-informed.
However, CMT remains underutilised. Why? Because many manual therapists still feel unprepared, uncertain, or even fearful that they might exacerbate symptoms. This is not a knowledge gap; it’s a missed opportunity.
From Passive Referrers to Active Contributors
Without education, manual therapists may resort to referring migraine patients elsewhere, sometimes unnecessarily. However, with appropriate training, we take on a significant role within interdisciplinary care. We screen more effectively, collaborate more confidently, and become part of the solution rather than remaining outside observers.
Educated manual therapists can not only identify and treat relevant cervical dysfunction; they can also empower patients with strategies to address this dysfunction and maintain positive treatment outcomes. This exemplifies true, patient-centred care.
Confidence Changes Everything
Migraine education isn’t just about knowledge — it develops clinical reasoning, enhances assessment, and strengthens professional identity. Manual therapists who grasp migraine don’t avoid complex cases; they engage with clarity and confidence. That, in itself, can transform practice.
Conclusion: The Time is Now
So why is educating manual therapists about migraine so important?
Because migraine is common, disabling, and underdiagnosed. Because the people affected are already in our clinics. Because CMT has something powerful to offer. Because the research exists – but needs translating into practice. Because collaborative care requires an informed allied health workforce. And because when we step forward with knowledge and skill, we improve lives.
It’s time manual therapists stop asking, “Is this migraine?” and start asking, “How can I help?”
Until next time
If you are new to Watson Headache®, welcome to the Watson Headache® Approach, an evidence-informed practice when considering the role of the neck in Cervicogenic and Primary Headache.
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Expertise Out of Place: Cervicogenic Headache Criteria
Definitions as Dogma: Cervical Migraine Factors
Rethinking Cervical Contributions to Migraine
Cervicogenic Headache: The Diagnosis Hiding in Plain Sight
Why Educating Manual Therapists About Migraine Matters
The Craniocervical Flexors: Weak or Inhibited?
The Complexion of Silent Migraine
Palpation: A Lost Art or an Overlooked Skill?
The Watson Headache® Approach: More Than Just a ‘Technique’
Cervical Afferents and Primary Headache: The Indefensible Perspective
Menstrual Migraine and Manual Cervical Therapy
Diagnosing ‘Migraine’: A Default Button?
Neck Pain and Migraine: Causality or a Migraine Symptom?
‘Cervicogenic Headache’: An Intellectual Straitjacket?
The ‘Dual Personality’ of Migraine