Moss Chiropractic of Inverness
Dr. Brett A. Moss
352-419-6548Schedule
Condition · Chiropractic Care

Numbness & Tingling

Numbness and tingling in the arms, hands, legs, or feet are sensory symptoms that most often trace back to nerve compression or irritation somewhere along the spine. The sensation, formally called paresthesia (an abnormal skin sensation such as prickling, burning, or numbness without an external cause), can range from a brief inconvenience to a persistent sign of an underlying structural problem. Identifying the spinal level involved is the first step toward resolving the symptom rather than just managing it. Chiropractic care addresses the mechanical causes of nerve interference that produce these sensations.
40 spines scanned in the last 30 days · top finding: forward head posture (30)

What it is

Nerves are the body's communication cables. Every signal your brain sends to a muscle, and every sensation your skin and joints send back, travels through nerve fibers that exit the spinal cord between vertebrae through small openings called foramina. When those openings narrow, when a disc bulges into the spinal canal, or when surrounding muscles go into protective spasm, the nerve gets crowded. A crowded nerve responds first with altered sensation, typically tingling or numbness, before progressing to weakness if the compression continues. The pattern of where the numbness appears on the body, called the dermatomal distribution, tells a trained clinician which spinal level is most likely responsible.

The cervical spine (neck, C1-C8 nerve roots) governs sensation in the arms, hands, and fingers, so cervical compression often produces symptoms that radiate down the arm. The lumbar spine (low back, L1-S1 nerve roots) governs the legs and feet, making it the source region for Sciatica symptoms that run down the back of the thigh and into the foot. A Herniated Disc is one of the most common single sources of acute nerve compression, as the gel-like nucleus of the disc can protrude and press directly against a nerve root. Spinal Stenosis, a narrowing of the spinal canal itself, creates a more diffuse pattern, often bilateral, and tends to worsen when standing or walking.

What to expect

An initial chiropractic visit for numbness and tingling involves a thorough history and neurological screen. The chiropractor will assess deep tendon reflexes, dermatomal sensation, and muscle strength to help localize which nerve root is compromised. Orthopedic tests such as the Spurling test for cervical radiculopathy (nerve root irritation in the neck) or the straight-leg raise for lumbar involvement give additional clinical data. In most cases, digital X-rays are taken at that first visit to evaluate spinal alignment, disc space height, and any arthritic changes that might be narrowing the foramina.

Once the clinical picture is clear, care is planned around the specific structural finding. A chiropractic adjustment (spinal manipulation) at the affected spinal level restores normal joint motion and reduces the mechanical load on the adjacent nerve root. Corrective exercise addresses the muscular imbalances that allowed the compression to develop in the first place, reinforcing the correction over time. When disc involvement is significant, Spinal Decompression is often added to the plan because axial traction (a gentle distraction force applied along the length of the spine) reduces intradiscal pressure and can allow a bulging disc to retract away from the nerve. For patients with nerve irritation that has progressed to inflammation in surrounding soft tissue, softwave therapy uses acoustic wave energy to support tissue repair at the cellular level.

Key benefits

Who benefits most

Adults who notice intermittent tingling in a hand after extended desk work, or who wake with a numb arm, often have early-stage cervical compression that responds well to chiropractic care before structural changes become pronounced. The same applies to people who experience burning or prickling in the feet while walking, a pattern consistent with lumbar canal narrowing or L4-L5 disc involvement. Older adults are a significant segment of this population, as degenerative disc changes and facet arthritis accumulate over decades, progressively reducing foraminal dimensions. Research has documented an expanding evidence base for chiropractic treatments in older adult populations, which is relevant given that age-related stenosis is a primary driver of chronic lower-extremity numbness. [4]

Patients with confirmed disc herniations, herniated disc being one of the most common MRI findings in working-age adults with radicular symptoms, are also strong candidates when the neurological deficit is sensory rather than involving significant motor loss or bowel and bladder dysfunction. Those with severe or rapidly progressive weakness, loss of bladder or bowel control, or saddle anesthesia (numbness in the perineal region) require immediate medical evaluation, not chiropractic management. Within those boundaries, the conservative chiropractic approach is appropriate for a broad range of patients, including those who have not responded to medication alone and those seeking to avoid surgical options.

How it connects to chiropractic

The connection between spinal mechanics and peripheral nerve symptoms is central to chiropractic clinical reasoning. Chiropractors identify as spinal health experts whose focus is improving function in the neuromuscular system, which positions them precisely to address conditions where mechanical disruption of the spine directly produces neurological symptoms. [7] When a vertebral segment loses its normal range of motion, the joint capsules, surrounding ligaments, and disc all sustain altered loading patterns. The foraminal space changes shape with motion, and a joint that no longer moves correctly can intermittently or continuously pinch the nerve passing through that foramen. Numbness and tingling are the sensory signal that this is happening.

The neurological effects of chiropractic adjustment are not limited to reducing compression. Research demonstrates that a single session of chiropractic spinal adjustment increases plantar flexor muscle strength in college students, indicating that the adjustment influences neural drive to muscles, not just mechanical joint position. [6] Separately, research into sensorimotor processing shows that chiropractic adjustments affect the way the brain integrates incoming sensory information, which has implications for patients whose chronic numbness has altered their perception of limb position. [5] For patients with radiculopathy that has not responded to high-velocity adjustments, low-velocity mobilization techniques, flexion-distraction, and related manual methods offer an alternative mechanical input that still reduces nerve root load without the same force demands. [2]

When imaging confirms significant disc herniation contributing to nerve root compression, spinal decompression therapy works synergistically with adjustments by addressing the disc pathology directly. The combination of restored segmental motion from adjustment and reduced disc pressure from decompression targets two distinct mechanisms simultaneously, which is consistent with the multimodal approach that expert panels have identified as the standard for managing spinal conditions producing radicular symptoms. [8] The Denneroll, a cervical or lumbar traction orthotic used during care, supports the restoration of normal spinal curvature over time, reducing the chronic postural loading that contributes to recurring disc and nerve problems. Corrective exercise prescribed at the appropriate phase of care maintains the improvements by strengthening the stabilizer muscles that protect nerve root clearance between visits. For details on what a course of care looks like, see .

Dr. Brett A. Moss brings 28 years of clinical experience evaluating and managing spinal nerve compression, and the practice integrates objective neurological testing with structural imaging to build a care plan specific to each patient's pattern of symptoms. The page outlines his training and clinical background. Patients in Inverness and the surrounding Citrus County region have access to this full range of conservative neurological and spinal care without referral to a specialist for most radicular presentations.

Schedule a Consultation

Common questions

Can a pinched nerve in my neck cause numbness all the way down to my fingers?
Yes. Each nerve root in the cervical spine follows a path down through the arm to a specific region of the hand and fingers. A problem at C6, for example, tends to cause symptoms in the thumb and index finger, while C7 involvement more often affects the middle finger. The nerve does not have to be damaged at the finger to produce symptoms there. The compression at the neck is the source.
How long does it take for numbness and tingling to improve with chiropractic care?
It depends on how long the nerve has been compressed and how much structural change is present. Acute cases where a disc has recently herniated often respond within a few weeks. Chronic cases involving long-standing stenosis or significant degenerative change take longer, sometimes several months of consistent care. A clear timeline is discussed after the initial evaluation once the structural cause is identified.
Is numbness in both feet at the same time different from one-sided numbness?
Bilateral symptoms, meaning both sides at the same time, are more likely to involve central canal stenosis or a condition affecting the spinal cord rather than a single nerve root. One-sided symptoms are more consistent with a herniated disc or foraminal stenosis at a specific level. Both patterns warrant evaluation, but bilateral lower-extremity numbness is taken more seriously as a potential sign of cord involvement and requires a thorough neurological screen before any treatment begins.
Residents of Inverness, Florida experiencing persistent or recurring numbness and tingling can receive a full neurological and spinal evaluation at Moss Chiropractic of Inverness without a referral.

Sources

  1. [1] haavik_30804399_pmc
    . advanced strategies are constantly being developed and tested in an attempt to improve long term outcomes for stroke survivors4. one possible intervention that may improve post - stroke motor recovery, but has to date not been adequately tested, is chiropractic care.…
  2. [2] bronfort_21426558_pmc
    with severe pain or leg pain of radicular origin may not tolerate the dynamic nature of hvla manipulation. these patients are treated with low velocity mobilization techniques described in our previous work ( i. e., low velocity joint mobilization, flexion - distraction, and…
  3. [3] goertz_31257002_pmc
    to interprofessional practice and readiness to refer, and low on the willingness to learn from other paradigms subscale. chiropractors expressed some lack of confidence in managing back pain in older patients and may need additional education. clinical experiences in which…
  4. [4] haas_28302309_pmc
    a case series [ 37 ] met our inclusion criteria. in the present study, we identified an additional 23 articles over a 8 - year period, representing an expansion in the literature on chiropractic treatments for older adults and the study of adverse events. most of the included…
  5. [5] haavik_41121255_pmc
    sensory experience in palpation training may enhance student performance. educators may consider integrating more structured haptic exercises early in curricula, while future research should explore longitudinal outcomes and the neural mechanisms underlying skill acquisition to…
  6. [6] haavik_39595887_pmc
    2, 18, 19, 21, 22, 23 ], all crucial for executing motor tasks accurately and recovering from central nervous system injuries [ 24, 25 ]. notably, a single session of chiropractic spinal adjustment was found to increase plantar flexor muscle strength in college students [ 18 ],…
  7. [7] haas_16226622_pmc
    advice, manipulation and manual therapy treatments, and tailored exercise recommendations. 1 chiropractors identify as spinal health experts, focusing on improving function in the neuromuscular system and overall health and wellbeing of patients, predominately seeing patients…
  8. [8] goertz_31864769_pmc
    of panelists reported prior involvement in a delphi consensus study, 77 % reported using a decision aid in practice, and 92 % reported using tissue - specific diagnoses to characterize lbp. table 2 displays self - reported knowledge of multimodal chiropractic care. most…
About the author
Dr. Brett A. Moss
DC · U.S. military veteran · License #CH7809

Find a chiropractor for Numbness & Tingling near you

1 InnateScan practice listed
Browse listed practices →

Or scan your spine first

Take a free 60-second posture screening — see where you stand.

Take a free spine screening →

Educational content only — not a medical diagnosis. Consult a licensed healthcare provider for evaluation.