When most people picture a chiropractor, they imagine one thing: someone who twists, pops, or cracks a sore back into place. That picture is not wrong, but it captures only a sliver of what is possible, and it misses the part that matters most. At Omega Functional Health in Wheat Ridge, chiropractic care is not the whole approach. It is one tool inside a larger, connected model that also draws on functional neurology and functional medicine, all guided by a way of systems-level thinking.
For people across Wheat Ridge, Denver, Arvada, Lakewood, Littleton, Highlands Ranch and the surrounding communities who are trying to understand what a functional health chiropractor in Wheat Ridge actually does, this article explains how these three disciplines fit together, why we use gentle instrument-based adjusting rather than manual twisting, and why this integrated, whole-system lens reaches concerns that a single-discipline or symptom-by-symptom approach often cannot.
The Limits of Looking at One Thing at a Time
To understand why an integrated approach matters, it helps to start with the gap it is designed to fill.
Conventional care, including the standard pediatric and primary care model, is built primarily to screen for disease, manage acute illness, and deliver preventive care inside a very short appointment window. It does many of those things well. What it is not designed to do is sit with the slow, interconnected, root-cause questions that complex and chronic concerns require. None of this is a criticism of the clinicians themselves, who are skilled and caring. The limitation is structural, built into the time and the design of the visit.
Two patterns tend to follow from that structure. The first is that care becomes very diagnosis-driven. The goal of a typical visit is to fit a set of symptoms to a recognizable label, and once the label is assigned, the work is largely done. A diagnosis is genuinely useful. It opens doors to services and support. But a diagnosis is a description of a pattern of symptoms. It does not explain the mechanism underneath them, and it does not tell you which systems in the body or nervous system are actually struggling.
The second pattern is compartmentalization. The conventional model tends to examine systems in separate boxes. The spine and joints are a musculoskeletal question. Behavior is a psychology question. Digestion is a gastroenterology question. Nutrition is a brief checklist. Each gets handled in its own lane, often by a different provider, and the connections between them fall through the gaps. But in a living, developing person, these systems are not separate. They are in constant communication, and they influence one another continuously. A model that examines them one at a time, in isolation, can miss the pattern that only becomes visible when you look at the whole.
Systems-level thinking is the alternative. It starts from the assumption that the body is an interconnected whole, that symptoms appearing in different places are often branches of the same root, and that the most useful question is frequently not which single symptom to silence, but which system underneath the symptoms needs attention.
Three Disciplines, One Connected Model
Our approach brings together three disciplines that are usually offered separately. Each answers a different question about the same person, and the power comes from using them together rather than in isolation.
Functional neurology asks how the nervous system is developing, communicating, and coordinating. It looks at how the brain and body are wired together, how movement, balance, reflexes, coordination, and sensory processing are functioning, and where in the nervous system signals may be inefficient or out of sync.
Functional medicine asks about the inputs and the internal environment. It investigates the root-cause factors that influence how the whole body and brain perform, including nutrition, the gut, inflammation, blood sugar and metabolic stability, sleep, and stress load. It is built on the principle of measuring before intervening and individualizing rather than standardizing.
Chiropractic care, in our model, is not a stand-alone treatment for back pain. It is a tool for delivering organized input to the nervous system. Used precisely, it influences how the brain receives information from the body, which is why we treat it as part of the neurological work rather than separate from it. More on that mechanism below.
None of these replaces the others. The nervous system that functional neurology evaluates is fueled and influenced by the metabolic and inflammatory environment that functional medicine examines, and it is fed by the sensory input that chiropractic care helps organize. Looking at all three together gives a far more complete picture than any one of them alone.
Chiropractic as Neurological Input, Not Just Joint Care
This is the piece that most reframes what chiropractic care actually is in our office, so it is worth slowing down on.
The spine is not just a stack of bones that can go out of place. It is one of the richest sources of sensory information the brain receives. The joints, muscles, and connective tissues of the spine are densely packed with receptors that constantly report on position, movement, load, and tension. That information travels to the brain along major sensory highways, including the spinothalamic and spinocerebellar tracts, the pathways that carry signals from the body up to the brain and cerebellum.
This is the key idea. When we work with the spine, we are not simply addressing a mechanical joint. We are influencing a large stream of input flowing into the brain. The cerebellum and higher brain centers depend heavily on this steady flow of accurate information to coordinate movement, maintain balance, support posture, and contribute to attention and regulation. When that input is disorganized or diminished, the brain has less reliable information to work with. When it is improved and well-organized, the brain has better raw material for everything it does.
Seen this way, a chiropractic adjustment is a form of targeted neurological stimulation. It is one of the most direct ways to deliver a large, organized burst of sensory input to the nervous system through these spinal pathways. That is precisely why chiropractic care sits inside our neurological model rather than off to the side as separate musculoskeletal treatment. The goal is not only a more comfortable joint. It is a better-informed brain.
Gentle, Instrument-Based Adjusting
Because the goal is organized neurological input rather than forceful joint movement, our adjusting reflects that. At Omega Functional Health, we use instrument-based adjusting, which means there is no twisting, no popping, and no cracking.
Instead of the high-velocity manual maneuvers many people associate with chiropractic, an instrument delivers a precise, controlled, low-force impulse to a specific spot. For many people, and especially for children and parents who feel anxious about manual adjusting, this is a gentler and more comfortable experience. It allows us to be specific and targeted about where the input is delivered, while keeping the force light. The aim is to stimulate the nervous system through those spinal pathways accurately and gently, not to force anything into place.
What the Research Suggests, Including in the Very Young
The idea that input from the upper spine influences development and function is not new, and it has been explored in some of the youngest patients. In the early 1990s, a German physician named Heiner Biedermann introduced the concept of kinematic imbalance due to suboccipital strain, or KISS. He described how functional strain in the upper cervical region of infants appeared connected to a constellation of findings, including postural asymmetry, torticollis, asymmetric movement patterns, and even difficulties with feeding and sleep. In his case series, gentle manual treatment of the upper neck was associated with improvement, and a frequent parent report was that the child ate and slept better afterward.
Biedermann’s work is best understood as a clinical framework supported by case-series observations and later proposals for an etiologic model, rather than as a closed and fully settled question. What the concept illustrates well, though, is the core principle of our approach: that the upper spine is a powerful source of input to the developing nervous system, and that addressing it gently may influence far more than the neck itself. We hold this evidence the way we hold all of it, taking the mechanism seriously while staying honest about where the research is strong and where it is still developing.
Why Metabolic Health Is Part of the Picture
Our thinking is also why we do not stop at the nervous system. The brain is a metabolically expensive organ. It consumes a large share of the body’s energy, which makes it unusually sensitive to how well the body is producing, regulating, and delivering that energy. When the metabolic foundation is unstable, the brain is often the first place it shows.
This is where functional medicine enters the same conversation. Blood sugar swings, nutrient gaps, and a low-grade inflammatory load can all shape how a person feels and functions, sometimes appearing as fog, fatigue, poor regulation, or difficulty recovering. A nervous system we are working to retrain through input will always do better when it is well-fueled and not fighting unnecessary inflammation. That is why we look at the metabolic and inflammatory environment alongside the neurological work, and why we measure before we recommend rather than handing everyone the same generic plan.
Who This Integrated Approach Helps
This model tends to resonate with people who feel like they have been passed around. Different providers, different labels, a new plan each time, and still no clear answer for why they, or their child, does not feel right. The tests come back normal, but the problem persists.
That often includes children who are struggling with focus, coordination, sensory sensitivities, or development in ways that standard visits have not fully explained. It includes adults dealing with persistent pain, balance and stability changes, or the cluster of burnout, brain fog, poor sleep, and unexplained fatigue that so often gets dismissed as just stress. What these situations share is that the most useful question is rarely which single symptom to silence. It is which systems underneath the symptoms need attention, and how they connect.
What This Approach Does and Does Not Claim
It is important to be clear and honest about scope.
We do not claim to cure disease, replace necessary medical care, or resolve every complaint with a single intervention. Spinal care has its strongest evidence base for musculoskeletal function, and several of the broader nervous-system and developmental ideas described here, including the KISS framework, are areas of ongoing research rather than finished science. We do not assume every person needs the same plan, and in functional medicine specifically, we test before we recommend rather than supplementing blindly.
What we do offer is a thorough, individualized assessment, attention to the whole interconnected system rather than only the symptom you walked in with, gentle and specific instrument-based care, and a plan built around what we actually find. Good care in this space stays transparent about what the evidence supports, what it does not, and how long things may take, and it works in coordination with your other providers. At Omega Functional Health, that honesty is treated as part of the care, not a disclaimer attached to it.
A Starting Point in Wheat Ridge
If you have been told your tests are normal, but you still do not feel right, or you want a more connected look at what is driving your or your child’s challenges, that is a starting point, not a dead end. People across Wheat Ridge, Denver, Arvada, Lakewood, and the surrounding communities are welcome to contact Omega Functional Health to learn more about our integrated, systems-level approach and whether it is a good fit. Everything begins with a thorough assessment and a clear picture of what is really going on.
References
Biedermann H. Kinematic imbalances due to suboccipital strain in newborns. Journal of Manual Medicine. 1992;6:151-156.
Biedermann H. Manual Therapy in Children: Proposals for an Etiologic Model. Journal of Manipulative and Physiological Therapeutics. 2005;28(3):211.e1-211.e15.
Brurberg KG, Myrhaug HT, Reinar LM. Diagnostics and Treatment of Infants Suspected with Kinematic Imbalance Due to Suboccipital Strain (KISS). Norwegian Knowledge Centre for the Health Services, Report No. 17-2009; 2009.
Trager RJ, Cupler ZA, Theodorou EC, et al. Chiropractic and Spinal Manipulation: A Review of Research Trends, Evidence Gaps, and Guideline Recommendations. PMC; 2024.
Relationship Between Chiropractic Care and Autonomic Nervous System Regulation. ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier NCT05401903.