Postural Orthostatic Tachycardia Syndrome (POTS) and concussion are routinely managed as separate conditions, with patients sent to cardiology for heart rate regulation and neurology for brain injury recovery. Treating each condition in isolation leaves the underlying mechanism of the other unresolved. Research confirms that concussion is the second most common trigger of POTS onset after viral illness. Integrated concussion care directly addresses the intersection of the brainstem, vestibular system, cervical spine, and autonomic nervous system. This concurrent treatment protocol produces clinical outcomes that single-specialty management cannot achieve.
The Pathophysiology Linking Concussion and Autonomic Dysfunction
The relationship between mild traumatic brain injury and autonomic dysregulation is well documented in clinical literature. According to a study published in the Journal of Neurologic Physical Therapy, 11.4% of patients diagnosed with POTS reported that their symptoms began within three months of sustaining a concussion. A separate 2022 review of pediatric concussion clinics found that 7% of patients met the criteria for post-concussive orthostatic tachycardia, making prior concussion history the strongest predictor for this specific clinical outcome.
The physiological explanation for this connection begins in the brainstem. A concussion causes sheer force that disrupts axonal communication throughout various brain regions, specifically impacting the regulatory centers of the autonomic nervous system. The brainstem houses the nucleus tractus solitarius and the rostral ventrolateral medulla. These structures act as the central command centers for regulating heart rate, maintaining blood pressure, and ensuring orthostatic tolerance.
When a brain injury disrupts these specific brainstem regions, the autonomic nervous system loses its ability to execute the rapid, compensatory cardiovascular changes required when a person transitions from lying down to standing. This regulatory failure results in orthostatic tachycardia. The patient’s heart rate spikes excessively and remains elevated. Consequently, blood pools in the lower extremities, and systemic blood pressure regulation becomes compromised. Patients experience chronic dizziness, cognitive fog, breathlessness, and profound exhaustion throughout their daily activities.
The Cervicogenic-Autonomic Connection
The standard medical model evaluates the neck and the autonomic nervous system through separate diagnostic lenses. This compartmentalization causes clinicians to miss one of the primary mechanical drivers of autonomic dysregulation. During a concussive event, the upper cervical spine absorbs significant mechanical force. Because the head cannot sustain an impact without transferring kinetic energy to the neck, concussions consistently involve a cervical injury component.
This mechanical force creates immediate dysfunction within the soft tissues, joint mechanics, and proprioceptive pathways of the upper cervical region. The deep suboccipital neck muscles, specifically spanning C0 to C2, contain some of the highest muscle spindle densities found in human anatomy. These dense spindles support critical proprioceptive signaling. Cervical afferent nerves project directly from these muscles to the vestibular nuclei, which subsequently communicate with the autonomic brainstem nuclei responsible for cardiovascular regulation.
When cervical proprioceptive input becomes noisy and degraded due to trauma, the vestibular nuclei transmit compromised data. The downstream autonomic brainstem centers receive this degraded signal and become dysregulated. Leaving the cervical input untreated means a massive mechanical driver of POTS remains active.
According to a 2024 case report published in Cureus, conservative care focusing on the cervical spine yielded significant autonomic improvements. The report detailed the treatment of a 27-year-old woman suffering from six years of persistent dizziness, cervicogenic headaches, and confirmed POTS. Following targeted cervical rehabilitation, her Dizziness Handicap Inventory score decreased from 50, indicating a moderate handicap, to 10, indicating minimal to no handicap. Her treating cardiologist confirmed that resolving the cervical dysfunction and prior concussive history was highly relevant to stabilizing her POTS presentation.
What Standard Clinical Evaluations Miss
Standard cardiology workups for POTS typically consist of a tilt table test, medication review, and general lifestyle recommendations. Conversely, neurology evaluations for post-concussion syndrome focus heavily on cognitive deficits and photophobia. A single evaluation analyzing both systems simultaneously is rare in conventional practice.
At Georgia Chiropractic Neurology Center, post-concussion patients with autonomic symptoms receive a paired diagnostic evaluation. The clinic utilizes an autonomic diagnostic stack that includes NeuroInfiniti, HeartMath, Polar H10 heart rate variability monitoring, and an active stand test. Simultaneously, the post-concussion diagnostic stack incorporates videonystagmography, video head impulse testing, saccadometry, computerized dynamic posturography, and C3 Logix neurocognitive testing.
Running both diagnostic stacks during the same clinical evaluation is necessary because the autonomic dysfunction in post-concussion POTS is located downstream from the unresolved brainstem and vestibular dysfunction. Assessing one system without the other provides an incomplete clinical picture. This integrated approach routinely reveals overlapping dysfunctions such as asymmetric vestibulo-ocular reflex gain, visual dependence on posturography, suboccipital hypertonicity, and an elevated orthostatic heart rate delta occurring simultaneously in the same patient.
The Six Core Modules of Integrated Functional Neurology Care
The treatment framework for post-concussion POTS at Georgia Chiropractic Neurology Center relies on six overlapping clinical modules.
- Cervical Soft-Tissue Rehabilitation Suboccipital hypertonicity and restricted upper cervical motion act as direct mechanical drivers of brainstem signal degradation. Utilizing manual soft-tissue work alongside Myosynaptics treatment restores the quality of proprioceptive data originating from the upper cervical sensory zone.
- Vestibulo-Ocular Rehabilitation Post-concussion patients frequently exhibit asymmetric vestibulo-ocular reflex gain and visual dependence, which indicate central processing dysfunction rather than peripheral vestibular issues. Targeted rehabilitation restores gaze stabilization and sensory integration. These corrections serve as prerequisites for safe and effective orthostatic conditioning.
- Oculomotor Training POTS diagnostic workups consistently miss saccadic dysfunction and convergence insufficiency. Oculomotor rehabilitation normalizes the critical visual-vestibular interactions that underpin both physical balance and autonomic stability.
- HRV-Paced Orthostatic Conditioning Standard aerobic exercise prescriptions often worsen symptoms in POTS patients who lack upright exertional tolerance. Heart rate variability-guided conditioning matches the specific exercise intensity to the patient’s real-time autonomic capacity. Recumbent exercise protocols are structured around evidence-based models like the CHOP POTS Exercise Program.
- Transcutaneous Vagal Stimulation Non-invasive vagal nerve stimulation targets the brainstem autonomic centers disrupted by the concussion. It improves parasympathetic tone directly. According to a 2024 randomized clinical trial published in JACC: Clinical Electrophysiology, transcutaneous vagal stimulation reduced the postural heart rate increase in POTS patients from 31.7 bpm to 17.6 bpm over a two-month period. This intervention achieved an approximate 44% reduction in orthostatic tachycardia without pharmacological intervention. Strengthening parasympathetic tone directly counters the autonomic suppression triggered by the initial head injury.
- HRV Biofeedback Patients practice resonant frequency breathing training at six breaths per minute to increase parasympathetic activation and reduce sympathetic tone. This at-home biofeedback practice extends the therapeutic effect between in-clinic visits and improves overall heart rate variability.
Clinical Evidence and Patient Outcomes
Patients suffering from concurrent concussion and POTS face high rates of misdiagnosis. Because symptoms like brain fog, rapid heart rate, severe fatigue, and exercise intolerance overlap heavily with psychological conditions, providers frequently misattribute these physiological issues to anxiety. The active stand test offers a highly effective, low-cost assessment method, yet many standard clinics omit it due to time constraints.
When integrated care targets both the cervical input and the autonomic nervous system simultaneously, patients achieve mechanistic resolution rather than mere symptom management. Internal clinic outcomes highlight these results. A 23-year-old graphic designer presented to the clinic 14 months after sustaining a workplace concussion. She had previously been told her symptoms were purely anxiety. Her initial active stand test revealed a heart rate increase from 72 to 116 bpm, alongside an asymmetric vestibulo-ocular reflex and suboccipital hypertonicity. An integrated care plan incorporating cervical soft-tissue work, oculomotor training, and vagal stimulation reduced her orthostatic heart rate delta to 22 bpm by week eight. By week 14, her heart rate delta stabilized at 14 bpm, her brain fog resolved, and she returned to full-time work. By week 20, she successfully resumed running.
Testimonials reflect similar recoveries. Cooper C., who traveled from Canada, reported that after years of suffering from concussion symptoms, a targeted two-week intensive program resolved his vertigo, dizziness, and mood swings. Haakon A., an international patient from Norway, cited his functional neurologic rehabilitation as the definitive factor in recovering from multiple concussions.
Frequently Asked Questions
What symptoms indicate a patient should be evaluated for post-concussion POTS?
Patients should seek evaluation if they experience a rapid heart rate, severe exercise intolerance, or persistent lightheadedness upon standing that developed after a head injury. This is especially critical if standard post-concussion rehabilitation has failed to improve their symptoms.
Why do doctors misdiagnose post-concussion POTS as anxiety?
The physiological symptoms of POTS, including a racing heart, breathlessness, and brain fog, perfectly mirror the physical manifestations of an anxiety or panic attack. Without performing specific orthostatic vital sign testing, providers easily mistake the autonomic nervous system’s physical dysregulation for a psychological disorder.
Does upper cervical chiropractic care improve POTS symptoms?
Targeted cervical soft-tissue rehabilitation corrects the noisy proprioceptive signals traveling from the neck to the brainstem. Restoring this mechanical input allows the vestibular and autonomic nuclei to regulate heart rate and blood pressure accurately.
How does transcutaneous vagal stimulation help patients with POTS?
Transcutaneous vagal stimulation delivers a non-invasive signal that increases parasympathetic tone and targets dysregulated brainstem centers. Clinical trials demonstrate that this therapy can reduce the severity of orthostatic tachycardia by 44 percent without the use of medication.
Data based on internal clinical outcome assessments and patient-reported symptom surveys (Updated May 2026). Individual results vary. GCNC does not manage or alter prescriptions; all medication changes are performed under the direction of the patient’s prescribing physician.
To learn more or request an evaluation, visit georgiachiropracticneurologycenter.com.
