Embrun Chiropractic Clinic

Vertigo & Dizziness Treatment in Embrun

Drug-free vertigo and dizziness relief in Embrun, ON. Dr. Murray treats cervicogenic dizziness and BPPV without medication or surgery.

Chiropractic care for vertigo & dizziness

Get to the root of your vertigo & dizziness

Also known as: Dizziness, Cervicogenic Dizziness, BPPV

If the room starts spinning when you roll over in bed, or dizziness hits every time you look up or turn your head, the cause may be closer than you think — your inner ear or upper neck. At Embrun Chiropractic Clinic in Embrun, Dr. Laura Murray evaluates both, distinguishes the type of dizziness you're experiencing, and offers drug-free care for the two most chiropractic-relevant forms: BPPV and cervicogenic dizziness.

Chiropractic care for vertigo & dizziness at Embrun Chiropractic Clinic in Embrun

Symptoms of vertigo & dizziness

  • A spinning sensation (room feels like it is moving)
  • Dizziness triggered by head or neck movement
  • Imbalance or unsteadiness when standing or walking
  • Nausea or vomiting alongside dizzy episodes
  • Lightheadedness when changing positions
  • Neck stiffness or upper-neck soreness accompanying dizziness
  • A feeling of fullness or pressure in the ears

Common causes

  • BPPV — displaced calcium crystals (canaliths) in the inner ear
  • Upper cervical joint dysfunction affecting balance signals
  • Whiplash or neck injury disrupting normal cervical proprioception
  • Forward-head posture and prolonged screen use straining the upper neck
  • Muscle tension in the suboccipital region compressing nerve endings
  • Post-concussion changes in the vestibular system
  • Dehydration or inner-ear inflammation triggering episodes
How Embrun Chiropractic Clinic treats vertigo & dizziness in Embrun

Our approach

How we treat vertigo & dizziness in Embrun

  1. Step 1

    Thorough assessment

    We take a detailed history, screen for red-flag dizziness (stroke, cardiac, or neurological causes), and perform orthopedic and vestibular testing to identify whether your dizziness is cervicogenic, BPPV, or something that needs a referral.

  2. Step 2

    A targeted, honest plan

    If you're a good candidate for chiropractic care, you receive a plain-English explanation of what we found and a specific, time-bound plan. If your dizziness points to a cause outside our scope, we refer you to the right provider promptly.

  3. Step 3

    Gentle treatment & movement rehab

    We use gentle upper-cervical adjustments and, for BPPV, canalith-repositioning maneuvers (such as the Epley maneuver) alongside corrective exercise to restore stable balance and reduce recurrence.

The basics

Understanding vertigo & dizziness

Vertigo and dizziness are not a single condition — they are symptoms that can come from several different systems in the body. The most important first step is determining which system is involved, because the treatment differs completely.

The two forms we most commonly evaluate and treat at Embrun Chiropractic Clinic are BPPV (benign paroxysmal positional vertigo) and cervicogenic dizziness. BPPV occurs when calcium carbonate crystals called canaliths break loose inside the semicircular canals of the inner ear and send garbled signals to the brain whenever the head moves into certain positions. Cervicogenic dizziness arises from the upper cervical spine — the joints at the top of the neck are densely packed with proprioceptors, sensory nerve endings that help your brain track where your head is in space. When those joints are restricted, injured, or irritated, the signals they send become unreliable, and the brain interprets that as dizziness or unsteadiness. Both forms respond well to conservative, drug-free care. What chiropractic cannot treat — and will actively screen for and refer out — is dizziness rooted in serious cardiovascular, neurological, or inner-ear disease.

Embrun Chiropractic Clinic treating vertigo & dizziness in Embrun

New Patient Special

$49

(Placeholder offer — confirm the clinic’s actual new-patient offer before launch.)

New patients only. Mention this offer when booking.

Types of vertigo & dizziness we help

“Dizziness” covers a wide range of sensations, and the right treatment depends on the cause. We regularly help Embrun-area patients with:

  • BPPV (benign paroxysmal positional vertigo) — intense brief spinning triggered by rolling over in bed, looking up, or tilting the head. Caused by displaced ear crystals and treated with canalith-repositioning maneuvers like the Epley. Often resolves in one to three sessions.
  • Cervicogenic dizziness — a persistent unsteadiness or foggy-head feeling that comes from restricted or irritated joints in the upper neck. Frequently accompanies neck stiffness, headaches, or a history of whiplash.
  • Dizziness after whiplash or neck injury — trauma disrupts normal cervical proprioception, and the brain loses its reliable balance signal from the neck. Restoring upper-cervical joint motion is central to recovery.
  • Postural and screen-related dizziness — forward-head posture places chronic load on the upper cervical joints and suboccipital muscles, gradually degrading the balance signals they send. Addressed with corrective exercise and postural rehab.

Conditions outside our scope — Meniere’s disease, vestibular neuritis, cardiac causes, and neurological disorders — receive prompt referral. We screen at every exam and will never overtreat.

What to expect at your first visit

Your first appointment takes about 45–60 minutes and is focused on finding out why you’re dizzy before treating anything. We’ll:

  1. Listen to your history — when episodes started, what positions or movements trigger them, whether neck pain or headaches accompany them, and any prior workup you’ve had.
  2. Screen for red flags — we perform clinical tests to rule out cardiovascular, neurological, or inner-ear causes that require immediate referral. If something doesn’t fit a musculoskeletal pattern, we’ll tell you honestly and point you to the right provider.
  3. Test the vestibular and cervical systems — orthopedic, neurological, and vestibular testing distinguishes BPPV from cervicogenic dizziness and guides your care plan.
  4. Explain what we found — in plain English, with a specific, time-bound plan and clear goals — not open-ended treatment.
  5. Begin care when appropriate — many patients with BPPV receive a repositioning maneuver the same visit; cervicogenic dizziness care often starts with a gentle upper-cervical adjustment the same day.

Drug-free help for vertigo & dizziness

Antivert and other vestibular suppressants can blunt dizziness symptoms for a few hours, but they do nothing to reposition displaced crystals or restore normal neck-joint motion. Chiropractic care addresses the structural cause — so the goal isn’t just fewer dizzy spells today, but better balance and stability long-term. For most patients that means returning to driving, exercising, and working without the constant fear of an episode. And when a cause is outside our scope, we refer without delay — we’d rather send you somewhere else quickly than treat the wrong thing slowly.

When to see a chiropractor in Embrun

Some dizziness is fleeting and harmless. Other dizziness is a signal worth acting on. Consider calling our Embrun office if you notice:

  • Spinning or unsteadiness triggered by rolling over, looking up, or turning your head
  • Dizziness that accompanies neck pain, stiffness, or a recent whiplash injury
  • Lightheadedness that gets worse with prolonged sitting, screen use, or forward-head posture
  • Recurring episodes with no clear medical diagnosis after a prior workup
  • Dizziness that is limiting your confidence while driving, working, or exercising

Seek emergency care immediately if dizziness occurs alongside sudden severe headache, one-sided weakness or numbness, slurred speech, double vision, or loss of consciousness — these can be signs of stroke and require 911, not a chiropractic appointment. We take this seriously and will never minimize a red-flag presentation.

If your symptoms fit a cervicogenic or BPPV pattern, an exam at Embrun Chiropractic Clinic can clarify the picture and get you started on a clear, drug-free path forward. Learn more about how neck pain and upper-cervical dysfunction contribute to dizziness, or review what to expect as a new patient.

Why Embrun-area patients choose Embrun Chiropractic Clinic

Patients from Embrun, Russell, Casselman, Russell Township, and Rockland choose Embrun Chiropractic Clinic for vertigo care because we do the work of distinguishing why they’re dizzy before we treat anything. Dr. Laura Murray combines vestibular screening, upper cervical examination, and postural assessment into one visit — so nothing gets missed and nothing gets over-treated.

For BPPV, we perform canalith-repositioning maneuvers (including the Epley) in the office and teach patients a home version to reduce future episodes. For cervicogenic dizziness, we use gentle chiropractic adjustments to restore normal joint mobility in the upper neck, paired with corrective exercise to retrain posture and proprioception so the dizziness doesn’t return once care ends.

We know living with vertigo affects every part of your day — driving, working, sleeping, exercising. Our goal is to give you honest answers and real results quickly, and to refer without hesitation when something is outside our scope.

Ready to find out what’s behind your dizziness? Book an appointment online or learn more about what your first visit looks like at our new patient page.

Why choose chiropractic

Chiropractic care vs. medication for vertigo and dizziness

Comparison factor Chiropractic Care Medication
Addresses the root cause Corrects joint or crystal displacement Suppresses symptoms only
Drug-free & non-invasive Always Rarely
Risk of side effects Minimal Drowsiness, dependency risk
Works for cervicogenic dizziness Highly effective Limited benefit
Works for BPPV Repositioning maneuvers work well Meds do not reposition crystals
Long-term recurrence prevention Exercise and posture correction included Seldom addressed

Related conditions

Other conditions we treat in Embrun

Patient reviews

What our Embrun patients say

“Dr Gregory is amazing! Always feel amazing after seeing him. He has helped me over several years and never disappoints! Very easy to feel relaxed and comfortable. You should definitely consider making chiropractic care part of your life.”
SB Sylvie Belisle Verified review · Google
“I have been seeing Dr. Gregory and Dr. Laura for about 3 years now, with visits approximately every 4 weeks to help maintain my health. Each visit is a great experience - I'm always met with a positive and welcoming atmosphere. I genuinely look forward to my appointments. If you are in the area and looking for a great chiropractor, I highly recommend Embrun Chiropractic Clinic.”
Jm Jesse man Verified review · Google
“Dr. Varty and Dr. Murray have been my chiropractors for 18+ years now, and I have to say they are some of the BEST in their field. They are both kind, gentle, excellent, top of the line chiropractors and I am not just saying that because I am their daughter! Both doctors posses healing hands and they will make you feel better in the first appointment! Amazing clinic, fantastic doctors, would recommend to everyone.”
QV Quinn Varty Verified review · Google

Good to know

Vertigo & Dizziness FAQ

Still have questions? Contact us — we're happy to help.

Can a chiropractor help vertigo?+

Yes — for the two most common chiropractic-relevant types. Cervicogenic dizziness (caused by upper-neck joint dysfunction) responds well to gentle cervical adjustments and soft-tissue work. BPPV (caused by displaced ear crystals) is treated with canalith-repositioning maneuvers like the Epley, which chiropractors trained in vestibular rehab perform routinely. We screen every patient to confirm which type is present and refer out when dizziness has a cardiac, neurological, or other medical cause.

What causes vertigo?+

The two most common causes we see are BPPV — tiny calcium crystals that shift inside the inner-ear canals and send faulty balance signals — and cervicogenic dizziness, where restricted or irritated joints in the upper cervical spine confuse the brain's balance center. Other causes include Meniere's disease, vestibular neuritis, migraines, and — rarely — serious conditions like stroke. That's why a proper exam matters before starting any treatment.

What is the Epley maneuver?+

The Epley maneuver is a series of precise head and body positions that guide displaced calcium crystals back to where they belong inside the inner ear. It takes about five minutes in the office and often produces significant relief within one to three sessions for patients with posterior-canal BPPV. Dr. Murray will also teach you a home version to use if symptoms return.

How long does vertigo last?+

BPPV episodes typically last seconds to a minute but can recur for days or weeks if untreated. Cervicogenic dizziness often persists as low-level unsteadiness until the underlying neck mechanics are addressed. With appropriate care, most patients see meaningful improvement within a few visits, though the timeline depends on how long the problem has been present.

How is cervicogenic dizziness different from BPPV?+

BPPV produces intense, brief spinning triggered by specific head positions (rolling over, looking up) and is caused by loose ear crystals. Cervicogenic dizziness tends to be more of a constant unsteadiness or fogginess, often accompanied by neck pain or stiffness, and is caused by faulty signals from the cervical joints. Both can coexist, and careful examination distinguishes them.

When is vertigo a medical emergency?+

Seek emergency care immediately if dizziness occurs with sudden severe headache, double vision, slurred speech, weakness or numbness on one side, difficulty walking, or loss of consciousness — these are possible stroke warning signs. We screen for red flags at every exam and will refer you without delay if anything points to a serious underlying cause.

Do I need imaging before my first visit?+

Most patients don't. We perform clinical testing in the office to identify the likely cause and screen for red flags. If we find anything that warrants imaging or a specialist referral, we'll tell you and help coordinate next steps. No referral is needed to see us in Ontario.

Can poor posture cause dizziness?+

Yes. Forward-head posture — common with desk work and phone use — places chronic stress on the upper cervical joints and suboccipital muscles. Over time this can disrupt the proprioceptive signals those joints send to your balance center, producing persistent dizziness or lightheadedness. Correcting posture is a core part of how we treat cervicogenic dizziness.

How soon will I feel better?+

Many patients with BPPV feel significant relief after one to three repositioning sessions. Cervicogenic dizziness typically improves over a few weeks of care as joint mobility and posture improve. We set a clear, time-bound plan after your exam so you always know what to expect.

Do you treat patients from Russell or Casselman for vertigo?+

Absolutely. We see patients from across the Embrun area — including Russell, Casselman, Russell Township, and Rockland — for vertigo, dizziness, and related neck concerns. Our office is easy to reach from any of these communities, and you can book online in minutes.

Call: (613) 443-2363