Medical Rationale
Chronic migraines produce persistent cervical muscle guarding and spasm through the trigeminocervical complex — the convergence of trigeminal afferents (C1-C3 dorsal horn) with upper cervical sensory neurons. During migraine attacks, central sensitization in this complex causes referred pain and protective muscle contraction in the cervical paraspinal muscles (splenius capitis, semispinalis, upper trapezius). Repeated migraine episodes produce chronic cervical myofascial pain, trigger point formation, and eventually cervical degenerative changes from sustained abnormal muscle loading. The head-forward posture adopted during migraine attacks (photophobia-driven posture) adds biomechanical stress to the cervical spine. Studies show cervical muscle tenderness in 70-80% of migraineurs between attacks.
Key Studies
Fernández-de-las-Peñas C et al. (2006) Cephalalgia (cervical muscle dysfunction in migraine); Bartsch T & Goadsby PJ (2003) Brain (trigeminocervical complex); Florencio LL et al. (2017) Headache (cervical musculoskeletal dysfunction in migraine).
Filing Tips
Cervical spine X-ray or MRI showing degenerative changes. Physical therapy records documenting cervical trigger points, reduced ROM, and association with migraine episodes. Neurology or physiatry nexus letter addressing the trigeminocervical complex mechanism. Document how cervical symptoms persist between migraine attacks — this distinguishes the cervical condition as a separate disability from the migraines themselves.