Medically reviewed by Dr. Malik Prihar, DC | Last updated April 27, 2026
Neck Pain Treatment in Marysville, WA
Neck pain rarely shows up in isolation. By the time a patient walks into our Marysville clinic, the neck has usually been telling them something for weeks — a stiff turn over the shoulder when they back out of the driveway, a tight spot at the base of the skull by mid-afternoon, a headache pattern that's gotten harder to ignore, or a morning where they couldn't quite get their head off the pillow without bracing for it.
In Marysville, the contributing patterns tend to follow a few familiar shapes: long I-5 commutes hunched against traffic, aerospace and trades work that loads the cervical spine in awkward positions, warehouse and logistics shift work with scanners and screens, and the evening device use that quietly compounds all of it. At our clinic just off the 116th Street NE exit, we figure out which of those patterns is actually driving your neck pain and build care around the real cause — not just where it hurts.
For the deeper clinical breakdown of how we evaluate and treat neck pain across both clinics, see our parent page on neck pain. This page is about what care looks like at the Marysville location specifically.
Neck Pain Patterns We See Most Often in Marysville
- I-5 commuter neck — patients running south to Everett, Lynnwood, or Seattle, where 60–90 minutes daily of forward-head driving posture quietly tightens the upper traps and posterior neck
- Aerospace and trades neck pain — overhead work, awkward-position assembly, and prolonged static postures that load the cervical spine and surrounding muscles
- Warehouse and logistics neck pain — scanner-and-screen workflows in the Smokey Point and Quil Ceda corridors, with end-of-shift stiffness that compounds across the work week
- Desk-and-device neck pain — long days at a screen layered on top of evening phone and tablet use, the classic forward-head pattern
- Post-collision neck pain — patients with lingering symptoms after a collision on I-5, SR-528, or local intersections (see our auto accident page and whiplash page for the full workup)
- Sleep-and-pillow neck pain — the "I woke up like this" presentations that point to underlying pattern problems
- Tension-headache neck pain — neck stiffness driving cervicogenic and tension-pattern headaches
What We Treat at the Marysville Clinic
- Acute neck strains — the "I slept on it wrong" or "I turned and felt something" episodes
- Chronic, recurring neck pain that flares with work, screens, or stress
- Neck pain combined with shoulder and upper-back tension
- Cervicogenic headaches driven by the upper cervical spine
- Radicular neck pain — pain, numbness, or tingling traveling into the shoulder, arm, or hand
- Disc-related neck pain, including evaluation for whether imaging is warranted
- Post-collision neck pain and whiplash recovery
- Reduced range of motion and chronic postural patterns affecting the neck
What to Expect at Your First Marysville Visit
Your first visit takes a full hour. We start with a real conversation — what you do for work, how your day is shaped, when the pain started, what makes it better or worse — followed by a hands-on exam: posture, cervical and thoracic range of motion, neurological screening of the upper extremity, orthopedic testing, and palpation of the neck, upper back, and shoulders.
If imaging is warranted, our Marysville location has on-site digital X-ray. For neck pain, X-ray is most useful when there's a history of trauma, suspected structural change, signs of degenerative cervical disease, or symptoms that aren't responding to a reasonable course of conservative care. Most non-traumatic neck pain doesn't need imaging to start, and we'll tell you straight if you're one of those cases.
From there, treatment usually combines chiropractic adjustments targeted to the involved cervical and upper-thoracic segments, soft-tissue work for the surrounding musculature, and a short, specific home program. For chronic or postural neck pain, we layer in mobility rehabilitation for the stiffness and injury rehabilitation for deep cervical flexor and scapular stability work. Most acute neck pain meaningfully improves within 2–4 weeks of consistent care; chronic and recurrent patterns usually need 6–10 weeks.
Red Flags — When Neck Pain Needs Emergency Care
Most neck pain responds well to conservative care. A few presentations don't, and they need to go to an emergency department, not a chiropractic clinic:
- Severe headache with neck stiffness and fever
- Sudden vision changes, slurred speech, facial weakness, or other stroke-like symptoms
- Loss of coordination, drop attacks, or new dizziness with neck pain
- Severe neck pain following major trauma
- Progressive weakness or numbness in both arms or both legs
- Loss of bowel or bladder control
- Unexplained weight loss or night pain alongside neck pain
If any of those apply, go to the emergency department. We'll evaluate everyone else.
Visiting the Marysville Clinic
Address: 3721 116th St NE, Suite 10, Marysville, WA 98271
Phone: (360) 805-8252
Hours: Monday–Thursday, 10AM–6PM
The clinic is just east of I-5 at the 116th Street exit, with free parking on site. Patients come in from across Marysville, Lakewood, Tulalip, Quil Ceda Village, Smokey Point, Arlington, Stanwood, and Camano Island.
FAQs — Marysville Neck Pain Care
Is it safe to get my neck adjusted?
For most patients with mechanical neck pain, yes. We screen for the small number of presentations where high-velocity adjustments aren't appropriate, and we have lower-force techniques available when those are the better fit. The exam comes first, the technique is matched to the case, and you'll always know what we're doing and why.
Do I need an X-ray for neck pain?
Most non-traumatic neck pain doesn't need imaging to start care. We image when there's a history of trauma, suspected structural issues, signs of degenerative cervical disease, or symptoms that aren't responding as expected.
Can desk and screen posture really cause neck pain?
Yes — and not just at the desk. Forward-head posture maintained for hours layers onto the cervical spine and the muscles that support it. Postural neck pain is one of the most common patterns we see at this clinic.
Do you treat neck pain from a car accident?
Yes. Post-collision neck pain is one of the most common reasons new patients call. See our auto accident page and whiplash page for the full workup, including PIP and documentation.
Can neck pain cause headaches?
Yes — cervicogenic headaches and tension-pattern headaches are often driven by the upper cervical spine and surrounding musculature. Our headaches and migraines page covers the patterns in detail.
How long does it take to feel better?
Most acute neck pain shows meaningful improvement within 2–4 weeks of consistent care. Chronic or recurring patterns usually need 6–10 weeks of work to actually shift. We're always working toward fewer visits, not more.
Do I need a referral?
No. Washington is a direct-access state for chiropractic care. If your insurance plan requires a referral on paper, we'll help you sort that out.
Related Reading
- Neck pain — the parent clinical page covering causes, evaluation, treatment, and recovery in detail
- Whiplash — for post-collision neck injuries
- Headaches & migraines — when neck tension drives the headache pattern
- Herniated disc — for cervical disc-related pain
- Pinched nerve — for radicular patterns into the arm
- Poor posture — desk-and-driving postural patterns
- Auto accident recovery — for post-collision neck pain
Other Locations
If Monroe is closer to you, we offer the same evaluation and care at our Monroe neck pain treatment location at 14090 Fryelands Blvd #174.
Schedule a Neck Pain Evaluation in Marysville
If neck pain has been hanging around longer than it should, or it's flaring up enough that it's shaping how you work, drive, or sleep, that's worth looking at directly. Mon–Thu, 10AM–6PM. Call (360) 805-8252 or start with the new patient page to book at Marysville.
This page is for general education and is not a substitute for an in-person evaluation. Conservative chiropractic and rehabilitation care is appropriate for many causes of neck pain, but not all. Seek emergency care for severe neck pain after major trauma, neck pain with fever or signs of meningitis, neck pain with stroke-like symptoms (vision changes, slurred speech, facial weakness, sudden dizziness or coordination loss), progressive weakness in the arms or legs, or loss of bowel or bladder control.