The Missing Puzzle Piece:  Upledger Craniosacral Therapy in the Treatment of Post-Concussion Syndrome
Melinda Roland MA., PT., LAc., OMD., Dipl-Ac., CST-D.

Traumatic Brain injury (TBI) is defined as “a disruption in the normal function of the brain that can be caused by a bump, blow, or jolt to the head, or penetrating head injury”. (CDC).   Concussion is considered a mild TBI, and is a complex pathophysiological process affecting the brain that may or may not involve a loss of consciousness.

Concussion can also occur via biomechanical forces taken in elsewhere in the body, such as a hard fall on the sacrum, a hard hit to the body, or the forceful movement of the head without any direct contact with an object such as in a whiplash injury.  The forces generated are transmitted to the head and brain as well as the entire body, causing the brain to move, often violently, within the cranial vault, with ensuing injury.

Post-concussion Syndrome, or PCS, describes a group of symptoms (3 or more) that persist after a concussion, sometimes for months or years.  Common complaints include headache, cervical pain, photophobia and visual dysfunction, noise sensitivity and tinnitus, dizziness, balance and coordination problems, and fatigue.  In addition, cognitive changes (memory impairment, especially short term memory, difficulty concentrating, confusion, fogginess), and behavioral changes ( anxiety, irritability and depression), and insomnia are often seen in PCS,  Some of the symptoms such as cognitive and behavioral changes and sensitivities to noise may not develop for days or weeks after the injury occurs.  Interestingly, the severity of the initial injury does not appear to predict the risk of developing the complex of symptoms that is Post-Concussion Syndrome. (JClinExpNeuropsych,v 37 (3) 2015)

There are many causes of PCS symptomatology.   Impact can cause structural damage to the brain, or interruption of neural communication.  “Immediately after biomechanical injury to the brain, abrupt, indiscriminant release of neurotransmitters and unchecked ionic fluxes occur…These ionic shifts lead to acute and subacute changes in cellular physiology. The resulting energy crisis is a likely mechanism for postconcussive vulnerability, making the brain less able to respond adequately to a second injury and potentially leading to longer-lasting deficits.” (JAthlTrain, v.36(3) Jul-Sept 2001)

Delicate structures responsible for vision or balance can be affected.  Resultant cervical dysfunction can create similar long-lasting symptoms. The interconnectedness of connective tissue and structure forms a matrix through which strain patterns can be transmitted throughout the body and the brain in all directions.

Typically, management of PCS involves symptomatic treatment. Medication, physical therapy, vestibular and vision therapy are traditionally used to diminish complaints and restore function.  However, clinically, we see significant and far-reaching results regularly in the treatment of PCS when the rehabilitation approach includes Upledger Craniosacral Therapy (CST).  In addition to being an effective treatment approach for boney, connective tissue, visceral, neural and meningeal stress, Upledger CST can enhance standard therapies by calming the sympathetic nervous system, allowing other therapies to be better tolerated. 

Upledger CST is a gentle, non-invasive manual therapy that detects and modifies restrictions in the craniosacral system (CSS) as well as strain patterns throughout the body.  The CSS consists of the meningeal membranes, including the dural membranes surrounding the brain and spinal cord, the osseous and fascial structures to which the meningeal membranes attach, the non-osseous connective tissue structures which are intimately related to the meningeal membranes, the cerebrospinal fluid (CSF), the ventricles and all the structures related to the production, resorption of the CSF, the meninges, and the CSS glia cells.

The brain and spinal cord are covered and protected by layers of tissue called the meninges.  The anatomy of the CSS includes the cranial vault, which is lined with the two layered dura mater, an endosteal layer firmly attached to the inner surface of the skull, and an inner meningeal layer.  In some areas, the dural meningeal layer reflects inward and forms partitions, creating the quadrilateral space that houses the brain.  The dural tissue or membrane forms a vertical partition that separates and contains the L and R hemispheres of the cerebrum (Falx Cerebri) and the cerebellum (Falx Cerebelli); the dura that forms the posterior horizontal partition (Tentorium Cerebelli)  acts as a mezzanine floor of sorts with the occipital and temporal lobes above and the cerebellum below.   “The falx sits like a mohawk hairstyle between the brain's two halves and is stiffer than the rest of the brain, like leather versus gelatin. Watching reproductions of the recorded impacts and additional simulations, the researchers saw that hits to the side of the head could produce vibrations in the falx, due to its stiffness. Those could then propagate down to the corpus callosum, creating the kind of tissue strain that is often implicated in concussion”. (Role of a Deep Brain Structure in Concussion, Stanford U., Mar 12, 2019. The authors went on to further describe C -shape waves produced in the falx by simulated strikes that moved the head towards the shoulder, and S-waves from those that caused the head to turn.  Upledger CST approaches this kind of membranous strain gently and effectively.

The second layer of the meninges is the arachnoid layer, which follows and attaches directly to the dural layer.  The innermost meningeal layer, the pia mater, follows the brain contours like shrink wrap.    With firm attachments at the foramen magnum and at C2 and C3 segments of the cervical spine, the dural tissue continues caudally to form a tube that surrounds the spinal cord, tethered only by ligaments, until anchoring at the 2nd sacral segment, exiting out of the sacral canal and blending with the periosteum of the coccyx.  The dura mater accompanies the spinal nerves as they exit the intervertebral foramina, forming dural sleeves that attach on the vertebral bodies. 

The cushioning cerebral spinal fluid (CSF) is located between the arachnoid and pia mater in the sub-arachnoid space.  The CSF surrounds, protects, nourishes and cleanses the brain and spinal cord.  It flows within the dural system, around and throughout the brain where the flow is regulated by glial cells, around the spinal cord to the dural sleeves, and it is affected by dural tension.

The deepest layer of the meninges, the pia mater, is firmly connected to the dura mater of the CSS via the arachnoid layer.  The innermost surface of the pia mater also has a direct connection to the brain itself.  It directly adheres to the brain’s matrix of glial cells via glial endfeet that form a membrane layer, call the outer glial limiting membrane.  These direct and significant connections provide a plausible mechanism by which trauma to boney structures lined with dura, and connective tissue strain from throughout the body can be communicated deep into the glial matrix that makes up the brain and supports its vulnerable structures.

Upledger CST mobilizes sutural restrictions and affects changes in mobility of structures that are within or are influenced by the CSS, as well as the important dural tissues that connect to them.  It facilitates the correction of boney and connective tissue dysfunction and strain and improves CSF flow.   It does so by using light touch mobilization techniques that require a high degree of palpatory specificity and sensitivity.  As a result, Upledger CST effectively treats strain patterns in the connective tissue network of the body, brain and spinal cord, enhancing function and easing symptoms.

Myriad structures are lined with dural tissue, and thus can be considered as both an origin of symptoms and as a focus for treatment. For example, all cranial bones, the nasal bones, and the orbit of the eye are lined with dura.  Cranial nerves for vision, hearing and balance, among others, travel through dural tissue or through mobile boney structures with profound connections to dura, and thus can be directly influenced by dural tension.  The jugular foramen, the opening through which 3 important cranial nerves (Vagus, Spinal Accessory, and Glossopharyngeal) must pass, is surrounded by a ring of dural tissue.   CN X, the Vagus nerve, is a primary parasympathetic nerve. Relieving dural strain can improves its function and can be important in restoring the autonomic flexibility so often compromised after concussion.   The myodural bridge consists of 3 deep suboccipital muscles that provide direction connection of C1 to dura.  The eyeball itself has a dural investment directly attached to its sclera.  The optic nerves, responsible for vision, is ensheathed in all 3 meningeal layers, and the Olfactory nerves, responsible for smell, are ensheathed by the pia mater layer.  The 3 motor nerves for the eye must traverse the tentorium cerebelli and are directly affected by abnormal tension in this tissue layer, creating visual issues like eye teaming and tracking difficulty.  These are just a few specific examples.

Because of the anatomical attachments and the continuity of fascia, it makes sense that Upledger CST treatment of involved structures can produce the far-reaching effects that we have seen clinically and in our research.

Our study was conducted in 2014 and 2015 with ex NFL players with diagnosis of PCS, to determine if specific manual therapy techniques could provide an intervention that would diminish long term symptoms in professional athletes with histories of concussion.  Upledger Craniosacral therapy, along with Barral Visceral Manipulation and Neuromeningeal techniques applied to these pts with post-concussive syndrome, provided significant results for future concussion recovery.  Statistically significant positive changes in cervical range of motion, memory, physical reaction time, quality of life, headache, pain levels and duration of sleep, were documented up to 3 mos after the intervention. (Craniosacral Therapy and Visceral Manipulation: A New Treatment Intervention for Concussion Recovery, Medical Acupuncture, vol 29, 4, 2017, Wetzler, Roland, Fryer-Dietz, Ahern).  These initial outcomes were inspiring and showed real promise for viable treatment options for TBI, concussion, and the secondary compensatory dysfunctions that occur following TBI. 

Changes in the continuity of fascia, restrictions in mobility of cranial structures, sutural restrictions, extensive dural connections (meninges attached to bone, neural and visual structures and to the glial matrix of the brain) provide a mechanism where by trauma can be communicated.   Upledger CST addresses these structures and dysfunction directly, providing a mechanism where by correction of such strain patterns is possible, facilitating reduction in symptoms, a greater functional ease and enhanced quality of life.

Upledger Craniosacral Therapy is an important tool in the evaluation and treatment of the structural, vascular, and neurologic tissue changes in concussion and PCS that occur throughout the body, brain and spinal cord.   It is not a substitute for traditional therapies and re-education, it is the piece that is missing.