Most TMJ cases aren’t jaw problems. They’re full-body stability problems that just happen to show up at the jaw first. And if you keep adjusting the same areas without accounting for pelvic stability, airway mechanics, and cranial strain patterns, the results won’t hold.
This episode breaks down the actual mechanisms that make TMJ care succeed long-term — and why your sequence matters more than your technique.
What We Cover:
Bottom-up vs top-down TMJ mechanics Why pelvic instability drives clenching, rigid spines, sympathetic tone, and patients who feel like they “fall apart” without constant care.
Airway mechanics that change everything Anterior head carriage, recessed mandibles, mouth breathing, snoring, and how airway dysfunction shapes jaw tone more than the jaw shapes the airway.
SOT-style screenings that change your setups How pelvic findings should influence your adjusting choices so you aren’t reinforcing collapse with your own hands.
Cranial pattern interpretation Temporal rotation, intermaxillary suture buckling, sagittal tension lines, and sphenoid strain patterns that predict whether your TMJ work will actually hold.
Bruxism as a stabilizing strategy Why clenching happens when the body is trying to create structure — not because of stress alone or “bad habits.”
Quarterbacking with dentists, myo, and pelvic floor providers How to collaborate confidently, lead the case, and protect outcomes without stepping out of your lane.
Key Takeaways:
Start with mechanism Stabilize the pelvis → normalize head carriage → free the airway → decompress the TMJ. The sequence is the adjustment.
Airway tension = jaw tension Pay attention to snoring, mouth breathing, morning headaches, irritability, and kids with “perfect posture” that’s actually compensatory.
Cranial findings that guide care Feel the intermaxillary suture for ridging, read temporal rotation patterns, and learn to spot sphenoid strain without second-guessing yourself.
Adjust differently when instability is present Visit frequency, spinal setups, and cranial sequencing need to shift when the foundation beneath the jaw can’t support change.
Show objective progress Motion films, T1 angle, palate shape, head shape metrics, neurotonal findings — these help parents and dental colleagues feel the progress you see.
Lead the team Own the role of quarterback. When you guide the care plan, everyone benefits — especially the patient.
Wins and Lessons From Practice
A miss Upper cervical work plus a night guard gave a great result for 24 hours. Then the system collapsed again. The patient became dependent on frequent care. Nothing was actually wrong with the adjusting — the foundation was unstable from the start.
A win You identify pelvic instability, adjust your sequence, add cranial work, track airway signs, and bring in myo and dental support. Suddenly care holds. Visit frequency drops. The patient gets durable change and your referral stream grows. That’s not luck. That’s mastery.If this episode clarified something you’ve been wrestling with, share it with a colleague who’s still chasing jaws in isolation.
And if you’ve seen a TMJ mechanism that blew your mind, reply and tell me about it. I love hearing the weird cases.
Timeline
00:00 Introduction and Episode Overview 00:26 Pediatric Focus and TMJ Disorders 01:36 Patient Consultation and Common Symptoms 04:21 Pelvic Stability and TMJ Mechanisms 11:43 Top-Down Mechanisms and Sympathetic Load 15:28 Cranial Assessments and Palate Distortions 20:43 Collaborative Care and Case Leadership 24:30 Conclusion and Call to Action
