Chronic Pain Management Barrington IL
Drug-free support for long-term pain, flare cycles, and better daily function
Chronic pain can wear you down physically and mentally—especially when nothing seems to last. Here, care is built to reduce flare patterns and help you move, sleep, and live with more steadiness.

A whole-person approach to chronic pain
More tools, better targeting
Chronic pain is rarely just “one thing,” which is why single-modality care often falls short. Dr. Jung combines chiropractic care, acupuncture, functional medicine thinking, and targeted therapies to address structure, nervous system strain, and inflammation patterns together. This can be helpful for people dealing with chronic low back pain, neck pain, headaches, arthritis-type discomfort, nerve irritation, or fibromyalgia-like symptoms. Your plan starts with understanding the full picture—what triggers flares, what helps, and what daily life looks like right now. Then we prioritize: what will make the biggest difference first without overwhelming you. The goal is steady progress you can feel in real life—walking, working, sleeping, and moving with less fear.
What we commonly help with
Pain patterns that keep coming back
If you’ve been told “nothing’s wrong” but you still hurt, you’re not alone—chronic pain can involve hidden drivers and nervous system sensitization. We often support people with:

- Fibromyalgia or chronic pain syndrome patterns
- Chronic back pain and neck pain
- Osteoarthritis-type joint discomfort
- Neuropathy-like tingling or burning (case-by-case)
- Chronic headaches or migraine-like patterns
- Widespread tension, fatigue, and poor recovery
What your care plan may include
Coordinated therapies under one roof
Your plan may combine chiropractic adjustments for movement and alignment, acupuncture for pain modulation and nervous system support, and functional medicine strategies to address inflammation and recovery barriers. If pain is localized and stubborn, shockwave therapy may be considered to support tissue healing in problem areas. You’ll also receive practical at-home steps that help results hold between visits, without turning your routine upside down. Progress is tracked by function—sleep, mobility, energy, and flare frequency—not just a pain number. The goal is to help you reclaim quality of life, one steady step at a time.
FAQs
Questions about chronic pain relief in Barrington
How do you manage chronic pain without opioids?
Chronic pain support can include non-invasive therapies that improve movement, reduce tension patterns, and calm an overworked nervous system. Many plans combine chiropractic care, acupuncture, and lifestyle-based strategies to address multiple drivers at once. The focus is on steady progress you can track in daily life—sleep, walking, work tolerance, and fewer flare-ups. A consultation helps determine which tools fit your symptoms best.
Does this clinic help with fibromyalgia or chronic pain syndrome?
Yes, many people come in with fibromyalgia-like symptoms or widespread pain patterns and want a more organized plan. Care often focuses on nervous system regulation, sleep support, movement tolerance, and reducing flare triggers. Because symptoms can be multi-factor, progress usually comes from combining the right tools rather than relying on one therapy alone. Your plan is tailored to what you’re experiencing and what you can realistically implement.
I’ve tried everything—what makes this different?
Many chronic pain patients have tried isolated treatments without a coordinated plan. Here, the focus is connecting the dots across structure, inflammation patterns, stress load, and recovery capacity. That helps prioritize what matters most first rather than throwing everything at the problem. The goal is a plan that feels practical and measurable, not another round of guesswork.
Can chiropractic or acupuncture really help long-term pain?
They can be helpful, especially when pain involves mobility restrictions, tension patterns, or nervous system overload. Chiropractic may support better movement and reduced strain, while acupuncture may help with pain modulation and relaxation response. Results vary by person and condition, and many people do best with a combined approach. A clear plan and consistent follow-through make outcomes more predictable.
How long does it take to see results with chronic pain?
Some people notice small changes quickly, while long-standing pain patterns usually improve over time with consistent care. Progress is often seen as fewer flare-ups, better sleep, more stable energy, and increased tolerance for activity. Your plan should be adjusted based on what you’re noticing, not kept the same “no matter what.” The goal is steady forward motion, even if it happens in stages.
Working Hours
- Mon - Fri
- -
- Saturday
- -
- Sunday
- Closed