Andaesha K’Treva, LMT #10539

Andaesha K’Treva, LMT #10539 Hi! I’m a Licensed Massage Therapist in the Willamette Valley, and I’ve returned to doing what I love, Monday through Friday.

Issue specific, therapeutic techniques aimed to resolving any issues you might have. I also perform massage for relaxation.

Very interesting!
02/02/2026

Very interesting!

01/31/2026
01/27/2026

Coming up on February, and there are a few openings in the books;

February 20th 4:30 pm
February 27th 11:30 am

If you want in, and one of those times works for you, please text me to set up a session.

503-884-7873

01/24/2026
This was interesting!
01/07/2026

This was interesting!

01/03/2026

🧠 THE MYODURAL BRIDGE:

A Deep Dive into One of the Most Important — and Most Ignored — Neuro-Biomechanical Systems in Modern Healthcare

…and how our movement-based, cervical-brain integration model + Ciatrix technology supports CSF flow, dural mechanics, autonomic balance, and neurorehabilitation at The Functional Neurology Center (FNC)

The myodural bridge (MDB) is no longer an obscure anatomical curiosity.
Over the last decade, research in anatomy, biomechanics, neurology, and cerebrospinal fluid physiology has revealed that the MDB is a critical mechanical and sensory connector linking:
• The suboccipital muscles
• The dura mater of the spinal cord and posterior cranial fossa
• The cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) system
• The brainstem and upper cervical spinal cord
• Autonomic and proprioceptive circuits
• Visual–vestibular–cervical integration pathways

What this means is profound:

👉 Every neck movement influences the dura.
👉 Every dural tension change influences CSF flow.
👉 Every CSF pulsation influences brain function.
👉 Every suboccipital contraction influences the entire system.

This is why patients with “mysterious” symptoms — head pressure, dizziness, brain fog, visual intolerance, autonomic instability, tinnitus, nausea, neck pain, cognitive slowing — often improve dramatically when the MDB and upper cervical system are restored.

At The Functional Neurology Center, we evaluate, measure, and treat this system directly.



🧩 WHAT EXACTLY IS THE MYODURAL BRIDGE?

The MDB is a dense collagenous and elastic connective tissue bridge that runs between:
• Re**us capitis posterior minor (RCPmi)
• Re**us capitis posterior major (RCPma)
• Obliquus capitis inferior (OCI)
…and the
• dura mater covering the spinal cord at the C0–C2 region.

It passes through the posterior atlanto-occipital membrane and posterior atlanto-axial membrane and attaches directly into the dura.

Mechanically, it links:

🔹 Muscle → Dura
🔹 Dura → Spinal cord
🔹 Spinal cord → CSF circulation

Functionally, it influences:

🔹 CSF movement
🔹 Spinal cord motion during flexion/extension
🔹 Brainstem dural tension
🔹 Proprioceptive input to vestibular & cerebellar nuclei
🔹 Nociceptive input to trigeminal nucleus caudalis
🔹 Autonomic modulation through central connections

The MDB acts as a functional biomechanical tension modulator and neurological signaling structure.



🌊 MYODURAL BRIDGE → CSF FLOW

A Deeper Look Into Why This Matters

Cerebrospinal fluid is NOT static.
It pulses, oscillates, circulates, and drains — driven by:
• Cardiac pulsation
• Respiration
• Cranial rhythmic impulses
• Postural changes
• Suboccipital muscle movement via the MDB

The MDB appears to:

🔹 Maintain patency of CSF pathways
🔹 Prevent dural infolding during head movement
🔹 Assist peristaltic CSF movement through the cervical canal
🔹 Help orchestrate CSF flow between rostral and caudal compartments (Tan et al.)
🔹 Influence mechanical pressure gradients within the craniospinal system

Research suggests that rhythmic somatic movement (walking, music-based movement, upper limb rhythmicity, sports movements, dance, even head nodding) improves CSF circulation partly through MDB-mediated dural stretching.

When the MDB becomes dysfunctional — through trauma, whiplash, forward head posture, suboccipital guarding, concussion, long COVID inflammation, chronic stress, or autonomic dysregulation — the consequences can be widespread:

⚠️ CSF stagnation or altered pulsatility
⚠️ Posterior cranial fossa pressure sensitivity
⚠️ Cognitive fog and fatigue
⚠️ Occipital or suboccipital headaches
⚠️ Neck stiffness and pain
⚠️ Dizziness and visual motion hypersensitivity
⚠️ Altered proprioceptive input → cerebellum and vestibular nuclei
⚠️ Autonomic shifts (sympathetic dominance)

We see this every day in complex patients.



🔗 THE MDB, THE TRIGEMINAL SYSTEM, & AUTONOMIC NERVOUS SYSTEM

The dura mater is innervated by:
• Trigeminal afferents (C1–C3 converging at trigeminocervical nucleus)
• Sympathetic fibers
• Small-diameter nociceptive fibers

Meaning:
• Suboccipital muscle contraction → MDB tension → dural tension → trigeminal nucleus activation
• This can refer pain or pressure into the head, eye, temple, jaw
• Dural mechanotransduction influences autonomic output
• Brainstem nuclei (NTS, DMX, RVLM) respond to altered dural tension and CSF pulsation changes

This is why MDB dysfunction can mimic:
• Migraine
• Post-concussion syndrome
• Tension headaches
• Facial pain
• Autonomic flares (POTS-like symptoms)
• Foggy head
• “Feeling disconnected”
• Motion-triggered dizziness

It is a neuro-mechanical + neurochemical + CSF-driven + autonomic phenomenon.

This is also why traditional orthopedic or structural neck care fails so many of these patients:
They are treating the muscles but not the dura, CSF system, or brainstem networks.



🏥 THE FNC APPROACH

A Comprehensive, Neuro-Integrated MDB Rehabilitation Model

We approach the myodural bridge using four major pillars:



🟦 1. Upper Cervical & Dural Tension Mapping

We perform advanced assessments, including:
• Suboccipital muscle palpation & tone mapping
• Accessory motion of C0–C1–C2
• Cervical joint position error (JPE)
• Smooth pursuit neck torsion test (SPNT)
• Flexion-rotation test
• Cervico-ocular reflex (COR) assessment
• VOR vs COR mismatch evaluation
• Dural tension testing via specific head movements
• CSF pressure-sensitive pattern recognition

This allows us to differentiate:
• Cervical-driven dizziness
• Dura-driven headache
• CSF-driven pressure symptoms
• Brainstem sensitization
• Visual-vestibular-cervical mismatch



🟦 2. Movement-Based Therapies Targeting MDB and CSF Mechanics

We apply rhythmic movement protocols that influence the MDB and CSF flow including:
• Coordinated head–neck rhythmic activation
• Cervical proprioceptive laser training
• Deep cervical flexor/extensor neuromotor retraining
• Suboccipital muscle inhibition and re-patterning
• Spinal rocking & oscillatory movement
• Rhythmic gait-pattern entrainment with cognitive or vestibular tasks
• Breathwork influencing thoraco-cervical pressure gradients
• Head/shoulder rhythmic sequencing (inspired by Tan et al.’s music-movement research)

These movements create mechanical oscillations that propagate through the MDB to enhance:
• CSF peristaltic flow
• Dural tension normalization
• Brainstem modulation
• Proprioceptive accuracy
• Autonomic balance

Movement is the medicine for this system.



🟦 3. Ciatrix Technology for Cranial & CSF Flow Support

Ciatrix technology adds a controlled rhythmic cranial CSF-supportive input that aligns beautifully with MDB and dural system physiology.

The Ciatrix platform helps:
• Reduce cranial-dural restrictions
• Enhance rhythmic CSF pulsation
• Influence craniospinal hydrodynamics
• Decrease pressure-driven symptoms
• Improve cranial mobility and fluid oscillation
• Support neuro-healing in brainstem and cerebellar networks

This technology complements our hands-on and movement-based work by adding a gentle, consistent, rhythmic mechanical input that the CSF system responds to extremely well.



🟦 4. Neuromodulation + Visual–Vestibular Integration

Because the MDB influences proprioceptive, vestibular, cerebellar, and trigeminal systems, we integrate:
• Photobiomodulation over brainstem/cervical regions
• ARPwave neuromodulation for suboccipital re-patterning
• Advanced oculomotor rehab
• Vestibular stimulation (static and dynamic)
• Autonomic nervous system retraining
• Cognitive-motor dual tasking

This creates full-brain integration, not just local muscle changes.



⭐ WHO BENEFITS FROM MDB-FOCUSED CARE?

We see dramatic improvements in:
• Post-concussion syndrome
• Long COVID neurological symptoms
• Chronic headaches
• Occipital neuralgia
• POTS & dysautonomia
• Brain fog
• “Head pressure” patients
• Chronic dizziness
• TMJ + upper cervical complex cases
• Whiplash or old injuries
• Visual motion sensitivity
• Neck pain with cognitive symptoms

If your symptoms haven’t made sense —
the myodural bridge might finally explain them.



💙 THERE IS HOPE

The MDB proves that the neck, dura, spinal cord, CSF, and brain are inseparable.
At The FNC, we specialize in treating these systems as an integrated whole.

When you restore movement, you restore CSF.
When you restore CSF, you restore brain function.
When you restore brain function —
patients get their life back.



📞 For more information or to schedule:

📧 info@theFNC.com
🌐 theFNC.com
📍 Minnetonka, MN

Advanced neurological rehabilitation for complex, chronic, and post-traumatic patients.
There IS hope.

https://www.researchgate.net/publication/346678915_Somatic_Rhythmic_Motion_Effective_on_Peristaltic_Circulation_of_Cerebrospinal_Fluid_Hypothesis_for_Music-_and_Sport-Based_Interventions

01/01/2026

Happy New Year!

There are no January openings, February openings for an hour as of today;

February 9th at 1:00 pm
February 18th at 1:00 pm

Thanks for reading, shoot me a text if you want a massage to start the year out right!

503-884-7873

12/19/2025
12/15/2025
12/13/2025
Simplified quite a bit here…
12/10/2025

Simplified quite a bit here…

12/10/2025

Address

Salem, OR
97301

Opening Hours

Monday 9am - 6pm
Tuesday 10:30am - 6pm
Wednesday 9am - 6pm
Thursday 10:30am - 6pm

Telephone

(503)8847873

Website

Alerts

Be the first to know and let us send you an email when Andaesha K’Treva, LMT #10539 posts news and promotions. Your email address will not be used for any other purpose, and you can unsubscribe at any time.

Contact The Practice

Send a message to Andaesha K’Treva, LMT #10539:

Share

Share on Facebook Share on Twitter Share on LinkedIn
Share on Pinterest Share on Reddit Share via Email
Share on WhatsApp Share on Instagram Share on Telegram