Dr Charles Dixon MS DC - Acupuncture "Dry Needling" & Gentle Chiropractic

Dr Charles Dixon MS DC - Acupuncture "Dry Needling" & Gentle Chiropractic I provide personalized Chiropractic Care, Dry Needle Acupuncture & Spinal Disc Decompression This style of Acupuncture is based on structural human anatomy.

I utilize the Acupuncture "Dry Needling" Technique for Pain Control. I also provide gentle, manual, Chiropractic Adjustments and Manual Muscle Release (aka: Myofascial Release) to help YOU get out of pain and get back to LIVING YOUR LIFE! In cases where Bulged Discs and/or Degenerative Disc Disease are causing your pain we may also want take advantage of the benefits of Spinal Disc Decompression and Spinal Strengthening Rehab Exercises.

03/31/2026

Erica and Michelle are wonderful Licensed Acupuncturists and some of things they could possibly help with might surprise you.

Hi! The office is closed Friday March 27th through Easter Sunday. We will resume regular hours on Monday April 6th. Plea...
03/27/2026

Hi! The office is closed Friday March 27th through Easter Sunday. We will resume regular hours on Monday April 6th. Please call (leave message) or text to schedule.
Thanks,
Dr Dixon

Friday Feb 13th I am closed.I took my lovely wife away from it all for a couple of days.See y'all Monday.
02/13/2026

Friday Feb 13th I am closed.
I took my lovely wife away from it all for a couple of days.
See y'all Monday.

Good Friday (Feb 6th) morning! I wanted to remind everyone that we are open Monday, Wednesday and Friday from 10-6. Also...
02/06/2026

Good Friday (Feb 6th) morning!
I wanted to remind everyone that we are open Monday, Wednesday and Friday from 10-6.
Also, to let everyone know that a week from today (Fri Feb 13th) I will be closed for a weekend getaway with my lovely wife for Valentine's Day.

Dr Janet Travell, the physician who is credited with using the term "dry needle" for the first time in one of her resear...
01/04/2026

Dr Janet Travell, the physician who is credited with using the term "dry needle" for the first time in one of her research papers. It is her that we have to thank for documenting referred pain patterns so we can help others with their pain due to trigger points in muscles.

The following was copied from another page which copied it from yet another page.
Thank you Dr Travell.

Her muscles screamed.
The X-rays were clean.
The labs were normal.
So the pain didn’t exist—until she proved where it lived.

For years, the answer was always the same.

Nothing shows up.

No fracture. No inflammation bold enough to measure. No scan dramatic enough to justify the suffering she described. The pain was deep, burning, relentless—knots of agony that made ordinary movement feel like punishment. But medicine had no picture to point to.

So it changed the story.

Maybe stress.
Maybe anxiety.
Maybe attention-seeking.

When pain can’t be photographed, it’s easy to pretend it’s imaginary.

Patients—most of them women—learned to rehearse their explanations, trying to sound calm enough to be believed and desperate enough to be taken seriously. They were sent home with reassurances, sedatives, or silence. The pain followed them anyway.

This wasn’t ignorance.
It was a blind spot.

Janet Travell lived inside that blind spot—and refused to accept it.

Travell was a physician at a time when pain without visible pathology was treated as a personality problem. If imaging was normal, the case was considered closed. The patient was the variable. The body, supposedly, was fine.

But Travell listened differently.

She noticed patterns in where patients hurt, how the pain radiated, what movements triggered it, and where pressure reproduced it exactly. She found tender, taut bands in muscle—specific points that, when pressed, sent pain shooting to predictable locations.

These weren’t metaphors.
They were maps.

Travell identified what she called myofascial trigger points—real, physical sources of chronic pain embedded in muscle tissue. They didn’t show up on X-rays because they weren’t bones. They didn’t light up labs because they weren’t infections. They lived in soft tissue medicine hadn’t learned to see.

But they were unmistakably real.

She documented them meticulously. She demonstrated that treating these points—through targeted pressure, injections, and therapy—could relieve pain that had plagued patients for years. People who had been told nothing was wrong stood up straighter, slept through the night, moved without flinching.

The pain hadn’t been imagined.
It had been overlooked.

Travell’s work laid the foundation for modern pain medicine and myofascial pain syndrome. It forced medicine to confront an uncomfortable truth: absence of evidence is not evidence of absence—especially when the tools are incomplete.

Before her, pain without proof was psychiatric by default.
After her, it was anatomical.

And this is where women recognize themselves instantly.

Being told nothing is wrong while your body protests every movement.
Being labeled difficult when you are simply hurting.
Being asked to doubt yourself because the machine can’t confirm your reality.

Travell didn’t accuse patients of exaggeration. She accused medicine of narrow vision.

She showed that suffering doesn’t wait for technology to catch up. That bodies can hurt in ways science hasn’t yet learned to measure. And that disbelief is not neutrality—it’s a decision that leaves people untreated.

Her legacy reaches far beyond trigger points.

It lives in every patient who finally hears, “I believe you.”
In every clinician who keeps looking after tests come back normal.
In every woman who learns that pain doesn’t need permission to be real.

Janet Travell didn’t make pain louder.
She made it legible.

She proved that just because something can’t be scanned doesn’t mean it doesn’t exist. And for millions who had been told their suffering was all in their head, that proof was life-changing.

Because when pain finally has a place to live, it stops living in shame.

I'm back in the office for a half day today (Friday Dec26) so call or text to schedule.Remember, I am out Monday Dec29 v...
12/26/2025

I'm back in the office for a half day today (Friday Dec26) so call or text to schedule.
Remember, I am out Monday Dec29 visiting family and then OPEN Tuesday Dec 30 instead. Open Wed Dec31 from 10-4 and Friday Jan2 from 10-6.

Update to today's office hours. Currently I am at Christus picking up our Aunt So it will likely be 1:00 before I make i...
12/12/2025

Update to today's office hours. Currently I am at Christus picking up our Aunt So it will likely be 1:00 before I make it into the office today.

Good Friday morning! I'll be in and out today so call or text for your appointment.
12/12/2025

Good Friday morning! I'll be in and out today so call or text for your appointment.

Occipital Nerve Pressure – A Hidden Cause of Headache.Ever had that weird, deep headache starting at the back of your he...
08/12/2025

Occipital Nerve Pressure – A Hidden Cause of Headache.

Ever had that weird, deep headache starting at the back of your head and creeping up to your forehead or even behind your eyes?
Well, meet the often-overlooked troublemakers behind your headache and/or neck pain!

Greater Occipital Nerve:
Runs from your upper neck to your scalp and can cause pain behind your eye or forehead.

Lesser Occipital Nerve:
Works more on the side of your head — can make your ear or the side of your head ache.

Greater Auricular Nerve:
Focused on the outer ear and nearby scalp giving you that uncomfortable feeling that “something’s wrong”.

See those red circles in the diagram? That’s where these nerves can get irritated due to pressure from the Suboccipital Muscles and the Tendons that attach them to your skull!

Occipital nerve pressure leads to Occipital neuralgia which causes a Headache starting at the base of your skull and traveling to your forehead or behind your eyes.

This diagram is super helpful for seeing why a stiff neck can turn into a skull crusher of a headache.
Take care of your neck and your head will thank you!




Thank you for your service to our country veterans!Our office is open today to serve you.
11/11/2024

Thank you for your service to our country veterans!
Our office is open today to serve you.

Celebrating 1 Year at our new location!
08/02/2024

Celebrating 1 Year at our new location!

I have offered hands on Chiropractic adjusting since 1999. Since 2005 I've utilized Dr Yun-tao Ma's "Dry Needle" Acupuncture.

Address

1122 Doctors Drive
Tyler, TX
75701

Opening Hours

Monday 10am - 6pm
Tuesday 10am - 1pm
Wednesday 10am - 6pm
Thursday 10am - 1pm
Friday 10am - 6am

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