When most people think of a dental problem, they think of teeth. Cavities. Gum disease. Maybe a cracked filling. They don’t think of neck pain. Or shoulder tension. Or a ringing sound in their ears. But all of those symptoms can trace back to your jaw. Specifically, to a tiny but powerful joint called the temporomandibular joint: the TMJ.
At the Woodbridge dental office of Dr. Joseph Cavallo, we see patients who have spent months, sometimes years, chasing the wrong cause of their pain. They’ve seen doctors for their headaches. They’ve gotten massages for their tight shoulders. Maybe they’ve even had their ears checked. And all along, the real problem was sitting right in their jaw.
Your Jaw Doesn’t Work Alone
Your jaw isn’t an island. It’s connected to your skull, your neck, your shoulders, and even your spine. Muscles and nerves run through all of them like a web. When your jaw joint becomes inflamed or out of balance, a condition called TMD or TMJ disorder, those muscles start compensating. They tighten up. They get overworked. And that tension travels.
Suddenly, your neck feels stiff. Your shoulders ache. You might even feel pain running down your upper back. It’s not in your head. It’s in your joint.
The Ear Connection Nobody Talks About
The strangest symptom, though, might be the one involving your ears. Your TMJ sits right next to your ear canal. They’re practically neighbors. So when your jaw joint is inflamed, that pressure can mess with your ears.
Patients describe it as:
- Ringing or buzzing (doctors call this tinnitus)
- A feeling of fullness, like you’re on an airplane
- Occasional dizziness or vertigo
They go to an ear doctor. They get hearing tests. Everything comes back normal. And they’re left frustrated with no real answers. That’s because they were looking at the ear when they should have been looking at the jaw.
How Do You Know If Your Jaw Is the Culprit?
If you’re dealing with unexplained neck pain, shoulder tension, or ringing in your ears, ask yourself a few questions:
- Do you also wake up with a sore or tired jaw?
- Do you catch yourself clenching your teeth during the day?
- Does your jaw click, pop, or lock when you open wide?
- Do you grind your teeth at night (a partner might hear it)?
If you answered yes to any of these, there’s a good chance your jaw is involved.
Relief Starts With the Right Diagnosis
Most doctors aren’t trained to look at the jaw as a source of whole-body pain. Dentists aren’t either, unless they’ve had specialized training.
Dr. Cavallo has. His advanced education from the Dawson Center, one of the nation’s top institutes for comprehensive dentistry, taught him to see the full picture: the teeth, muscles, and joints. How everything works together or falls apart.
He doesn’t just ask about your teeth. He asks about your neck. Your shoulders. Your ears. He feels the muscles in your jaw and watches how you open and close. Only then can he build a treatment plan that actually helps.
You Don’t Have to Live With the Pain
For many patients, the solution is simpler than they expected. A custom oral appliance, basically a specialized night guard, can take the pressure off the joint and let the surrounding muscles finally relax. No surgery. No needles. Just a small device worn at night.
Within weeks, the neck pain fades. The shoulder tension eases. The ringing becomes quieter or disappears entirely.
If you’ve been chasing unexplained pain without real answers, it’s time to look beyond the jaw. Contact Dr. Cavallo’s Woodbridge office today. Your neck, your shoulders, and your ears will thank you.