Post-Concussion Syndrome & Traumatic Brain Injury
We measure the neurological systems responsible for regulating blood flow to the brain — the variables standard concussion care never looks at.
If any of these sound familiar, you're in the right place.

A normal MRI rules out bleeding and structural damage. It does not measure whether your brain is regulating blood flow correctly, whether your vestibular reflexes are misfiring, or whether neurovascular coupling has broken down after your injury. Those are functional failures — and they don't show up on standard imaging. That's where we begin.
Up to 30% of concussion patients develop persistent symptoms lasting months or years. Why? Because most concussion care is built around structural imaging that was never designed to detect functional neurological failure. A normal scan doesn't mean nothing is wrong. It means the wrong variables were measured.
Before booking your visit, schedule a free phone consultation with a Keiser Clinic physician. They'll listen to your story, answer your questions, and tell you plainly whether coming in makes sense for your situation.
Schedule a Free ConsultationWhat to expect
Our diagnostic workup brings cutting-edge methods from leading neurovascular and concussion research — including real-time cerebral blood flow measurement and functional neurological assessment that most concussion specialists still don't have in routine practice. We do — and we use them with every patient.

We measure blood flow to the brain in real time. After a concussion, the brain often loses its ability to regulate that flow precisely — and the moment we can show you that on a screen, the "invisible" injury becomes visible for the first time.

CO₂ directly controls how brain blood vessels dilate and constrict. After concussion, breathing patterns often shift in ways that compound cerebral hypoperfusion — a variable almost nobody measures, and one of the most treatable in the picture.

We identify the precise point at which physical or cognitive exertion begins to compromise cerebral blood flow — giving us an objective threshold to work within, and a measurable target to push above as you improve.

We assess the visual and vestibular systems using video-oculography (VOG) and pupil response testing. If these systems are misfiring, they can keep your autonomic nervous system stuck in overdrive.

We use deep breathing, Valsalva, and postural stress to measure how your autonomic system responds and recovers under challenge. Then we layer in cognitive, cervical, and visual demands, because many patients only break down under combined load. What looks manageable at rest often becomes obvious when the system is pushed.

Some of the most important findings still come from an experienced doctor examining you directly. We assess reflexes, eye tracking, cervical motion, and coordination to catch the neurological patterns that may not show up on a screen.
A Note From Our Team
Several of our doctors have been patients or caregivers themselves. They know what it feels like to be dismissed and sent home with no answers. When you become a patient here, you have a care team of doctors who understand where you've been — and what it actually takes to get better.
Your rehabilitation is not a program that existed before you walked in the door. Nothing is prescribed before we know exactly where the failure is and what's driving it. Instead of rest, time, and generic PT being your only options, we prescribe an individualized neurological treatment — dose-specific to your needs, within your tolerance threshold.
Whether your primary bottleneck is vestibular, oculomotor, cervical, autonomic, or neurovascular — we strip away the labels and identify the mechanism that's failing in you specifically, so we can treat the actual problem rather than the presentation of it.
A CT or MRI checks the structure of the brain. It does not check neurovascular coupling, cerebral autoregulation, or vestibulo-ocular reflex integrity. Those are the systems that govern function — and they can fail completely while your scan looks perfect.
Subjective improvement can be placebo or temporary. We don't just rely on how you feel to measure progress. We retest you objectively throughout your visit, comparing data points to verify real measurable improvement — so you leave with proof, not just hope.
Virtual follow-up is included in your visit. Your protocols go home with you. We check in, answer questions, and make sure you stay consistent with what's working — until you no longer need us.
Most patients who come to us carry more than one of these diagnoses. These pages exist because that is often how people find us, not because we treat each diagnosis on a separate track. Our testing measures what your brain and nervous system are actually doing. The label you arrive with does not change that.
"Standard concussion care has a ceiling. We work above it — in the brain."
Some of what you may be prescribed during your visit

Retrains the balance system when dizziness, motion sensitivity, visual instability, or autonomic symptoms are being worsened by vestibular dysfunction.

Targets the visual control systems that stabilize gaze and helps the brain build a more accurate map of the body in space. This can reduce neurostrain, disorientation, overload, and instability under cognitive and sensory load.

Uses targeted stimulation, including tools like the Neuro20 suit, to improve sensory input from the body and give the nervous system better information to regulate from.

Addresses mechanical strain and poor sensory signaling coming from the neck and upper cervical region, where instability can interfere with brainstem function, and autonomic regulation.

Rebuilds cleaner movement patterns so activity becomes more tolerable and less likely to trigger compensation, overload, or crash responses.

Challenges the brain's ability to regulate under mental load, helping improve function when symptoms flare with thinking, multitasking, or divided attention.

Uses carefully dosed activity to improve tolerance and function without relying on generic exercise protocols like CHOP or GET that ignore cerebral blood flow, autonomic limitations, and issues related to fatigue.

Uses red light and laser therapy to support tissue recovery, reduce irritation, and complement neurological rehabilitation in areas that need targeted stimulation.

We use the non-invasive Magnetolith in patients with ligament laxity, including hEDS, to treat tendons and joints that may be contributing to instability in joints or the upper cervical spine.
| Category | Conventional Care | The Keiser Clinic |
|---|---|---|
| Framing | Normal imaging = no structural injury. Rest and wait for recovery. | Imaging checks structure. We check function — neurovascular coupling, cerebral autoregulation, and reflex integrity. These fail while scans look normal. |
| The Symptoms | "It's likely anxiety or stress. Here's a referral." | Brain fog, dizziness, light sensitivity, and crashes are measurable neurological events — not psychological responses. We find the mechanism. |
| Testing | CT/MRI returns normal. No further workup ordered. | Real-time cerebral blood flow, CO₂ reactivity, vestibular and oculomotor reflex testing, exertional threshold assessment — measuring what actually fails. |
| Treatment | Rest, time, generic PT, and symptom management | Individualized neurological protocols — built from your functional data, targeting the specific system that is your bottleneck. |
| Progress | Patient self-report. "Give it more time." | Objective retesting throughout your stay — if the data doesn't change, the protocol does. |
| Exertion | "Avoid anything that makes symptoms worse" — no threshold identified | We measure your precise exertional threshold with real-time monitoring — then use it to build capacity without triggering a crash. |
| Doctor Access | 15–45 minute specialist visits spaced months apart | Multiple hours a day with a full clinical team — with direct follow-up after you leave. |
We intentionally see a small number of patients each week. When you're here, you have a full clinical team — not a rotating roster of one-off appointments.
Most patients stay two to three weeks. Some stay longer. But when you arrive, the only thing you commit to upfront is that first day of diagnostic testing. What comes after is your decision.
We don't run a copy-and-paste concussion rehabilitation program. We become your care team and design a protocol specific to you.
Schedule a Free ConsultationWant to hear directly from patients who've been through this?
Read POTS & dysautonomia recovery stories →A Keiser Clinic physician will listen to your story, answer your questions, and tell you plainly whether coming in makes sense for your situation. No pressure. No false hopes.
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