What You Eat Is Your Foundation: Nutrition Tips for Aging Patients

February 24, 2026

If you've been coming to our chiropractic office for back pain or neck pain care, you already know that chiropractic care is rooted in the idea that your body functions as one connected system — and what supports that system goes beyond adjustments alone. Yet one of the most powerful tools for supporting your long-term health is one that rarely comes up in the treatment room — what you eat every day. What you eat has a profound effect on how your spine, muscles, bones, joints, and nerves function every single day and help you get around Juneau.

AGING AND NUTRITION

The irony of ageing is that our need for vital nutrients increases at the same time our bodies become less efficient at absorbing them. Research published highlights that older adults face distinctive physiological challenges when it comes to micronutrient absorption and utilization. Decreased stomach acid production, changes in gut motility, and decreased kidney function can all impair how effectively the body processes vitamins and minerals — even when dietary intake seems adequate. (1)

NUTRITION AND BACK PAIN

When it comes to back pain specifically, what's missing from your diet can be just as significant as what's happening in your spine. Vitamin D and calcium are critical for bone density, and deficiencies are directly linked to increased fracture risk and osteoporosis-related spinal compression. Without adequate magnesium, muscles struggle to fully relax and nerves become more reactive, creating the kind of chronic tension and cramping that makes back pain more difficult to resolve. B vitamins support nerve health, and antioxidants like vitamins C and E help fight the chronic inflammation that drives many musculoskeletal conditions.

Importantly, the midlife years are a great time to take action — not after symptoms worsen. A study by Yu and colleagues (2) found that educational interventions aimed at midlife women significantly improved both knowledge and self-efficacy around healthy ageing, including the safe-guarding of what researchers call "intrinsic capacity" — the physical and mental reserves that keep us functional and independent as we grow older. Nutrition is a cornerstone of that capacity.

GOOD NEWS

These are modifiable risk factors. Small, consistent changes to your diet — more leafy greens, fatty fish, nuts, seeds, and colorful vegetables — can significantly support the work we're doing together in the treatment room. We at Aurora Chiropractic Center encourage every patient to consider nutrition as an extension of their chiropractic care. A healthy spine is built from the inside out — and that begins with what you put on your plate.

CONTACT Aurora Chiropractic Center

Listen to this PODCAST with Dr. James Cox on The Back Doctors Podcast with Dr. Michael Johnson as he talks about a common spinal condition, disc degeneration, that accompanies aging and how The Cox® Technic System of Spinal Pain Management helps.

Make your Juneau chiropractic appointment soon.