Case Report One9: Case History: A 37-year-old female was seen for benign paroxysmal positional vertigo (BPPV) referred by her allopathic physician for chiropractic care. The patient had two to three months of constant vertigo, which was unresponsive to medications mid prohibited her from driving or walking without dilliculty. Interventions/Results: She presented with sacroiliac joint hyper-mobility syndrome (category two), right temporal bone restricted in external rotation, and significant malocclusion with clenching. Sacro occipital technique category two protocols for the pelvis were applied along with cranial and TMJ therapies. Dental cotreatment was necessary to sustain the cranial and TMJ corrections. By the seventh office visit (three to four weeks of care), the patient's vertigo had resolved, her category two stabilized, and TMJ translation had improved without pain. Implications: In this case, the interesting aspect was that the patient had consistent symptoms for two to three months and was unresponsive to medication. In a way, the medication became a comparative intervention and the length of symptomatology suggested that the treatments rendered might have been related to the patient's improvement. Case Report Two1": Case History: A42-\ ear-old female presented with an unsteady Par-kinsonian type of gait diagnosed as psychogenically driven. She also was diagnosed with an atypical version of a complex regional pain syndrome (CRPS) called complex pain syndrome (CPS) due to its whole body generalization, as well as having a history of migraines.