Neck Pain
Every day, people bear the burden of chronic and acute Neck Pain – pain that interferes greatly with how they live their daily lives. There are a multitude of causes of neck and arm pain, including repetitive stress, accidents, poor posture and tension in our muscles. The tightness in your neck muscles ca stress between your joints. Some causes are more easily treated than others; those who suffer from a neck injury from a serious accident may require more extensive treatment.
The neck and arms are vital parts of our anatomy and consulting with a doctor about any pain is imperative. Often, such pain eventually lead to reoccurring headaches.
Arthritis can also be the source of discomfort in your neck. Arthritis is a degenerative condition involving friction and n can be a symptom of a more serious condition, such as a herniated disc in your spine or an injury to a nerve that needs to be addressed. Chiropractic adjustments can help you deal with the pain, relieve tension, and mitigate the stress your body endures.
There are various types of neck pain, including uncomplicated mechanical neck pain, discal neck pain and traumatic neck pain, for example whiplash. Your neck is a highly mobile area and is therefore also susceptible to stresses and strains.
A thorough examination by an osteopath is essential to gain a proper diagnosis, after which we will agree the best way forward to treat you and your condition. By using gentle corrective manipulative techniques and giving posture, exercise, lifestyle and basic stress management advice, we can restore your neck and thoracic spine to its correct function, ease movement, relieve your pain and get you well again.
Mechanical Neck Pain
Uncomplicated mechanical neck pain is extremely common, affecting 10% to 20% of the population at any one time. It is the second most common condition (after low back pain) that we treat at the Clinicube.
In a very similar way to back pain, often there is no apparent reason why neck pain starts, sometimes you can just wake up with a bit of neck ache that then gets progressively worse over the next day or two and you don’t really know why. This is because most neck pain is a complex condition, meaning that it is not usually due to one event, but rather many different risk factors all interacting to result in neck pain.
The usual risk factors are:
- previous injury, such as a fall or whiplash-type strain
- poor posture, especially if the head is pushed forward and the neck bent backwards
- poor upper neck or thoracic (mid-back) mobility, especially if this curve has increased
- psychological stress
- wear and tear in the joints (spondylitis and arthritis)
Acute Neck Pain
Often occurs in the morning with patients thinking they must have slept awkwardly but this is not usually the case; it’s just that the accumulation of these factors over a period of time has disrupted normal spinal mechanics in the neck and often the upper back, that in turn has led to changes in motor control and altered movement, creating abnormal loading of the joints. During the night they have reached the limit of their ability to cope with the tissues becoming fatigued and sensitive and pain following soon afterwards, as pain-sensitive structures in the neck become irritated and inflamed. This normally manifests as pain in the base of the neck, which may radiate into the shoulders and the upper arms if particularly bad.
More commonly, neck pain increases gradually over a period of weeks or months but may become chronic if left untreated.
Neck pain is often associated with:
- severe stiffness, especially if degenerative facet syndromeis present
- cervicogenic headache– usually travelling from the back of the skull to the front in a tension-type pattern
- migraine
- pain into the shoulder or along the border of the shoulder blade
- trapped nerves– giving radiating pain and pins and needles into the arms or hands (common if a slipped disc has occurred)
Because the neck is so mobile it is actually very good at adapting to small injuries and increasing stresses and strains. But the accumulation of these adaptations over a period of time can eventually lead to changes in motor control and altered movement creating abnormal loading of the joints, and they reach the limit of their ability to cope. Tissues become fatigued and sensitive and pain follows soon afterwards, as pain-sensitive structures in the neck become irritated and inflamed. This normally manifests as pain in the base of the neck, which may radiate into the shoulders, the upper arms or even up into the skull.
- Factors involved usually include:
- previous injury, such as a fall or whiplash-type strain
- poor posture, especially if the head is pushed forward and the neck bent backwards
- poor thoracic (mid-back) mobility, especially if this curve has increased
- psychological stress
Discal neck pain
If there is an underlying weakness or the loading is too great, the small discs in the neck can be damaged and bulge. This can either affect the blood supply or compress the local nerves, leading to Nerve Compression Syndrome often giving severe pain into the arm and numbness or pins and needles in the hand.
Discal neck pain is normally diagnosed by careful clinical examination, but often an MRI is needed to confirm this.
Forced movement of the neck can result in severe injury, painful inflammatory changes and muscle spasm leading to severe stiffness and, in some cases, severe disability. This may result as a consequence of anything that allows the joints in the neck to be forcibly pushed past their limit of motion, such as following a fall or a sporting injury. But the most common is from whiplash injury.
Whiplash is a common occurrence associated with any hyper-flexion (forward bending) or extension (backward bending) injury. Injury is caused by an acceleration/deceleration event, usually as a result of a road traffic incident or a contact sporting activity. Injury may occur to multiple structures including muscles, tendons, ligaments, bone, joint and nerve tissue and can result in significant impairment and disability.
These conditions may be very serious and complex and should be thoroughly assessed by a trauma specialist, as serious injury such as neck fracture could be present. However, if no major structural damage has occurred there could still be changes in joint mechanics, failure of function and overloading. All of which can lead to pain and stiffness that manifests as neck pain, trapped nerves or headaches months or even years later.
Neck Pain Treatment
Our doctors at the Launchfit™ by Clinicube®are trained to properly assess the mechanics of your neck and thoracic spine to identify any regions of undue stress and strain, as well as being able to check your posture.
By using gentle corrective manipulative techniques and giving posture, exercise, lifestyle and basic stress management advice, we can restore your neck and thoracic spine to its correct function and ease movement and relieve your pain.
After your initial assessment, we will agree the best way forward. Depending on your symptoms, this will typically involve osteopathy and possibly some exercise and stress management, for example in whiplash treatment, or, for more severe or long-term conditions, IDD Therapy.
How long until I’m better?
Recovery times vary according to the individual, their medical history and particular condition, but you would usually expect to see a good improvement within four treatments. However, we would recommend a few more to not only remove your pain but to allow a full recovery. By enabling you to protect your spine from future damage we can help you reduce the risk of degenerative changes at the base of your neck.
If you have suffered with a disc bulge, prolapse or herniation – and have had nerve pain going into the arm or hand associated with pins and needles for less than 6 weeks – There are an array of treatments that can be prescribed, such as, ATM2, Cold Laser Therapy and Redcord. You would typically need in the region of 4-8 treatments to improve this.
We have had some superb results with patients who have been in a great deal of pain for several months. After a month of treatment, they have been able to return to an active lifestyle again, and some have even been able to avoid spinal injections and surgery.
What is Cold Laser Therapy?