Cervical Spine TBC 4 Flashcards
Mobility deficits: These are superior to minimal intervention
- manual therapy
- exercise
Mobility deficits: Thrust manipulation and non-thrust manipulation are (more/less/equally) effective
equally - no difference between the two (Leaver 2010)
Mobility deficits: High quality evidence for exercise combined with
manual therapy
2006
Mobility deficits: Patients who benefit from cervical manipulation
6 predictors for pts who experienced immediate improvement in either pain, satisfaction, or perception of condition
- initial scores on NDI < 11.5
- B involvement pattern
- ≤ 5 hours sedentary work per day
- feeling better when moving the neck
- did not feel worse when extending theneck
- dx of spondylosis without radiculopathy
2006
Mobility deficits: 6 predictors for improvement with manipulation
NDI score
< 11.5
2006
Mobility deficits: 6 predictors for improvement with manipulation
The presence of (#) or more of the 6 predictors increases the probability of success with manipulation from 60% to (%)
4 or more
89%
2012
Mobility deficits: Patients who benefit from cervical manipulation (4 criteria)
- sx duration < 38 days
- positive expectation that manipulation will help
- cervical rotation asymmetry ≥ 10˚
- pain with PA spring testing of middle cervical spine
Mobility deficits: CPR for thoracic manipulation
- sx duration < 30 days
- no sx’s distal to shoulder
- looking up doesn’t worsen symptoms
- cervical ext < 30˚
- diminished upper thoracic kyphosis (T3-5)
- FABQPA < 12
Mobility deficits: CPR for thoracic manipulation
3+ present increases the probability of success from
54% to 86%
Mobility deficits: Thoracic manipulation
The published CPG for neck pain recommends that thoracic spine manipulation can be used for pts with primary c/o neck pain. In addition, it can reduce pain and disability in pts with
neck pain
neck related arm pain
Neck pain with headaches: 3 main types
- migraine
- tension
- cervicogenic
Neck pain with headaches: PT is MOST effective for this type
cervicogenic
Neck pain with headaches: (bilateral/unilateral) HA associated with neck/occipital area symptoms that are aggravated by neck movements or positions
unilateral
Neck pain with headaches: HA produced with provocation of (contralateral/ipsilateral) posterior cervical myofascia and joints
ipsilateral
Neck pain with headaches: restricted (ROM/mobility)
- cervical ROM
- C0-2 segmental mobility