Should You See a Doctor for Your Neck Pain? | Arthritis Information

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From the Johns Hopkins Health Alerts:

 
Neck pain can result from a variety of causes, including muscle strain, worn joints, disk disorders, and injuries. Sometimes self-care measures are not enough and you need medical attention -- sooner rather than later to prevent long-term disability. This advice and other guidance comes from The Bone and Joint Decade 2000- 2010 Task Force on Neck Pain and Its Associated Disorders, an international group of doctors and other experts specializing in musculoskeletal disorders who reviewed the literature on neck pain. Here's what they found.

There is no single therapy that's right for everyone, and you may need to try a variety of treatments or combinations of therapies to find what works and what doesn't. The goal is to help you regain function and get back to your daily activities.

One option is neck exercises, which can help reduce pain by increasing the strength of your neck muscles. A new study published in Arthritis Care & Research showed that neck and shoulder strengthening exercises done three times a week for 20 minutes a session helped relieve chronic neck muscle pain. Your doctor or a physical therapist can recommend specific strengthening exercises and teach you how to safely perform them at home.

Your doctor can also prescribe stronger pain medicine, such as prescription nonsteroidal antiinflammatory medications (Naprosyn, Celebrex), opioid analgesics (Darvon, Ultram), muscle relaxants (Flexeril), or tricyclic antidepressants (Norpramin). Other safe and potentially effective treatments worth considering are chiropractic manipulation, massage, and acupuncture.

If your neck pain is accompanied by pain, weakness, or numbness in your fingers, arms, or legs, see your doctor as soon as possible. This type of pain is caused by what is commonly known as a pinched nerve. To make the diagnosis, your doctor will do a physical examination and will need to order an x-ray, computed tomography (CT) scan, or magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) study to confirm that you have a neurological (nerve) problem.

Recommended treatments for a pinched nerve, according to the Task Force, include corticosteroid medications injected close to the nerve roots or small neck joints or into the muscles of the neck. Lidocaine also can be injected into the neck to numb the pain. Your doctor may also recommend traction, which uses weights and pulleys to gently stretch the neck and keep it immobilized. Surgery is rarely needed for this type of neck pain, but it may be an option if you have nerve root or spinal cord compression. Studies show that surgery can substantially relieve this type of pain and discomfort within six to 12 weeks.

In diagnosing neck pain, the chiropractor will want to know if there has been shoulder or arm pain accompanying the neck symptoms and whether there has been numbness or loss of strength in the arms. People with RA should pay close attention to neck pain.  RA can seriously affect the C1-C2 area and untreated instability in this area can lead to paralysis and even death.  If you have RA you should also be very wary of chiropractic care in this area as their manipulations of the neck can cause serious problems with anyone with this instabilityIs an xray usually sufficient to rule out RA involvement of the C1-C2?I've been seeing a chiropractor but he doesn't use manual manipulation.  I couldn't handle that. 
 
My GP seems to think my pain in my upper neck (right at the base of the skull) is from my DDD, bones spurs, etc.  But, the problems in my neck are at the lower cervical region.  I don't get how that would cause pain in the upper area.
I would check with an ortho for more definitive answers than your GP is giving you I have great discomfort in that area... having been x-rayed three years ago and was told I have stenosis with encroachment on the canal.......I have some improvement as a result of PT in that area.  
Maybe when I am finished with the hips and the knees I can get back to this area.

I wouldn't mess with it if I were in severe pain....... definitely see a specialist..

too delicate .. as was said
babs102010-08-09 18:10:06
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