Upper Cervical Headaches - Fearon Physical Therapy
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Transcript Upper Cervical Headaches - Fearon Physical Therapy
Margaret Anderson
Headaches
Symptom of a disorder in articular, muscular or other
soft tissue of the neck
Occur thro the convergence of cervical and trigeminal
afferents on common neurones in the
trigeminocervical nucleus and any structure
innervated by any of upper 3 cervical nerves.
Other sources of headaches
TMJ
Intercranial conditions: neoplasm or meningitis
Vascular headaches
Migraineous type:
Cluster headaches
Headaches
Common areas of cervical headaches are frontal,
orbital, temporal and occipital
Headaches are commonly unilateral but can be
bilateral.
Does not change sides as can occur in migraine
Headaches
Quality :
Ache, deep, boring and less commonly throbbing pain.
Superficial, shooting pain of lancinating pain is typical
of true neuralgia.
Neurogenic symptoms in benign cervical
musculoskeletal headaches is rare.
Headache is a referred pain rather that an irritation or
compression of cervical nerve root but one must
always ask about sensory changes in the scalp
Behavior of Headaches
Often cause and effect difficult to establish
When do they occur: daily, 2 or 3 times a week or once a
month. Establish a pattern and their duration
Initiating factors
Associated symptoms
Nausea/vomiting
Eye or ear symptoms
Consider provoking activities
Driving
Reading with chin in hand
Hairdressers basins
Difficulty swallowing may indicate a C3 discogenic problem
Behavior
Ease factors
Rest, usually posture: lying
May wake with headache
down or sitting quietly
Medications
because of poor sleeping
position or busy previous day
Cervical stiffness
24 hour
May build
up atday
end of day
If chronic analgesics or
NSAID offer little relief
History
May present with headaches for weeks, months
May result from injury or past history of neck trauma
Perpetual strain to upper cervical joints can be poor
posture.
Insidious onset of headaches may be direct response to
onset of DJD
Headaches of upper cervical origin often coexist with
migraines.
Case Study,
65 year old female. Looks after grandchildren, works
on various charitable committees, ‘always busy’
AREA
Left sided dull sub-occipital pain which radiates behind left
eye.
Sub-occipital area ‘sore to touch’ and ‘feels swollen’
She denies right-sided pain, pain radiating into the upper
extremity or any numbness and tingling.
Behavior
Her headaches come on for no apparent reason, but
she will wake at midnight after a busy day or 4am if not
busy.
If severe she will take Tylenol and return to sleep
During the day she never has a headache but will
sometimes wake with one, which lasts for about an
hour; she is unaware of any cervical stiffness.
History
Her headaches came on about 6 months ago when her
husband was seriously ill. She thought it was due to
stress. Her husband recovered but the headaches
remain.
She had headaches about 7 years ago which were
successfully treated with manipulation
Planning the Physical Exam
Severity
Irritability
Nature
Stage & stability
Precautions and contraindications
Do you think you will reproduce the headache or find a
comparable sign?
Physical Exam
Observation: poking chin posture, unable to correct, stuck in upper
cervical extension because of tight upper cervical and upper trapezius
musculature
Flexion unable to unroll upper cervical, no pain with overpressure
Left rotation 85° stiff, no pain
Right rotation 70° tight Left sub-occipital, no pain
PPIVMS C2/3 blocked to opening and closing in rotation and lateral
flexion
Palpation: tight upper cervical muscles, L>R, tender to touch
L C2/3 unilateral PA stiff local pain IV >> R
L C1/2 stiff, pain IV
COMPARABLE SIGN IS:
* FOR ASSESSMENT:
Assessment at the end of OE
Patient says she is no worse/same
Diagnosis
Headache of C2/3 > C1/2 origin
Secondary/chronic muscle shortening and spasm
Postural adaptation because of aging
Presentation
Severity
Irritability
Stage
Stability
PRECAUTIONS AND CONTRAINDICATIONS
THINK ABOUT:
Mechanical factors
Functional
Psychosocial: well balanced elderly woman
Possible causes
Think about:
Prognosis
Natural history of the disorder
Chronic problem
Level of recovery
Rate depends on initial response to treatment, so would
expect how many visits?
Age
Likelihood of recurrence
Treatment Planning
Outline treatment for next 2 visits
Remember 3 aspects of the patient’s problem
Headache of C2/3 > C1/2 origin = stiff upper cervical
joints.
Secondary/chronic muscle shortening and spasm
Postural adaptation because of aging
Think about options & what you expect to change
easily and start there.
Note: traction in upper cervical spine tends to
exacerbate headaches.