- Neck pain - Symptoms and causes - Mayo Clinic
Jobs or activities that make you move your neck the same way over and over can lead to pain Injuries Falls, sports injuries and car accidents can hurt your neck Stress Feeling stressed may make your neck muscles tight and painful Other health issues Illnesses such as arthritis, infections or cancer also can cause neck pain
- Cervical Radiculopathy (Pinched Nerve in Neck): Symptoms Treatment
Cervical radiculopathy (also known as “pinched nerve”) is a condition that results in radiating pain caused by compression of any of the nerve roots in your neck
- How Spinal Injuries Lead to Chronic Neck Pain | Spine. MD
FAQs: Spinal Injuries and Chronic Neck Pain Can whiplash lead to long-term problems? Yes, whiplash can lead to long-term problems While many people recover within a few weeks, some develop chronic neck pain, persistent headaches, and reduced range of motion that can last months or even years
- Degenerative Disk Disease: What It Is, Symptoms Treatment
Degenerative disk disease isn’t a disease It’s the name for what happens when your spinal disks begin to wear down, leading to neck and back pain
- Neck and shoulder pain: Treatments, prevention, and causes
Neck and shoulder pain is usually the result of strains and sprains from bad posture Learn the causes, diagnosis, and treatment of neck and shoulder pain at WebMD
- Neck Pain - AANS
For serious neck problems, a primary care physician and often a specialist, such as a neurosurgeon, should be consulted to make an accurate diagnosis and prescribe treatment Age, injury, poor posture or diseases such as arthritis can lead to degeneration of the bones or joints of the cervical spine, causing disc herniation or bone spurs to form
- A headache that starts in your neck - Harvard Health
Learn how a cervicogenic headache (a type of pain that starts in the neck and radiates to the back of the head) differs from other headaches, and what treatments can help
- Exercise Therapy for Chronic Neck Pain: Tailoring Person-Centred . . .
Exercise therapy is considered the best evidence-based approach for managing chronic neck pain However, the implementation of exercise therapy presents several challenges Systematic reviews indicate that it has modest effectiveness, while clinical
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