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Published byDerrick Grant Modified over 9 years ago
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Neck Pain Dzung H. Dinh, MD, MBA Professor of Neurosurgery University of Illinois College of Medicine at Peoria
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Disclosure Aesculap ROI Nuvasive
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Content 1. Anatomy 2. Evaluation of neck pain 3. Differential diagnosis 4. Treatment plan
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Anatomy
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Evaluation 1.History 1.Ask the right questions 2.Listen to the patient 3.Formulate a diagnosis 2.Examination 1.To confirm your diagnosis, not to make diagnosis 3.Ordering additional tests 1.Again, to confirm or r/o diagnosis.
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History Ask the right questions Critical questions 1. Pain location Central/Axial/Paraspinal Refer HA or Arm Sx True Radicular 2. Pain quality Dull ache Sharp shooting –neck, occiput, arm Burning vs. dysesthesia 3. Pain Pattern - Diffuse Discrete 4. Numbness – pattern, location 5. Deficit – pattern/distribution Not so critical questions 1. Pain onset/inciting event 2. Pain provocation 3. Pain diminution 4. Up-to-date Rx
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History Listen to the patient Stumbling gait Dropping things Hand falling asleep Skin feels burnt Trouble going upstair Urinary hesitancy No pain Woke up with weakness Slowly getting worse
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History Diagnosis formulation Diffuse neck pain, HA, skin burning, TP – myofascial pain. Discrete arm pain, not much neck pain, discrete deficit – radiculopathy Weakness, no pain, no numbness – ALS Hand numbness in median or ulnar pattern- CTS or cubbital Sx Wrist extensor weakness- C7 or radial nerve Radicular sx and entrapment sx - Double crush syndrome (C5 or 6 and CTS, C8 or T1 and ulnar)
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Examination to confirm your diagnosis Myofascial pain: Trigger points (supraspinatus, rhomboid, teres), no deficit Myelopathy: spastic gait, hyperreflexia, path reflex Radicular distribution deficit – radicular C5: deltoid, infra/supraspinatus C6: bicep, dorsal forarm, thumb, index finger C7: tricep, index, middle finger, finger, wrist extension C8: 4 th,5 th fingers, volar of forearm, grip weakness T1: under arm, finger extension. Peripheral entrapment CTS: middle 3 fingers, grip weakness, + Phalen Cubittal Sx: last 2 fingers, opponens, + Tinel Radial nerve pathology
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Additional Tests to confirm your diagnosis Myofascial pain- EMG/NCV if there is lots of refer Sx Myelopathy: MRI Radicular – MRI Peripheral entrapment – EMG/NCV
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Treatment Plan 1.Myelopathy with cord compression – surgery 2.Radiculopathy with deficit – surgery +/- 3.Myofascial Pain – Never surgery 4.Peripheral Entrapment Sx - Maybe 5.Double crush Sx – Depends 6.Radiculopathy and Myofascial Pain - depends
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Case Presentation
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Thank You
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