Non-surgical Treatment
Whenever possible, doctors prefer to use treatments other than surgery. The
first goal of these nonsurgical treatments is to ease your pain and other
symptoms.
Your health care providers will work with you to improve your neck movement
and strength. They will also encourage healthy body alignment and posture. These
steps are designed to slow the degeneration process and enable you to get back
to your normal activities.
Medications
Many different types of medications are typically prescribed to help gain
control of the symptoms of neck pain. There is no medication that will cure neck
pain. Your doctor may prescribe medications to ease pain, fight inflammation,
and to help you get a better night's sleep.
Soft Neck Collar
If your pain is severe, your doctor may recommend a soft neck collar to keep
your neck still for short periods of time. Resting the muscles and joints can
help calm pain, inflammation, and muscle spasm.
Ice/Heat Applications
You might also be advised to place a cold pack on your neck for ten to
fifteen minutes at a time, or you may be shown how to do a contrast treatment.
Contrast treatments involve switching between a cold pack and a hot pack.
Physical Therapy
Some doctors ask their patients to work with a physical therapist. Therapy
treatments focus on relieving pain, improving neck movement, and fostering
healthy posture. A therapist can design a rehabilitation program to address your
particular condition and to help you prevent future problems.
Injections
Spinal injections are used for both treatment and diagnostic purposes. There
are several different types of spinal injections that your doctor may suggest.
These injections usually use a mixture of an anesthetic and some type of
cortisone preparation. The anesthetic is a medication that numbs the area where
it is injected. If the injection takes away your pain immediately this gives
your doctor important information suggesting that the injected area is indeed
the source of your pain. The cortisone decreases inflammation and can reduce the
pain from an inflamed nerve or joint for a prolonged period of time.
Some injections are more difficult to perform and require the use of a
fluoroscope. A fluoroscope is a special type of X-ray that allows the doctor to
see an X-ray picture continuously on a TV screen. The fluoroscope is used to
guide the needle into the correct place before the injection is given.
Epidural Injection
Neck pain or pain that spreads down the arm may require treatment with an
epidural steroid injection (ESI). In an ESI, the medication mixture is injected
into the epidural space around the nerve roots. Generally, an ESI is given only
when other nonoperative treatments aren't working. ESIs are not always
successful in relieving pain and inflammation. If they do work, they may only
provide temporary relief.
Selective Nerve Root Injection
Another type of injection to place steroid medication around a specific
inflamed nerve root is called a selective nerve-root injection. A special type
of scope called a fluoroscope helps guide a needle directly to the painful
spinal nerve. The nerve root is then bathed with the medication. Some doctors
believe this procedure gets more medication to the painful spot. In difficult
cases, the selective nerve root injection can also help surgeons decide which
nerve root is causing the problem before surgery is planned.
Facet Joint Injection
When the problem is thought to be in the facet joints, an injection into one
or more facet joints can help determine which joints are causing the problem and
ease the pain as well. The fluoroscope is used to guide a needle directly into
the facet joint. The facet joint is then filled with medication mixture. If the
injection immediately eases the pain, it helps confirm that the facet joint is a
source of pain. The steroid medication will reduce the inflammation in the joint
over a period of days and may reduce or eliminate your neck pain.
Trigger Point Injections
Injections of anesthetic medications mixed with a cortisone medication are
sometimes given in the muscles, ligaments, or other soft tissues near the spine.
These injections are called trigger point injections. These injections
can help relieve neck pain and ease muscle spasm and tender points in the back
muscles.
Surgery
Only rarely is cervical spine surgery scheduled immediately. Your doctor may
suggest immediate surgery if there are signs of pressure developing on the
spinal cord or if your muscles are becoming progressively weaker very
rapidly.
For other conditions, doctors prefer to try nonsurgical treatments for a
minimum of three months before considering surgical options. Surgery may be
suggested when severe pain is not improving.
There are many different operations for neck pain. The goal of nearly all
spine operations is to either remove pressure from the nerves of the spine or
stop excessive motion between two or more vertebrae--or both.
The type of surgery that is best depends on the patient's conditions and
symptoms.
Foraminotomy
A foraminotomy is done to open up the neural foramen and relieve pressure on
the spinal nerve root.
Read more about Foraminotomy...
Laminectomy
The lamina is the covering layer of the bony ring of the spinal canal. It
forms a roof-like structure over the back of the spinal cord. When the nerves in
the spinal canal are being squeezed by a herniated disc or from bone spurs
pushing into the canal, a laminectomy removes part or all of the lamina to
release pressure on the spinal cord.
Read more about Laminectomy...
Discectomy
In a discectomy, the surgeon removes a problem disc. Surgeons usually do this
surgery from the front of the neck. This procedure is called anterior cervical
discectomy. In most patients, discectomy is done together with a procedure
called cervical fusion.
Read more about Discectomy...
Cervical Fusion
A fusion surgery joins two or more bones into one solid bone. The purpose for
doing spinal fusion is to increase the space between the vertebrae and to keep
the sore joint from moving. This is usually done by placing a small block of
bone graft in the space where a disc was removed. Opening up more space enlarges
the neural foramina, takes pressure off the nerve roots, and eases tension on
the facet joints. Cervical fusion is used to treat neck problems such as
cervical radiculopathy, disc herniations, fractures, and spinal instability.
There are two main types of fusion for neck problems.
Anterior discectomy and fusion is done through the front of the neck. After
taking out the disc (discectomy), the disc space is filled with a small graft of
bone. The bone is allowed to heal, fusing the two vertebrae into one solid
bone.
In posterior fusion, the surgeon lays small grafts of bone over the back of
the spine. When these bones heal together, they fuse the two vertebrae into one
solid bone. Posterior fusions in the cervical spine are primarily used to treat
fractures of the neck.
The bone graft needs time to heal in order for the fusion to succeed. This
requires the neck to be held still. After cervical fusion surgery, patients
usually have to wear a special neck brace for several months. These neck braces
are often bulky and restrictive. Recently, surgeons have begun using metal
plates and screws (often referred to as instrumentation) to "lock" the bones in
place. The instrumentation is fastened to the vertebrae, where it holds the
bones still while the graft heals.
Read more about Spinal Fusion...
Corpectomy and Strut Graft
A corpectomy relieves pressure over a large part of the spinal cord. In this
procedure, the surgeon takes off the front part of the spinal column and removes
several vertebral bodies. The spaces are then filled with bone graft material.
Metal plates and screws are generally used to hold the spine in place while it
heals. A corpectomy is used in cases of severe spinal stenosis and myelopathy.
Read more about Corpectomy...
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