Six conditions cause most of the neck pain complaints seen by primary care physicians: cervical muscle strain or sprain, torticollis, acceleration injury, myofascial pain dysfunction syndrome, and cervical osteoarthritis or rheumatoid arthritis. Most of them can be diagnosed and treated by the primary care physician. Of the more unusual causes, one should not miss a clinical fracture; a herniated cervical disc, spinal cord compresion from a disc, or epidural tumor; infection of the disc or the vertebral body; subluxation of the vertebral bodies; or pain referred from the chest or mediastinal structures. MRI offers new opportunity for early diagnosis of myelopathy owing to OA or RA, vertebral osteomyelitis, and metastatic involvement of cervical vertebrae.
CITATION STYLE
Goodman, B. W. (1988). Neck pain. Primary Care - Clinics in Office Practice. https://doi.org/10.1177/17557380211016506
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