| Literature DB >> 29545691 |
Miles O Fortner1, Paul A Oakley2, Deed E Harrison3.
Abstract
[Purpose] To present the case of the non-surgical restoration of cervical lordosis in a patient suffering from chronic whiplash syndrome including chronic neck pain and daily headaches resulting from previous whiplash. [Subject and Methods] A 31 year old female presented with a chief complaint of chronic neck pain and headaches for 12 years, correlating temporally with a sustained whiplash. These symptoms were not significantly relieved by previous chiropractic spinal manipulative therapy. The patient had cervical hypolordosis and was treated with Chiropractic BioPhysics® protocol including extension exercises, manual adjustments and cervical extension traction designed to increase the cervical lordosis.Entities:
Keywords: Cervical hypolordosis; Extension traction; Whiplash associated disorder
Year: 2018 PMID: 29545691 PMCID: PMC5851360 DOI: 10.1589/jpts.30.266
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Phys Ther Sci ISSN: 0915-5287
Fig. 1.Neutral lateral cervical radiographs.
Left: Initial (4/4/17) showing cervical absolute rotation angle hypolordosis of −18.8° between C2–C7. Right: Follow-up (8/28/17) showing restoration of normal lordosis (−32.1°) after 30 treatment sessions. Green line represents ideal 42° curve; Red line highlights patient position.
Fig. 2.Pope 2-way cervical extension traction.
Fig. 3.Cervical mirror image extension exercises.