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Do You Have Neck Pain?
You May Have A Whiplash Injury
Car accidents, blows to the back in
sports, and on the job injuries can easily leave you with a whiplash
injury. While sometimes symptoms are felt immediately, often
symptoms are delayed for days, months or even years.
The most common symptom of whiplash (affecting 62 percent to 92
percent of those injured) is neck pain, and it usually begins
between two hours and two days after the accident. This is often the
result of tightened muscles that react to either muscle tears or
excessive movement of joints from ligament damage. The muscles
tighten in an effort to splint up and support the head, limiting the
excessive movement. While muscle relaxants can relieve some of the
discomfort of these muscle spasms, using muscle relaxants without
wearing a support collar to brace and hold the head in place can
undermine this natural protection muscles and cause further from the
injury.
An estimated 66 percent to 70 percent of those suffering from
whiplash complain of headaches.
The pain may be on one side or both, on again and
off again or constant, in one spot or more general. These headaches,
like neck pain, are often the result of tightened, tensed muscles
trying to keep the head stable and, like tension headaches, they are
often felt behind the eyes.
Shoulder pain, often described as pain radiating
down the back of the neck into the shoulder blade area, also may be
the result of tensed muscles.
Muscle tears often are described as burning pain,
prickling or tingling. More severe disc damage may cause sharp pain
with certain movements which are relieved by holding your hand over
your head.
If you experience any of these symptoms, you may
have a whiplash injury that, left uncared for, can cause far more
serious problems months, even years later.
The Quebec Automobile Insurance Society recently
released an exhaustive study of more than 10,382 articles on neck
injuries and concluded most interventions for whiplash injury were
unproven, including soft cervical collars and corticosteroid
injections. Yet they recommend spinal manipulation as clearly
effective.
So if you suspect you have a whiplash injury, choose a specialist
in spinal injuries, Dr. Bartell or Dr. Pierson, who have proven
methods of care for whiplash.
Basic Whiplash Systems
- Neck Pain
- Headache
- Shoulder Pain
- Low Back Pain
- Difficulty Swallowing
- Blurred Vision
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- Ringing in the Ears
- Nausea
- Fatigue or Weakness
- Irritability
- Dizziness
- Vertigo - (sense of rotation)
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