Neck Pain — Cervial Spine

Neck pain can appear in various forms, ranging anywhere from a dull and irritating ache to burning, debilitating nerve pain that may radiate down the shoulder into the arm. There can also be a lot of reasons about how the pain started and how long it may last. In order to develop an effective treatment plan, it is essential to understand different neck pain types.

neck pain treatments

Axial Neck Pain

The most common type of neck pain is axial pain, also called mechanical pain. Axial pain is focused on one part or region of the neck and does not move or radiate. It typically feels dull, achy, or throbbing but can also be sharp or stinging. Symptoms may increase with certain movements or poor posture.Neck muscle strains and/or ligament sprains are typical causes of axial neck pain. Other sources of axial neck pain include various mechanisms related to spinal degeneration or trauma, including cervical disc degeneration, facet joint dysfunction, or vertebral bone fracture.

Radicular Pain

Radicular pain can occur when a nerve root in the cervical spine becomes inflamed, causing pain to radiate along the nerve, down into the shoulder, arm, and/or hand.

Radicular pain involves the nerve, and nerve pain can feel searing or electric shock-like. The pain can intensify with certain movements and posture. It is typically experienced on only one side of the body, but it can be on both.

When radicular pain stems from the cervical spine, it is usually due to spinal degeneration, such as when a nerve root is irritated by bony overgrowths, called osteophytes (bone spurs), or a cervical herniated disc.

The location of radicular pain is commonly thought to follow dermatomal patterns (areas of the skin served by a single nerve cell). Some studies, however, have indicated that radicular pain does not always follow this pattern.

neck pain posture

Pain can be referred to the neck in various ways, such as from the heart (during a heart attack) or jaw (temporomandibular joint). Conversely, a pathology in the neck can cause referred pain in other parts of the body, most commonly a headache, shoulder pain, or upper back pain.

Referred Pain

When pain is experienced in a location other than its source and is not caused by nerve root irritation, it is called referred pain. It is usually experienced as a deep, achy, cramping and/or throbbing sensation. The area of distribution is likely to be more diffuse, or spread out, than radiating pain, but these two types of pain can feel similar. Referred pain is typically felt on only one side of the body, but it can be on both.

The mechanisms of how referred pain develops and spreads are still being studied. For example, when a trigger point (tender or hypersensitive part of a muscle) is compressed, the pain symptoms can be referred to other parts of the body. However, there is no firm agreement in the medical community about how trigger points develop and whether their pain patterns are predictable.

Myelopathic Pain

When the spinal cord in the neck becomes compressed, myelopathic pain may develop. While myelopathic pain may occur at the level of compression causing neck pain, symptoms are often located at a distance below the neck/compression site, such as in the legs and/or feet.

This separation of symptoms and causal region may contribute to an increased risk for misdiagnosis and mismanagement.

Funicular pain is another type of spinal cord-related pain and may occur when the cord’s ascending tracts—the spinothalmic or posterior column tracts—become compressed or irritated. Funicular pain tends to present as an achy, throbbing, or cold feeling in one of the limbs, such as a leg, or in the trunk of the body.

It can also feel electric shock-like and similar to radicular pain (sciatica) going down the leg. Sometimes funicular pain is experienced when the neck is flexed forward, known as Lhermitte’s phenomenon, and results in a searing pain that can travel down the spine and/or into the arms or legs.