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Chiropractic Management of Neck Pain Complicated by Symptomatic Vertebral Artery Stenosis and Dizziness

Patient: Male, 62-year-old Final Diagnosis: Cervical spondylosis • vertebral artery stenosis • Vertebrobasilar insufficiency Symptoms: Dizziness • headache • neck pain Medication: — Clinical Procedure: Soft tissue manipulation • therapeutic ultrasound • thoracic spinal manipulation Specialty: Rehabi...

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Autores principales: Chu, Eric Chun-Pu, Trager, Robert J., Tao, Cliff, Lee, Linda Yin-King
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: International Scientific Literature, Inc. 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9597265/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36258651
http://dx.doi.org/10.12659/AJCR.937991
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author Chu, Eric Chun-Pu
Trager, Robert J.
Tao, Cliff
Lee, Linda Yin-King
author_facet Chu, Eric Chun-Pu
Trager, Robert J.
Tao, Cliff
Lee, Linda Yin-King
author_sort Chu, Eric Chun-Pu
collection PubMed
description Patient: Male, 62-year-old Final Diagnosis: Cervical spondylosis • vertebral artery stenosis • Vertebrobasilar insufficiency Symptoms: Dizziness • headache • neck pain Medication: — Clinical Procedure: Soft tissue manipulation • therapeutic ultrasound • thoracic spinal manipulation Specialty: Rehabilitation • Traditional Medicine OBJECTIVE: Rare disease BACKGROUND: Vertebrobasilar insufficiency (VBI) is most often caused by vertebrobasilar atherosclerosis, often presenting with dizziness and occasionally neck pain. Little research or guidelines regarding management of neck pain in affected patients exists. CASE REPORT: A 62-year-old male hypertensive smoker presented to a chiropractor with a 13-year history of insidious-onset neck pain, dizziness, and occipital headache with a Dizziness Handicap Inventory (DHI) of 52%. The patient had known VBI, caused by bilateral vertebral artery plaques, and cervical spondylosis, and was treated with multiple cardiovascular medications. The chiropractor referred patient to a neurosurgeon, who cleared him to receive manual therapies provided manual-thrust cervical spinal manipulative therapy (SMT) was not performed. The chiropractor administered thoracic SMT and cervicothoracic soft tissue manipulation. The neck pain and dizziness mostly resolved by 1 month. At 1-year follow-up, DHI was 0%; at 2 years it was 8%. A literature search revealed 4 cases in which a chiropractor used manual therapies for a patient with VBI. Including the present case, all patients had neck pain, 60% had dizziness, and all were treated with SMT either avoiding manual cervical manipulation altogether or modifying it to avoid or limit cervical rotation, yielding positive outcomes. CONCLUSIONS: The present and previous cases provide limited evidence that some carefully considered chiropractic manual therapies can afford patients with VBI relief from concurrent neck pain and possibly dizziness. Given the paucity of research, cervical SMT cannot be recommended in such patients. These findings do not apply to vertebral artery dissection, for which SMT is an absolute contraindication.
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spelling pubmed-95972652022-11-07 Chiropractic Management of Neck Pain Complicated by Symptomatic Vertebral Artery Stenosis and Dizziness Chu, Eric Chun-Pu Trager, Robert J. Tao, Cliff Lee, Linda Yin-King Am J Case Rep Articles Patient: Male, 62-year-old Final Diagnosis: Cervical spondylosis • vertebral artery stenosis • Vertebrobasilar insufficiency Symptoms: Dizziness • headache • neck pain Medication: — Clinical Procedure: Soft tissue manipulation • therapeutic ultrasound • thoracic spinal manipulation Specialty: Rehabilitation • Traditional Medicine OBJECTIVE: Rare disease BACKGROUND: Vertebrobasilar insufficiency (VBI) is most often caused by vertebrobasilar atherosclerosis, often presenting with dizziness and occasionally neck pain. Little research or guidelines regarding management of neck pain in affected patients exists. CASE REPORT: A 62-year-old male hypertensive smoker presented to a chiropractor with a 13-year history of insidious-onset neck pain, dizziness, and occipital headache with a Dizziness Handicap Inventory (DHI) of 52%. The patient had known VBI, caused by bilateral vertebral artery plaques, and cervical spondylosis, and was treated with multiple cardiovascular medications. The chiropractor referred patient to a neurosurgeon, who cleared him to receive manual therapies provided manual-thrust cervical spinal manipulative therapy (SMT) was not performed. The chiropractor administered thoracic SMT and cervicothoracic soft tissue manipulation. The neck pain and dizziness mostly resolved by 1 month. At 1-year follow-up, DHI was 0%; at 2 years it was 8%. A literature search revealed 4 cases in which a chiropractor used manual therapies for a patient with VBI. Including the present case, all patients had neck pain, 60% had dizziness, and all were treated with SMT either avoiding manual cervical manipulation altogether or modifying it to avoid or limit cervical rotation, yielding positive outcomes. CONCLUSIONS: The present and previous cases provide limited evidence that some carefully considered chiropractic manual therapies can afford patients with VBI relief from concurrent neck pain and possibly dizziness. Given the paucity of research, cervical SMT cannot be recommended in such patients. These findings do not apply to vertebral artery dissection, for which SMT is an absolute contraindication. International Scientific Literature, Inc. 2022-10-19 /pmc/articles/PMC9597265/ /pubmed/36258651 http://dx.doi.org/10.12659/AJCR.937991 Text en © Am J Case Rep, 2022 https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/This work is licensed under Creative Common Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International (CC BY-NC-ND 4.0 (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/) )
spellingShingle Articles
Chu, Eric Chun-Pu
Trager, Robert J.
Tao, Cliff
Lee, Linda Yin-King
Chiropractic Management of Neck Pain Complicated by Symptomatic Vertebral Artery Stenosis and Dizziness
title Chiropractic Management of Neck Pain Complicated by Symptomatic Vertebral Artery Stenosis and Dizziness
title_full Chiropractic Management of Neck Pain Complicated by Symptomatic Vertebral Artery Stenosis and Dizziness
title_fullStr Chiropractic Management of Neck Pain Complicated by Symptomatic Vertebral Artery Stenosis and Dizziness
title_full_unstemmed Chiropractic Management of Neck Pain Complicated by Symptomatic Vertebral Artery Stenosis and Dizziness
title_short Chiropractic Management of Neck Pain Complicated by Symptomatic Vertebral Artery Stenosis and Dizziness
title_sort chiropractic management of neck pain complicated by symptomatic vertebral artery stenosis and dizziness
topic Articles
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9597265/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36258651
http://dx.doi.org/10.12659/AJCR.937991
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