In patients with non-traumatic neck pain, use a focused history, physical examination and appropriate investigations to distinguish serious, non-musculoskeletal causes (e.g., lymphoma, carotid dissection), including those referred to the neck (e.g., myocardial infarction, pseudotumour cerebri) from other non-serious causes.
In patients with non-traumatic neck pain, distinguish by history and physical examination, those attributable to nerve or spinal cord compression from those due to other mechanical causes (e.g., muscular).
Use a multi-modal (e.g., physiotherapy, chiropractic, acupuncture, massage) approach to treatment of patients with chronic neck pain (e.g., degenerative disc disease +/- soft neuro signs).
In patients with neck pain following injury, distinguish by history and physical examination, those requiring an X-ray to rule out a fracture from those who do not require an X-ray (e.g., current guideline/C-spine rules).
When reviewing neck X-rays of patients with traumatic neck pain, be sure all vertebrae are visualized adequately.
Head flexed, ipsilaterally rotated and tilted, with axial loading
Upper limb tension test (equivalent of straight leg raise for arm)
Wrist supinated, shouder abducted, elbow extended, and neck lat flexion to contralateral side
Manual neck distraction test
Vertical traction on head - and pain relieved
Examine shoulder
Clear C-spine Injury
Consider NEXUS criteria (caution using criteria in <2yo, and>65yo)
Neuro deficit (focal)
Spinal (midline) tenderness
Altered LOC
Intoxication
Distracting injury
There is some data showing that you may consider clearing C-spine even in distracting injury
Consider Canadian C-Spine Rule in alert, stable trauma patients (excluded known spine disease/surgery, non-trauma, GCS<15, age <16 years - consider NEXUS)
Can clear C-spine if no high risk factor:
Age ≥ 65 years
Extremity paresthesias
Dangerous mechanism (Fall ≥3 ft/5 stairs, axial load to head [eg. diving], MVC >100km/h or rollover or ejection, motorized recreational vehicles, bicycle crash)
One low risk factor present AND able to actively rotate neck 45° left and right:
Sitting position in the ED
Ambulatory at any time
Delayed (not immediate onset) neck pain
No mid-line tenderness
Simple rear-end motor vehicle collision
Imaging
Blunt Trauma
Lateral, AP, odontoid X-ray
High risk mechanism
Multiple system trauma with comorbid injuries to head, face, torso
Conditions that predispose C-spine injury (Down syndrome)
AMS (GCS 14)
Neck pain, tenderness, deformity, limited ROM
Flexion-extension X-ray
Normal C-spine X-ray and no neuro deficit, continued pain/tenderness, and able to flex and extend neck
CT C-spine
Acute neuro deficit
GCS 3-13
Abnormal/suspicious C-spine X-ray
MRI if abnormal neurological exam and if requires spinal cord imaging
Consider initial five-view X-ray (odontoid, lateral, PA, and both oblique views) in non-traumatic neck pain if
Age >50yo with new symptoms
Constitutional symptoms
History of malignancy
Moderate-severe pain >6w
Progressive neurological findings
Infectious risk
Not required in cervical radiculopathy (motor/sensory/reflex deficits) UNLESS (consider MRI)
Trauma
Persistent symptoms >4-6w of treatment
Red flag (malignancy, myelopathy, abscess)
MRI in all progressive neurological deficits, suspicion of infection/malignancy, or significant pain >6w
Consider EMG if pain and dysesthesia in extremities