Exercise for Oxford Arm Pain and Neck Pain Relief

Non-surgical neck pain treatment relieves such cervical spine related pain. What does that treatment include? Researchers and clinicians grapple with that question all the time. Where does the answer lie? With you, the neck pain patient, the arm pain patient. The chiropractic treatment plan from the passive pain-relieving treatment to the self-management tools are formed to each individual neck pain sufferer. Satterwhite Chiropractic is the neck pain sufferer’s partner in the path to Oxford neck pain relief.

NON-SURGICAL TREATMENT OF NECK PAIN STAGES

A group of experts in the conservative management of cervical radiculopathy (neck-related arm pain) convened to establish a list of effective non-surgical treatment modalities at different stages of pain (acute, subacute, chronic). The stage makes a difference. In the acute stage, more passive pain-relieving interventions – spinal manipulation, patient education, specific foraminal opening exercise, pain-relieving position - were thought important. As patients proceed through subacute (boosted physical activity, supervised motor control, specific exercise, and neurodynamic mobilization) to chronic (general aerobic exercise, strength training), more personalized physical activity and self-management were described as important. (1) Satterwhite Chiropractic agrees with this individualized plan and understands there is a careful balance between passive treatment and active exercise for most favorable outcomes.

HOW MUCH TREATMENT FOR NECK PAIN?

Thirty-seven experts set out to figure out the proper dosage and kind of motor control and segmental exercise was optimal for chronic non-specific neck pain. They agreed most that there were 3 dosage variables: intensity, frequency, and reps. As for which exercise, dosage, procedure, progression, etc., they agreed that prescribing exercise was not simple and must be individualized, acceptable, and feasible to the patient. (2) Satterwhite Chiropractic fully agrees! We work with our Oxford neck pain patients to ensure the exercises work for them and their spinal condition and willingness to perform the exercises.

ACTIVE CARE OF NECK & ARM PAIN: Exercise

Exercise recommendations for chronic non-specific neck pain haven’t been well defined. A review of published studies on this topic revealed that (A) many exercise programs reduce pain and disability in the short term, (B) pillar exercises reduce pain and disability in the intermediate term, and (C) motor control plus segmental exercises deliver moderate to great pain decrease overall. Long term pain decreasing exercise recommendations have not been studied. (3) Another aspect of exercise for neck and arm pain patients is the respiratory aspect. Neck pain and forward head posture as seen in smartphone users were discussed in a comparison study: control, routine therapeutic exercise, (combined) routine therapeutic exercise with respiratory exercises. At 8 weeks, the combined group had significant differences in diaphragm muscle activation, respiratory balance, and number of breaths. (4) Pain and breathing can be friends when done properly. Satterwhite Chiropractic works with each patient to determine what exercises are best for each patient’s stage of pain to improve each one’s condition.

CONTACT Satterwhite Chiropractic

Listen to this PODCAST with Dr. Adam Propper on The Back Doctors Podcast with Dr. Michael Johnson as he describes The Cox® Technic System of Spinal Pain Management incorporation and exercise to help with neck and arm pain.

Make your Oxford chiropractic appointment soon. We make a non-surgical treatment plan with a combination of active exercise and passive care to assist each of our neck pain patients in getting the relief they want each of our neck pain patients find relief]51]. 

 
Satterwhite Chiropractic presents how the chiropractic neck pain and arm pain relief treatment plan is personalized for optimal effectiveness.  
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"This information and website content is not intended to diagnose, guarantee results, or recommend specific treatment or activity. It is designed to educate and inform only. Please consult your physician for a thorough examination leading to a diagnosis and well-planned treatment strategy. See more details on the DISCLAIMER page. Content is reviewed by Dr. James M. Cox I."