Stiff neck
Attention
Always consider meningitis in people complaining of a stiff neck
- Exclude more serious neck injury or injury (eg meningitis, vascular problem or fracture if trauma)
- Meningitis
- Vascular — ask about the 5D’s (dizziness, double vision, dysarthria (difficulty speaking) or dysphagia (difficulty swallowing), drop attacks) and 3 N’s (nausea, nystagmus, numbness around the mouth) — if present medical consult
- Fracture — if a history of trauma, follow the Canadian C-spine rule to see if X-ray is needed or not
- Screen for neurological symptoms (eg pins and needles, numbness or weakness in the arms) if neurological symptoms — medical consult
- Acute torticollis (wry neck) — sudden onset of severe neck pain with spasm of neck muscles. Causes person to bend or twist neck and head away from painful side
- May be caused by holding awkward position, often from day before (eg long distance driving), often occurs in children after sleeping
- Usually occurs on one side of neck, resolves by itself within a few days
- Common in young people — 12–30 years
- Do not drive when suffering from this condition
- For neck pain or stiffness due to idiopathic (non-traumatic) cause or traumatic cause
(eg after a sporting injury or car accident)
- Keep posture as normal as possible
- Keep moving neck as much as pain will allow — gentle exercise will speed up recovery
Active movement and manual traction
Attention
- If person has pins and needles or numbness during procedure — medical consult
What you need
- Hot pack or ice pack — use what person tolerates best
What you do
- Lie person down in comfortable position with pillow supporting head
- Put hot/ice pack under neck
- Have person turn head toward painful side as far as possible and as pain allows, then return head to centre
- Have turn head towards non-painful side as far as possible, then return head to centre
- Repeat 10 times each side, with each repetition try to go a little further in each direction.
- If no improvement — have the rest where comfortable and advise simple pain relief (analgesia). Then try again a few hours later
Note: If this procedure does not relieve symptoms — try hold–relax procedure
Hold–relax
Attention
- Can be taught to person to do at home
- Turn head toward or away from painful side, depending on which hurts less
- Turning toward pain described, but technique the same for both
What you do
- Person sits in comfortable chair
- Turn head slowly and gently toward painful side until it starts to become uncomfortable, then stop
- Put one hand against side of head opposite to painful side
- Use other hand to steady neck — Figure 10.87
Figure 10.87
- Ask person to turn head against pressure of your hand — not push sideways
- Keep even, firm pressure against head so that they just can’t turn their neck, not so hard that you move their head
- At the same time, ask person to take a deep breath and hold it, look upward to side where your hand rests
- Count 10 seconds then ask person to relax and breathe out
- Person should now be able to turn their head a little more toward painful side without your help
- Do this again 3–5 times in a row — there should be a great improvement in tension and pain
- Physiotherapy referral may be useful
Supporting resources
- My pain hub neck pain exercises
- Canadian C-spine rule