This one’s for the manual therapists out there. A brief little review of 2 landmark papers pertaining to fact joint pain and referral patterns.

Part 1A:

CERVICAL ZYGAPOPHYSEAL JOINT PAIN PATTERNS I: A study in normal volunteers (Dwyer et. al., Spine, 1990)

A study determining whether or not pain from a given joint assumed a characteristic distribution…where the pain pattern in a given patient might be used as an accurate indicator for clinically diagnosing the symptomatic joint

4 asymptomatic subjects were used

A contrast medium was injected into the joints, acting in a prevocational matter (experimental stimulus). Subjects were then examined for tenderness in both the cervical and shoulder regions

The distributions of evoked pain were recorded and a visual analog scale was completed

The medial branches of the dorsal primary rami were also blocked

The pain felt was deep and achy in quality

Pain patterns:

  • C2-3: into the head
  • C3-4: (coinciding with the levator scapula) was more rostral than C4-5 (which concentrated by the angle formed by the shoulder and neck)
  • C5-6: covered the top of the scapula and shoulder above the level of the scapular spine laterally
  • C6-7: extended caudally to the inferior angle of the scapula

Following the analgesic blocks, the subjects unexpectedly demonstrated a slight hypesthesia over the area coinciding with the previous recorded area of invoked pain and tenderness

Concluded that the cervical z-joints can be sources of pain, including referred pain and that a physiological mechanism must exist whereby pain stemming from a z-joint can be referred into the related limb or limb girdle

Further, cervical z-joint pain is distributed in a pattern characteristic of its segmental origin

Click here for Part 1B

Photo source

Related posts:

  1. Zygapophyseal Joint Pain Patterns: Part 1B (Cervical Spine) A study testing the reliability of their pain charts by...
  2. Hamstring Length and the Patellofemoral Joint A summary of my upcoming review on ResearchReviewService.com...
  3. Its Not Always Bursitis: Greater Trochanter Pain Syndrome The use of “Trochanteric Bursitis” as a diagnosis for lateral...
  4. Common Movement Dysfunctions What to look for when screening and assessing the moving...
  5. Quantifying Quality A note on the Functional Movement Screen and Selective Functional...

Related posts brought to you by Yet Another Related Posts Plugin.

2 Responses to “Zygapophyseal Joint Pain Patterns: Part 1A (Cervical Spine)”

  1. [...] Contact me Zygapophyseal Joint Pain Patterns: Part 1A (Cervical Spine) [...]

  2. [...] Zygapophyseal Joint Pain Patterns: Part 1A (Cervical Spine) [...]

Leave a Reply

Spam Protection by WP-SpamFree




Looking for something?

Use the form below to search the site:

Still not finding what you're looking for? Drop a comment on a post or contact us so we can take care of it!