Cervical Spine

Cervical Spine

Etiology

  • Muscular: If it is muscular and acute, it is easy to treat and usually goes away on its own after a few days. It resolves well with muscle channels.
  • Root problems: Compression of the nerves exiting the vertebrae. The path of the pain clearly indicates at what level the compression is. Thumb and index finger: C5 and C6. Middle three fingers: C6 and C7. Little finger: C7 and D1.
  • Artery compression: adds dizziness, vertigo, blurred vision.
  • Sympathetic system problem: for example, heart pain is transported to the sympathetic system (sweating, restlessness,...).
  • Spinal cord level compression: This is a more serious problem. There are symptoms of hypoesthesia, limb paralysis.


With cervical spine problems, the affected channels must be identified:

Treatment

Governing Vessel problem: BL-10 + GB-20 + GV-16 very good for upper cervicals.


Sometimes GV-14 is more important than GV-16 for all cervical problems (drain it).


If needed, look for Hua Tuo Jia Ji from the 4th and 5th cervical. They treat conflicts originating from the cervicals. If you want to enhance the action of the Jia Ji points, add GV-1.


Other points:

Authors:

Page updated on December 22, 2020

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