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Car accidents,
blows to the back in sports, and on the job injuries can easily leave you
with a whiplash injury. While sometimes symptoms are felt
immediately, often symptoms are delayed for days, months, or even years.1
The most common
symptom of whiplash (affecting 62 percent to 92 percent of those injured)
is neck pain, and it usually begins between two hours and two days after
the accident.2
This is often the result of tightened muscles that react to either muscle
tears or excessive movement of joints from ligament damage. The
muscles tighten in an effort to splint up and support the head, limiting
the excessive movement. While muscle relaxants can relieve some of
the discomfort of these spasms, using muscle relaxants without wearing a
support collar to brace and hold the head in place can undermine this
natural protection from the muscles and cause further injury.
An estimated 66
percent to 70 percent of those suffering from whiplash complain of
headaches.3
The pain may be on one side or both, on again and off again or constant,
in one spot or more general. These headaches, like neck pain, are
often the result of tightened, tensed muscles trying to keep the head
stable and, like tension headaches, they are often felt behind the eyes.
Shoulder pain,
often described as pain radiating down the back of the neck into the
shoulder blade area, also may be the result of tensed muscles.
Muscle tears
often are described as burning pain, prickling or tingling. More
severe disc damage may cause sharp pain with certain movements, which are
relieved by holding your hand over your head.
If you suspect you have a
whiplash injury, please call
our office and avoid any
advancing complications. |
If you
experience any of the symptoms, you may have a whiplash injury that, left
uncared for, can cause far more serious problems, months, or even years later.
The Quebec
Automobile Insurance Society recently released an exhaustive study of more
than 10,382 articles on neck injuries and concluded most interventions for
whiplash injury were unproven, including soft cervical collars and
corticosteroid injections. Yet they recommended spinal manipulation
as clearly effective.4 So if you suspect you have a whiplash injury,
choose a specialist in spinal injuries, like Dr. Reichert, who has proven
methods of care for whiplash.
1.
Stephen M. Foreman and Arthur C. Croft, Whiplash Injuries: The
Cervical Acceleration/Deceleration Syndrome, (Williams and Wilkins,
Baltimore, 1988) p. 323.
2.
Ibid. p. 287.
3.
Ibid. p. 289.
4.
"Quebec Task Force Rewrites Whiplash Protocols,"
Dynamic Chiropractic, June 5, 1995,
Vol. 13, No. 12, p. 28.
from
Target Information Management, Inc,
2003, vol. 287 |