Aa
Aa
A
A
A
Close
Avatar universal

pain in the back of the neck

I have had neck pain for about 8 wks. It hurts when i turn my head to the right and my right ear has been aching at times. I am experiencing head aches too, although not all the time.The pain is directly to the side of my spine just on the hair line. I am female aged 45 and fairly fit. Changing my pillows to support pillows has not helped. I have never suffered with this before. the more it goes on the more i worry it might be cancer, but i realise there are probably many other things that can cause this.
6 Responses
Sort by: Helpful Oldest Newest
Avatar universal
First of all, keep in mind that I am unable to diagnose you because I am unable to examine you, this forum is for educational purposes.      
    The symptoms that you describe are consistent with occipital neuralgia.  This is non-specific for the cause (common causes include old neck injury(whiplash, etc), vestibular problems, cervical disc disease, etc), but results in the pinching of a nerve that supplies cutaneous innervation of the occiptial region (supplies nerve supply to the skin over the back of the head). This nerve is called the greater occipital nerve, and is a common tender point in patients with necks problems and headaches.  This nerve is part of the input into the system that triggers headaches (most often in migraine headache prone people, but also in others).   First I would recommend an MRI of the cervical spine to evaluate for a structural cause (cervical disc disease, compression fracture, etc).  Then I would recommend neck physical therapy and a headache preventative medication such as tizanidine (Zanaflex) elavil, or topamax.  If your symptoms do not respond to this, than trigger point injections into the greater occipital nerve can provide some temporary relief (can be provided by a neurologist that specializes in headache).
I hope this has been helpful.
Helpful - 0
Avatar universal
feel free to email me if you want... it's been a while since your post..... sorry.... i was away. ***@****
Helpful - 0
Avatar universal
Mike,
I have been following this board for a while and notice you post a lot. Need some help with my problem and would appreciate your input. How did you determine your problem was muscular? Background, in 2003 I had neck, back and rib pain. After months of this finally had MRI, showed herniated cervical disk. Had PT for about three to four weeks, during one session the PT pushed on spine thorsic area and pain in back was gone. I think the reason it took so long to find pain was because I had arthritis  (not sure of the medical terminology) in ribs all on my right side which was causing pain in front and back and everywhere on my right side. Fast forward. I was rearended in car accident in November of 2006 and have been in constant pain since all on my left side this time. The newest MRI shows mild left side nerve pinched at C6-7. My problem is left side pain in upper back, varies from burning pain (feels like sunburn) to aching, to down right hurting along with left arm problems from elbow down, wrist and left index finger. I just had my second cervical epidural yesterday - first one I felt small relief in back and some relief in left arm but when pain returned, left arm  is worse than before. I also have been trying trigger point massages as well as exercising back muscles. Nothing seems to help. Would like you input.
Helpful - 0
Avatar universal
it does not sound like cancer. it is more than likely from muscular issues in the neck or bony issues. See a spine specialist (a family md most probably will not order an MRI but refer you to a spine MD or orthopedist for such). I agree you should have an MRI. IF nothing shows up, it's probably muscular.
Helpful - 0
Avatar universal
You need a C-SPINE MRI from your family doctor.   He can send you in the right direction after that. Lingering pain in that area is nothing to mess with I have had that for over a year now.   Had I addressed the problem early on I might have had more options other then just surgury.   Most people wait until few options are left.  Address the problem early with your family doc.

Helpful - 0
Avatar universal
mY MOTHER HAS HAD PROBLEMS FAR SEVERAL MONTHS NOW BEEN TO NEUROLOGIST,HAD A MRI .  Her problems are when she turns her head to the right it hurts and then she has visual migraines that last about 30 minutes.  She went and had some series of shots in her back last week and that seemed to help for a couple of days.  Today she had a terrible bout as she did yesterday also.  She is at her wit's end does she need to go to a headache specialist please help
Helpful - 0

You are reading content posted in the Neurology Forum

Popular Resources
Find out how beta-blocker eye drops show promising results for acute migraine relief.
In this special Missouri Medicine report, doctors examine advances in diagnosis and treatment of this devastating and costly neurodegenerative disease.
Here are 12 simple – and fun! – ways to boost your brainpower.
Discover some of the causes of dizziness and how to treat it.
Discover the common causes of headaches and how to treat headache pain.
Two of the largest studies on Alzheimer’s have yielded new clues about the disease