I was in contact with an eminent neurologist today, we had not previously communicated nor had any knowledge of each other. He was very generous with his time and expertise but it was his self confessed pragmatism that formed a thought that I should like to share here.
It appears that a "dysfunctional" cervical spine when manipulated properly can bring relief to many people who have been diagnosed with primary headache disorders including cluster headaches. A little research informed me that this notion has been aired on this site before with widely varying responses from members; including this from cbolony on13th March 2003 2.17pm (Re: Upper neck misalignments and the brainstem « Reply #8.
"I get the same CH every year 4 weeks of 3-4 ch aday 8-10 kip then they start to come down 1-2 lower kips until they just go away after about 8 weeks. I get 3-4 cycles a year been that way since 1996.How can a Upper neck misalignments do that to me are you fucking kidding me"
So not a new contender for consideration.
But what if a dodgy neck can cause cluster headaches, migraine, Hemicrania Continua etc.?
But a cause? No! One of a number of causes perhaps.
I think a number of factors have to come into play (probably very many). The occipital or trigeminal nerves could be impacted on away from the hypo mobile cervical spine but present the sufferer with the same symptoms that a damaged facet joint may cause.
But how does the response present as different primary headaches in the same / different people? The answer to that is probably related to why a continuous condition can hurt one moment and not the next and be unbearable the next.
But for the brain to decide if something is going to hurt, where and when then millions if not billions of permutations could come into play. The smell of paint doesn't cause migraine but it could be the last thing in a very long list before the brain decides "ok turn the pain on"
Pain is sometimes referred away from the point of cause by the brain, making it difficult for us to know where the pain is coming from and for a doctor to diagnose. So something that is wrong in the neck is able to manifest itself as pain behind the eye. And a diagnosis is rarely a description of cause but an accepted explanation of symptoms.
No I am not saying a dodgy neck causes cluster headaches but I am saying that it can (with a myriad of complementing factors) lead to a diagnosis of cluster headache. I am no suggesting this as a possibility, it is a well documented fact.
And in many diagnosis of cluster headache the cervical spine may have nothing to with the cause. But there is an irrational leap to say that if someone diagnosed with CH has cervical manipulation and is "cured" then the original diagnosis is wrong, the correct diagnosis being a hypo mobile cervical spine headache. No the correct diagnosis is CH if all the accepted diagnostic protocols are followed.
How many on here accept they have CH but have not had several dozen nerve blocking tests done to ascertain that the pain is not partially generated in the cervical spine? And then had hundreds of negative tests done for other things originally diagnosed as CH but then diagnosed as something else.
If anyone is in any doubt over the vagaries of a certain diagnosis that is accepted by everyone, check out the disagreement that two of the world's most eminent HA experts are having over agreeing a diagnosis classification. I think what the patient wants is to be pain free and not a "pure" diagnosis that is unambiguous and unassailable, no such diagnosis is currently possible in primary HA's.
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