I went to a chiropractor who manipulated my neck with a quick motion as you describe. This helped somewhat, but not permanently, and I was always concerned that it would do additional damage. I have since found a chiropractor who uses only comfortable gentle techniques, no quick motions; techniques include using an "adjuster" up and down the spine at specific targeted locations, electrostimulation, ultrasound, and "blocking" the spine in particular positions for a short time. The first step was a thorough exam, and all the changes have been in small steps, but over a period of weeks and months the process has been extremely effective at apparently permanently curing an assorted variety of health problems. I'd suggest, if possible, find a chiropractor with a holistic philosophy that uses these sorts of techniques and no fast motion techniques.
Thank you so much for the informative reply. It wasn't until recently that I even thought my neck misalignment could be causing my fatigue/cognition problems. As far as the cervical spine chiro -- I believe they have imaging systems in their office that they use before they begin treatment. I'd imagine going to a spine doctor is optimal, but all they would recommend would be PT, possible medication and lastly surgery. But, getting their diagnosis would probably be helpful with further treatments holistically.
Thanks again!
I forgot to mention that SPECT imaging (Single-photon emission computed tomography) would be the ultimate way to determine blood flow in the brain and is a very clinically useful way to look at brain function.
Of course, this would be an option to be considered if everything else fails.
Just do a search for this online, if you're not familiar with SPECT.
Dr. Amen's website has a lot of information on this, should you be interested in more details.
By suggesting this, I'm not endorsing anything that has to do with services offered in his website. My suggestion is strictly for educational purposes.
Best wishes!
Niko
Abnormalities in the upper cervical spine ,the C1 (Atlas) and C2(Axis) and C3 with the nerves going upward towards the top of the head- in light of your cervical misalignment from the x-ray- can cause nerve irritation, with symptoms ranging from cervicogenic tension, neck pain, dizziness to mental fog/impaired concentration, upon compression.
Middle to lower cervical spine :C4-C6 ,since the nerves from there travel to upper back, shoulders, arms, hands and fingers, are associated -upon compression- with pain and weakness in those areas.
We have to also consider that the neck being the body's connection to the head, it contains blood supply vessels going to the head, so any stretching or compression of these would result in impaired blood supply, thus less oxygen supply to the head
The consequences are obvious: Inability to concentrate, impaired memory,
mental fog, fatigue etc.
I'm not familiar with the details of Cervical Spine Chiropractic procedures, however, personally I would still insist on a Cervical Spine MRI, to find out
more about the nature of this abnormality, before proceeding with the aforementioned treatment.
This is just my own opinion and it is not intended as a substitute for medical advice.
I hope this helps establish the correlation in question.
Cheers and best wishes!
Niko
Thank you for your input.
It could very well be a herniation but I don't see the coorelation between a disc herniation and fatigue/brain fog. What my head x-ray did show was that my skull is sitting crooked on my atlas(C1).
I'm in the process of scheduling a session with a Cervical Spine Chiropractor, they specialize in the cervical area of the spine and can image/treat it much differently than a generalized chiro. Apparently many people with my symptoms including the fatigue have found resolution in this modality of treatment.
Please voice your opinion as I am not totally familiar with their techniques.
Thanks again.
Sounds like cervical disc herniation.
The discs are very close to the spinal cord and the nerves.
Any herniation may be accompanied by any of the symptoms you described, as the discs may push outward to the back and to the sides against the nerves, causing local pain and also may travel to the arms and fingers causing some tingling or weakness. Release of inflammatory chemicals also contribute to some symptoms and should stress levels stay elevated, the inflammatory response stays engaged longer than necessary.
Often the herniation subsides/shrinks on its own and this would explain the fingers' weakness remission.
You need a cervical MRI that would rule cervical disc herniation out or verify it and get it treated properly.
This is not intended as a substitute for medical advice
Hope this helps.
Niko