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Podcast Head/Neck Podcast 5 Mar 2025

Tingling, Weakness & Pain? Let’s Talk Cervical Radiculopathy

Cervical Radiculopathy

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Content

00:00 Intro

00:52 What is Cervical Radiculopathy?

04:05 Cervical vs Lumbar Disc Herniation

05:29 Clearer Terminology needed

07:15 Prevalence and Risk Factors

08:26 Most useful Tests

10:33 Crucial History Findings

11:56 Dermatomal/myotomal examination

13:13 Treatment Options

18:27 Manipulations? Mobilizations?

21:29 Motor Control Training

24:55 Directional Preference in the Cervical Spine?

26:03 Higher Level Exercises

27:01 Self-Management

28:52 Diagnostic Mistakes to Avoid

31:30 Red Flags and Imaging

33:15 Lessons to learn from LRS

34:25 Future Research Directions

37:45 Top Tips

39:27 Outro & Contact Info

Guest

Erik thoomes

Dr. Erik Thoomes

Dr. Erik Thoomes is a leading musculoskeletal clinician, educator, and researcher with a keen focus on neck pain, cervical radiculopathy, and related spinal conditions. Erik’s extensive research and publications have helped shape evidence-based practice in both diagnosis and conservative management strategies of neck pain disorders.

Description

In Episode 74 of the Physiotutors podcast, host Kai is joined by Dr. Erik Thoomes, an expert in musculoskeletal conditions, particularly cervical radiculopathy. Dr. Thoomes provides an in-depth discussion on cervical radiculopathy, distinguishing it from nonspecific neck pain. He explains that cervical radiculopathy involves radiating arm pain due to nerve root irritation or compression, often caused by disc herniation or spondylotic changes, contrasting it with lumbar radiculopathy.

The episode emphasizes the importance of thorough patient history in diagnosis and suggests a cluster of tests including Spurling’s test and neural tension tests to improve diagnostic accuracy. Dr. Thoomes also challenges the reliability of traditional dermatomes and myotomes, advocating for individualized assessment and treatment strategies.

The conversation covers various treatment options, highlighting the ineffectiveness of cervical traction and suggesting neurodynamic mobilization, spinal manipulative therapy, and targeted exercises. Dr. Thoomes advises adapting management strategies from acute to chronic stages and stresses the role of patient education and self-management. The episode also touches on the limited role of imaging unless necessary and discusses the importance of differentiating cervical radiculopathy from other conditions.

Dr. Thoomes calls for more research in areas like epidemiological data and neurodynamic mobilization and shares clinical gems for effective management. The episode concludes with an emphasis on individualized patient care and encourages questions and further discussion from listeners.

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