If you treat the cervical spine, when will motor control retraining help you achieve better results with neck pain? How can you decide if motor control exercises should be incorporated in your treatment? If motor control retraining is indicated, how can you assess which exercises or cervical cues will specifically help your patient to recover from their for neck pain or referred upper limb pain?
In this video, Titled Musculoskeletal Physiotherapist Caitlin Farmer will take you through assessment of cervical spine motor control, choosing exercises, and progressing your patient's control during functional tasks
Part 1
Assessment of cervical spine motor control
When and how to retrain cervical spine motor control
Motor control in a functional task
Objective tests you can use in combination with cervical cues
Positions to start retraining deep neck flexors
Cueing for cervical multifidus
Deciding whether deep neck flexors or cervical multifidus should be trained
Part 2
Retraining deep neck flexors
Choosing your assessment task
The order of treatment
Surface anatomy and palpation of cervical multifidus
Supine arm lift
Retraining motor patterns
Identifying when you need to treat other areas
Examples of motor control cues for multifidus, deep neck flexors
Identifying the best motor control cue for your patient
Motor control in specific functional tasks e.g. arm lift
Part 3
Motor control in specific functional tasks
Other factors in motor control
Conclusion
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