Clin Pain.  2022 Jun;21(1):38-40. 10.35827/cp.2022.21.1.38.

Complication of the Cervical Thrust Technique in a Patient with Athetoid Cerebral Palsy: A Case Report

Affiliations
  • 1Department of Rehabilitation Medicine, Gangnam Severance Hospital, Rehabilitation Institute of Neuromuscular Disease, Yonsei University College of Medicine, Seoul, Korea

Abstract

Manual therapy has been widely practiced in almost all countries worldwide. With its potential complications, there are contraindications for thrust technique. A 56-year-old woman diagnosed with athetoid cerebral palsy visited a local clinic due to a tingling sensation in right hand that lasted for a year and aggravated to both upper extremities. The patient underwent three sessions of cervical manual therapy including thrust technique. No evaluation was performed. The patient immediately felt weakness in all extremities after performing cervical thrust technique. Magnetic resonance imaging showed atlantoaxial instability and cervical myelopathy. Approximately one-third of adults with cerebral palsy reported chronic musculoskeletal pain and they often experience neck pain. Particularly in athetoid cerebral palsy, malalignment or instability of the cervical spine is prevalent and often results in myelopathy. Therefore, musculoskeletal evaluation is necessary to identify cervical instability in case of cervical thrust technique, and it should be performed by relevant medical professionals.

Keyword

Manipulation; Spinal; Spinal cord disease; Cerebral palsy
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