Cervical Spine Active Range of Motion / Movement | Clinical Physio Premium

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This video takes you through how to test Active Range of Movement at the Cervical Spine (Neck); linking in how to do the tests, key traits and common pathologies, and what pain with different movements actually mean!

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What an amazing material ! Speciffic and very explicit information ! Very greatfull for this ! Your team has made my Sport Rehab student life much much so much easier! Thank you!

bogdandima
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This is so helpful. Love the way you explain in a very organised fashion and well controlled speed. Thanks!

mlemay
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Hi
We have to eyeball the Range in exam or should we use goniometer
Plz advise

thinkpositive
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Thank you very much for your valuable videos... Very helpful ..

chandukoyi
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doing bachelor's in physiotheraphy from India. Here, physiotheraphy as a career n job is evolving. Also, the kind of education we get at universities is not that clinical than it was suppose to be. Most educators aren't clinicians and vica versa. Though practicals are taught. At the end we learn all through mostly alone throuhhThose are not the premium level, the clinical level rthey way toutou shown. Thanks for help.

physiotubex
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Brilliant and thoroughly explained! this will help a lot with my practical examination, thank you !

amirahosnyibrahim
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Hello!
At 12:45 you're talking about the closing of the facet joints. For rotation of the cervical spine, doesn't the contralateral facet joint actually slide forwards and anteriorly, thus "opening" the facet joint and not closing it as said in the video?

nawmurr
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That was really helpful thankyou. I had a head on collision at high speed 20yrs ago, felt like my neck turned into a giraffe, chin hit my chest and bruised it... lots degeneration, stenosis, disc bulge now, some cord flattening. I noticed with your extension in the upper cervical demo, if I even very slightly tuck my chin backwards I get a really wierd feeling at the base of the skull, its like a dull thick pulling pressure sensation that goes all the way along the crown and to bridge of nose. Tiny movements make cracking and popping, but MRI didn't show anything upper cervical until until C3 onwards. What would be causing that sensation? Always have a pressure feeling in my head. Thank you so much for sharing.

Achala
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Thanks for the video. When I do flexion ( head forward to chest) Head shakes throughout ROM. Full ROM and no pain but feels unstable. My Doctor is at a loss. Was in accident 2 months back. Had head and upper neck ache for 3 weeks. MRI and CT laying down were clean. Any advice as to what I should be looking into?

MSV
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Really helpfull explanation easily understandable 👍

ishrathmoqbool
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This would be a great video but mispronunciation of cervical is so distracting and reduces its effectiveness.

ccox