RA Neck Symptoms
Most people with cervical spine problems from RA don’t have any symptoms. In fact, research from a 2018 Mexican study finds that asymptomatic cervical instability is quite common in people with RA. The majority of patients in this study were asymptomatic for neck pain and other cervical spine symptoms despite advanced RA and severe disease activity.
However, RA neck involvement can cause symptoms. The most prominent are pain and headache, but it can also cause several other symptoms as well.
Neck Pain
Neck pain is the most common symptom of RA of the neck. Its severity varies. You may experience a dull or throbbing ache in the back of your neck and around the base of your skull. Joint stiffness and swelling might make it harder to comfortably move your head.
The neck pain of RA is different from that of a neck injury. With an injury, you may experience stiffness and pain that improves over days and weeks. However, RA neck pain gets worse if you don’t get appropriate treatment. Even if your symptoms improve, the inflammation, pain, swelling, and stiffness may eventually return.
Headache
You may also experience headaches when RA affects your neck. Pain can be due to inflamed or irritated spinal nerves on each side of the vertebrae that control sensation in the upper back. This is known as a cervicogenic headache.
The superficial nerves that control the sensation of the scalp can become irritated or inflamed, leading to occipital neuralgia. And inflammation often contributes to generalized head pain.
Additional Symptoms and Complications
While it’s not common, RA in the neck may cause serious problems if inflammation or spine instability leads to compression in nearby structures such as the spinal cord, nerve roots, and vertebral arteries.
Causes
In RA, chronic, long-term inflammation damages the synovial joints. Synovial joints are the movable joints of the body.
When RA damages the neck’s synovial joints, the cervical spine can become unstable. While there are many synovial joints in the cervical spine, RA tends to attack the one between the atlas and the axis, the first and second bones of the spine. The atlas is responsible for supporting the head’s weight, while the axis helps move the neck.
Treatment
The use of newer drug treatments has led to a drop in the number of people whose RA impacts the neck, but medication can’t reverse joint damage that’s already occurred. It’s likely to progress if you’re untreated or under-treated, which could cause permanent joint damage and considerable disability.
The drugs that help treat RA may improve your overall inflammation from RA, as well as your neck symptoms. Other therapies, such as physical therapy and surgery, are specifically tailored to treat your neck issues.
Medication
Over-the-counter medications and prescriptions may help stop inflammation, reduce pain, and slow down disease progression caused by RA. For example, non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) such as Advil (ibuprofen) and Aleve (naproxen sodium) help treat mild to moderate pain and reduce inflammation.
When these medications don’t provide relief, your healthcare provider may prescribe a stronger anti-inflammatory or a corticosteroid. However, the American College of Rheumatology recommends in their treatment guidelines that corticosteroids should be avoided as much as possible, as they can cause side effects like bone loss, drug-induced diabetes, and glaucoma if used continuously.
Your treatment plan will likely include:
Depending on your case and the medications you are taking, your healthcare provider may recommend using one of these alone or in combination with other treatments.
Alternative Therapies
Inactivity tends to make RA joint pain worse, so your healthcare provider will likely recommend light exercise such as yoga to reduce stiffness and improve your strength and flexibility. You can focus on exercises for the neck or the whole body.
It’s always a good idea to start slow and gradually increase the intensity. Always check with your rheumatologist and physical therapist before beginning any neck exercises. Some exercises are dangerous for people with cervical instability from RA. And typically, it is not recommended to exercise an actively inflamed joint because there’s an increased risk of injury.
Several other therapies target the neck directly. For example, your healthcare provider may recommend massage therapy to reduce pain and stiffness in the joints of your neck, or physical therapy to improve range of motion.
Therapeutic neck pillows can help provide neck and head support while you sleep. Keeping your neck properly aligned can help you wake up with less pain and stiffness.
Hot and cold therapies are also helpful for reducing inflammation, swelling, stiffness, and pain. Use a hot or cold compress for 10 minutes at a time, alternating between the two throughout the day.
Surgery
Your healthcare provider may suggest cervical spine surgery if you have severe, irreversible joint damage or signs of nerve compression or spinal cord compression.
Surgery may be helpful in re-stabilizing the first and second vertebrae and reducing pressure from spinal cord compression. Surgery can also remove any bony spurs (bony growth) in the neck, which are common in RA.
A Word From Verywell
You should see your healthcare provider if you experience neck pain that starts to affect your daily life and doesn’t respond to treatment, especially if you have already been diagnosed with RA. You especially shouldn’t put off talking to your healthcare provider if your neck pain is accompanied by numbness, tingling, pain that radiates into your arm, and/or headaches.
A proper diagnosis can reduce pain and inflammation, lower the potential for joint damage and disability, and improve your quality of life.
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