The normal curvature of the cervical spine is often straightened or even reversed in muscle strain / sprain of the neck region. Straightening of the lordosis is when the spine does not have it's normal slight curvature We can't code it as 737.20.
Cervical lordosis is a curvature of the neck from the sagittal or side view. There should be cervical lordosis. I am wondering if maybe you meant a loss of cervical lordosis. A loss of cervical lordosis is when the neck has straightened and has lost the normal natural curvature.
Straightening of cervical lordosis means that the curvature in your neck is straight instead of in a half moon curvature pattern. This is an issue that can create many symptoms, as well as speed up the process of degeneration of your neck. It can absolutely cause sensitivity in the arms or other parts of your body.
Thank you for reaching out. Loss of cervical curve or lordosis can become a serious problem. Obviously you are experiencing some of the issues currently with the neck and shoulder pain. It also puts you at higher risk of disc herniation and increased rate of spinal degeneration.
The 2022 edition of ICD-10-CM M43. 8X6 became effective on October 1, 2021. This is the American ICD-10-CM version of M43. 8X6 - other international versions of ICD-10 M43.
Other specified dorsopathies, cervical region The 2022 edition of ICD-10-CM M53. 82 became effective on October 1, 2021.
ICD-10-CM Code for Lordosis, unspecified, lumbar region M40. 56.
Postural lordosis, lumbar region M40. 46 is a billable/specific ICD-10-CM code that can be used to indicate a diagnosis for reimbursement purposes. The 2022 edition of ICD-10-CM M40. 46 became effective on October 1, 2021.
Straightening of the cervical spine means that you have lost the good curve or the lordosis of the cervical spine. As far as it being caused by muscle spasms, I don't know if you were in a car accident or something that would have caused the muscles to be in spasm. It does not mean that you have scoliosis.
Cervical lordosis is when your spine in the neck region doesn't curve as it normally should. This can mean: There's too much of a curve. The curve is running in the wrong direction, also called reverse cervical lordosis. The curve has moved to the right.
One of the more common causes of straightening of the normal cervical lordosis are car accidents in which the neck ligaments are damaged.
Lordosis (also known as swayback) is when the lower back, above the buttocks, curves inward too much, causing the child's abdomen to protrude and buttocks to stick out. Kyphosis is when the upper spine curves too far outward, forming a hump on the upper back.
ICD-10-CM Code for Spondylosis without myelopathy or radiculopathy, cervical region M47. 812.
Lordosis is the inward curve of the lumbar spine (just above the buttocks). A small degree of lordosis is normal. Too much curving is called swayback.
16.
ICD-10-CM Code for Scoliosis, unspecified M41. 9.
89 - Other specified diseases of spinal cord.
What Is Myelopathy? Myelopathy is an injury to the spinal cord caused by severe compression that may be a result of spinal stenosis, disc degeneration, disc herniation, autoimmune disorders or other trauma.
Dorsopathy – a group of diseases of the spine and paravertebral tissues. The main causes of this disease is the increased load on the spine, impaired nutrition and blood supply to the vertebrae and tissues, as well as shocks, falls from a height on the spine or legs and other injuries.
Disease of spinal cord, unspecified G95. 9 is a billable/specific ICD-10-CM code that can be used to indicate a diagnosis for reimbursement purposes. The 2022 edition of ICD-10-CM G95. 9 became effective on October 1, 2021.
The best treatment method for restoring the cervical lordosis and treating “text neck” is a corrective care chiropractic technique, such as CLEAR, CBP, or Pettibon. Chiropractors who specialize in structural corrective care take x-rays to measure the alignment of the spine and utilize specialized methods to achieve results. They’ll then follow up with additional x-rays and/or posture pictures to demonstrate that a correction was achieved. There is no substitute for results!
As you lose the good curve in your neck, the first thing you might notice is tense and aching muscles in the neck and shoulders.
Tense and Aching Muscles. As the curve in the neck is lost, the pressure on the discs increases, along with the tension on the spinal cord. The muscles in the back of the neck and shoulders become stretched and tight, having to work harder to support the weight of the head. Imagine carrying a heavy bag of groceries out in front ...
When the shape of the neck changes, the way the segments move also changes. The discs end up bearing more and more of the weight of the head.
According to research, bending the head forward by as little as 15 degrees more than doubles the apparent weight of the head, making the muscles work twice as hard. Bending the head forward 45 degrees (as most people do when they are checking their phone) increases the weight of the head by about four times as much!
This is called disc herniation and is much more serious than a protruding disc. Oftentimes, surgery is the only way to treat a disc that has suffered an annular tear leading to a herniation. My MRI or X-ray Says I Have a Loss of Cervical Lordosis or a Problem with My Intervertebral Discs.
For this reason, it’s usually much easier to restore the cervical lordosis in a younger individual, who hasn’t lived with poor posture for years. The discs in your spine rely upon motion to stay healthy.
There are several ways that a person can lose the natural curve (also called lordosis) of the neck. Here are a couple of the most common reasons it occurs:
Each of the cervical vertebrae has loops of bone unique to these vertebrae. The loops provide safe passage for the vertebral arteries, which supply blood to the brain. You can probably see where this is going. Patients in the study who were experiencing straight neck were not getting as much blood flow to the head.
This can help your neck to regain its natural curve, can restore cervical blood flow, and may even assist proper posture in feeling more natural.
Poor posture takes longer to have the same effects as an accident, but it can eventually cause the neck bones to straighten. Sitting at a desk all day for work is one of the most significant issues that developed lands are facing when it comes to posture. The biggest neck issue is that monitors are often positioned too low, which results in a forward head position all day long. It’s basically the recipe for the military neck. The other issue is the obsession people have with checking their phone 50-100 times per day. Craning the neck at a 60-degree angle to look down a phone you just pulled out of your pocket increases the pressure on the neck by 5-6 times, and it can also lead to a straightening of the vertebrae.
You can probably imagine the many health problems that may occur when the neck loses its natural curvature or, perhaps worse; you develop a reverse curve in the neck. As we’ve already noted, it throws off the balance of the head, so that means shifts in the spine and soft tissue to correct that problem.
When the neck becomes misaligned, or the surrounding soft tissue is damaged, the ability to balance the head properly is thrown off. The result is that more changes take place in the vertebrae and surrounding soft tissue to stabilize the head. This can result in a realignment of the vertebrae until they are in a straight line rather than ...
With one or more of those curves eliminated, the spine is now under more than the usual strain, from merely carrying around the average size 10 to 12-pound head all day. But it gets worse. Research published in the Medical Science Monitor shows that straighten of the cervical spine disrupts the biomechanics of the body.