Spine Instability / Hypermobility 

Best Spine Treatment Without Surgery at Capri Spine

Spinal Hypermobility / Instability

Spine has a limited amount of motion in four planes, incase there is a pathological increase in this or the position of the vertebra in respect to superior and inferior vertebra changes it is called as hypermobility

Stretched ligaments result in a condition called hypermobility in which the joints lose their natural springy end play. To someone skilled at feeling joint motion, like a chiropractor, this loss of springiness can be detected. As the ligaments become more lax, the small muscles that connect one vertebra to the next become tight. They have to work harder to make up for the loss of stability due to the lax ligaments. This makes your neck/low back feel tight.

Hypermobility can be congenital (i.e., hereditary) or acquired. Teenagers/ adolescents tend to have hypermobile spinal joints. This is normal and will usually resolve as the skeleton and supporting tissues finish growing. Clinical evidence suggests that hypermobile spinal joints become arthritic at a faster rate than normal joints. Hypermobility can also result from injuries such as whiplash, or it can be self-inflicted. Some popping in the back or neck occurs spontaneously with movement and may be normal.

TREATMENT

Physiotherapists treat hypermobility with strengthening exercises. If the ligaments are weak and the muscles have to work harder, they will be less tense if they are stronger. Strong muscles don’t have to work as hard as weak muscles, so there is less tension. Hypermobility is also treated with spinal adjustments, a form of manipulation. Although this would seem to be contradictory, sometimes hypermobility can be a compensation for restricted or fixated joints elsewhere in the spine. The adjustments are given only to these joints, not the hypermobile ones.

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