Adler Giersch Attorneys Getting Started FAQ | Client Login

 

Bookmark
ur3.gif

The Advocate Archives > Cervical Spine Injury and Balance Control

Cervical Spine Injury and Balance Control

By Janet Thoman, Attorney at Law

Following traumatic injury, some patients report dizziness or balance problems. These complaints can be caused by many factors. Several different sensory systems affect the regulation of balance including the visual, vestibular and peripheral somatosensory systems. A 2007 study points to cervical spine injury as a common cause of balance disturbance or postural control deficits following trauma.

Researchers at the University of Ulm, Germany studied 40 patients with acute grade II whiplash injuries and 40 controls. Using tetra-ataxiametric posturography, a device that measures balance control, the researchers tested the whiplash patients and controls. Subjects with acute whiplash were found to have significantly poorer results than the healthy controls. Two months later, the subjects were retested. There was no significant difference in the result of the control group. However, significant changes were noted in the whiplash subjects. Of the 40 subjects, 17 reported no change in their pain intensity, 21 reported improvement in pain and 2 had deteriorated. The subjects who had improved showed significant improvement in balance control as compared to the other 19.

Interestingly, at initial testing, only 4 of the 40 whiplash patients reported any dizziness or balance disturbance despite objective evidence of balance impairment. At the two-month follow-up, no patients reported these symptoms. In whiplash patients, the peripheral somatosensory system is assumed to be impaired by damage to the proprioceptors in the neck.1  Since numerous systems are involved in balance control, the authors surmise that postural disturbances only become symptomatic when several subsystems are impaired at the same time.

When an acute whiplash patient reports dizziness or balance problems, this study suggests the problem may be related, at least in part, to the neck injury. However, since few subjects with only whiplash actually reported these symptoms, health care providers should be mindful of the possibility that other subsystems may be causing dizziness or vertigo, or that there can be a vestibular injury to the inner ear.

When a person is injured in a collision or other traumatic event, the insurance companies involved readily challenge the cause of symptoms such as dizziness and vertigo. Experienced counsel with the appropriate knowledge on trauma and injury can assist the victim of injury and the health care provider in establishing the cause of a condition and, therefore, secure coverage and reasonable compensation for the condition.

 

 

 

 

1. Dehner, C, Heym B, Maier D, Sander S, et al. Postural control deficit in actue QTF grade II whiplash injuries. Gait & Posture 2008;28:113-119.


? Do you have more questions this page did not answer?
email Email page to yourself or a friend email Print This Page Bookmark Add to any service

Seattle   Bellevue   Everett   Kent

333 Taylor Avenue North | Seattle WA 98109
Tel: 206.682.0300 | Fax: 206.224.0102 | Info@adlergiersch.com

Northwest's Personal Injury Attorneys | Personal Injury Practice Areas | PI Resources & Articles | Site Map | Recovery Reply Form | Specialties: Brain Injury | Spinal Cord Injury | Automobile Accidents | Link to Us

The Northwest's premiere personal injury law firm, Adler Giersch personal injury law offices are located in Seattle, Bellevue, Everett and Kent providing personal injury legal representation ranging from brain injury to wrongful death, spinal injuries to auto accidents.

©2012 Adler Giersch . PS. All Rights Reserved. Copyright/Legal Disclaimer | Contact | 206.682.0300







Traumatic Brain Injury Book

“After watching two personal injury attorneys (on jury duty) for two whole days, I just want you to know there is not anyone better than you out there.”

Sonya M. Browder