Neck pain is often a temporary problem caused by a strain. However, sometimes neck pain can signal a more serious problem. If your child's neck hurts, he or she may:
Neck pain is usually caused by a strain. A neck strain can be caused by many activities. Your child may have strained the neck from sleeping in an awkward position, painting a ceiling, reading in bed, typing for too long, playing a sport, or other similar activities.
A stiff neck (your child can't bend forward and touch his chin to the chest) can be an early symptom of meningitis. In this case your child will also have a fever.
Serious spinal cord injury can result from diving injuries, trampoline injuries, or other accidents involving the neck. Children who have suffered such an accident should not be moved until a neck brace or spine board has been applied by a rescue squad.
A strained neck isn't serious and usually lasts 1 to 2 weeks.
Give acetaminophen (Tylenol) or ibuprofen (Advil) 4 times a day until your child has gone 24 hours without any pain. This is the most important part of treatment because neck pain causes muscle spasm and thus more pain, and these medicines can stop this cycle.
A heating pad, hot water bottle, or hot shower spray applied to the most painful area for 20 minutes helps to relieve muscle spasm. Do this whenever the pain flares up.
Instead of a pillow at night, your child may prefer a folded towel wrapped around the neck. This collar will keep the head from moving too much during sleep. (You can buy a foam collar at a pharmacy.)
Your child should avoid any neck exercises until he is completely well.
If your child has had more than one neck ache, usually he has an activity or habit that overstresses the neck muscles or bones. Such activities are working with the neck turned or bent backward, carrying heavy objects on the head, carrying heavy objects with one arm (instead of both arms), standing on the head, contact sports, or even friendly wrestling. Avoid these causes.
Also, improve the tone of the neck muscles with 2 or 3 minutes of neck stretching exercises per day. Helpful stretching exercises are touching the chin to each shoulder, touching the ear to the shoulder, and moving the head forward and backward. Don't apply any resistance (counterforce) during the stretching exercises.
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