Cervical Spine Structure and Function
The average human head weighs around _ lbs in neutral posture
10-12
Composite cervical motion: Total flex/ext = Total rotation = Total LF =
126 SD 22, 144 SD 23, 87 SD 22
how many A-O joints
2
If you lean 15o forward, the head weight is ~ _ lbs
27
how many A-A joints
3
Most cervical spines show evidence of disc degeneration > age
40
With a 30-degree forward, it's ~ _ lbs
40
cervical lateral flexion one way
42
Greater degenerative evidence > age
50
cervical flexion and extension one way
63
cervical rotation one way
72
AKA the head spinning joint
A-A
rotation (~50% of total cervical rotation, ~45o to each side)
A-A
1 pivot joint (dens of C2 with the anterior arch of C1 )
A-A joints
2 plane synovial lateral joints (biconvex superior and inferior zygapophyseal facets C1 -C2 )
A-A joints
The only convex-concave relationship in the spine where the rule holds true
A-O
nodding (~15o flex/ext) with very small amount of lateral flexion (~3o ) and coupled rotation (no pure rotation)
A-O
~15o flex/ext, no true rotation, negligible side bending of occiput on C1
A-O
Convex occipital condyles on concave superior facets of C1
A-O joints
Primarily in horizontal plane
A-O joints
Synovial joints with intra-articular meniscoids
A-O joints
atlas is the
C1
2 large lateral masses with superior (concave) and inferior (sl convex) facets
C1 (atlas)
Facet on internal surface of anterior arch for the dens of C2
C1 (atlas)
Function is to cradle occiput and transmit force down
C1 (atlas)
Shaped like a ring (no vertebral body or spinous process) but wide transverse process
C1 (atlas)
Transverse foramen for vertebral artery (VA)
C1 (atlas)
innervation of The A-O and A-A by
C1 and C2 ventral rami
Based on your understanding of normal arthrokinematics of the cervical spine, which of the following motion segments is MOST likely responsible for producing the rotation seen in this picture?
C1-2
axis is the
C2
Anterior portion of body extends superiorly (dens)
C2 (axis)
Dens articulates with C1 (alar and transverse ligaments)
C2 (axis)
Function is to transmit load of occiput and C1 to lower cx spine and provide rotation of occiput and C1
C2 (axis)
Superior and inferior zygapophyseal facets Bifid spinous process (SP) Transverse foramen for vertebral artery (VA)
C2 (axis)
Lower cervical (Cx) spine is the
C2/3 to C6/7
Disc degeneration most frequently seen at _ and _ levels
C5-6, C6-7
cervical vertebra prominens
C7
R lateral flexion arthrokinematics
R lateral tilt and glide, R facet downslide, L upslide of facet
Cervical plexus lies under _ muscle at C1-4 emerging from posterior border of SCM
SCM
Based on your understanding of normal structure and function of the cervical spine, excessive laxity in the transverse ligament/cruciform ligament complex would MOST likely be associated with which of the following?
Spinal cord compression
• Synovial joints with fibroadipose meniscoids • Large, lax joint capsules • Facets lie between horizontal/transverse and frontal planes (45 degfrom horizontal plane)
Zygapophyseal (facet) Joints C2/3 to C6/7
Uncovertebral degeneration and ostophytic formation with
aging
A-A limited by opposite _ ligament
alar
Attach skull to C2
alar ligament
Becomes taut in craniovertebral flexion and rotation and side bending (contralateral)
alar ligament
Can become compromised (e.g. trauma, RA, Down syndrome)
alar ligament
Limits upper cx flexion and stabilizes C1 and C2 in rotation
alar ligament
Paired ligaments from posterior dens of C2 to medial side of occipital condyles
alar ligament
stop you from rotating to far
alar ligament
A-O Nod/flexion =
anterior roll and posterior glide
Flexion arthrokinematics
anterior tilt and glide, upslide of inferior facet
No joint
atlanto-axial joint (A-A)
Yes joint
atlanto-occipital joint (A-O)
C1 is the
atlas
C2 is the
axis
innervation C2
back of neck
innervation C1-2
beanie
From C3-4 through C7 -T1 a combination of _ above and below the joint around the articular pillars
cervical dorsal rami
A-A rotation: _ facet glides forward and slightly down
contralateral
biconvex means
convex on convex
A-A _ on _
convex, convex
Lateral flexion and rotation to the same side
coupling pattern C2/3 to C6/7
From C1 or C2 to occiput: Anterior A-O and A-A membranes (extension of ALL) limits
extension
From C1 or C2 to occiput: Posterior A-O and A-A membranes (extension of lig flavum) limits
flexion
From C1 or C2 to occiput: Tectorial membrane (extension of PLL) limits
flexion
ligamentum nuchae function to resist _ and resting flexion moment
flexion
Lower cervical spine (C2/3-C6/7) Most motion: Least motion:
flexion and extension, lateral flexion
Aging affects posture: Normal head posture progresses toward _ position accentuated by changes in thoracic kyphosis which _ with age Ability to _ the head declines with age
forward, increases, retract
Uncinate processes enlarge from age 9-14, provide _ and limit lateral flexion
frontal plane stability
General aging changes to the spine apply (e.g., _ in the density and stability of collagen so connective tissue more vulnerable to breakage , _ elasticity, _ proteoglycans content, disc degeneration etc.)
increase, decreased, decreased
A-A rotation _ facet glides back and slightly down
ipsilateral
rotation arthrokinematics
ipsilateral downslide, contralateral upslide
innervation C3
lateral neck
Attached to skull at external occipital protuberance and foramen magnum to SP of C7
ligamentum nuchae
Site of muscle attachments
ligamentum nuchae
Facets lie between horizontal and frontal planes (45o from horizontal plane)
lower cervical spine
SP are bifid: The length of the SP decreases from C2 to C4 and then increases from C4to C7 Transverse foramen for VA Vertebral foramen is large and triangular for the large spinal cord Groove for spinal nerve
lower cervical spine
From C1 or C2 to occiput each could limit lateral flexion and/or rotation but _ will likely limit this first
muscle tension
Convex occipital condyles to articulate with concave facets of C1
occiput
Craniovertebral (upper cervical spine) includes
occiput, C1 (atlas), C2 (axis)
extension arthrokinematics
posterior tilt and glide, downslide of inferior facet
Contralaterally reduced vertebral artery blood flow and velocity at maximum cervical _
rotation
cervical plexus lies on _ and _
scalenes, levator scapulae
Consider greater and lesser occipital nerve piercing _ and their relationship to suboccipital muscles Sub-occipital nerve and it's relationship to suboccipital muscles
semispinalis capitis
In general, joint surfaces of the occiput, C1 and C2 provide only minimal bony stability which means that ligamentous and muscle support are important for
stabilization
Also has longitudinal bands, sometimes called atlantal cruciform ligament
transverse ligament
Can become compromised with certain diseases (e.g. RA, Down syndrome)
transverse ligament
Limits upper cx flexion and allows C2 to pivot (rotation)
transverse ligament
Stretches across ring of C1
transverse ligament
Very strong (dens usually fractures before it tears)
transverse ligament
critical for upper cx spine stability (holds dens to C1 and prevents anterior translation C1/2)
transverse ligament
Clinical tests of cervical ligamentous integrity
transverse ligament, alar ligament
cervical vertebrae have these processes
uncinate
process that gets bigger as you age
uncinate
Site of degeneration leading to foraminal stenosis
uncinate processes
Uncovertebral joints or "Joints of Luschka"
uncinate processes
At risk of injury during rotational movement of the spine
vertebral artery
Carries oxygenated blood to the cerebellum, brainstem, and occipital lobes
vertebral artery
Contributes ~ 11% of cerebral blood flow
vertebral artery