Clinical Anatomy and Management of Cervical Spine Pain, 1st Edition

Clinical Anatomy and Management of Back Pain Series
Authors :
Lynton Giles & Kevin Singer
The text has been organised into three sections so that the information required by the reader can be easily accessed:*Section 1: introduces the reasoning behind the text as well as an overview of the neuroanatomy of the cervical spine*Section 2: the ...view more
The text has been organised into three sections so that the information required by the reader can be easily accessed:

*Section 1: introduces the reasoning behind the text as well as an
overview of the neuroanatomy of the cervical spine
*Section 2: the clinical anatomy, pathology and biomechanics of the
cervical spine
*Section 3: diagnosis and management

This book is the second volume in the series of three books bringing together a truly multidisciplinary approach to the management of mechanical spinal pain. Each volume provides a thorough review and analysis of clinically relevant information on the basic sciences leading to diagnosis and treatment of mechanical spinal disorders. The books are aimed at both undergraduate and postgraduate students of chiropractic, osteopathy and physiotherapy, as well as all clinicians who seek a comprehensive review of mechanical spinal pain.
Add to Cart
The text has been organised into three sections so that the information required by the reader can be easily accessed:

*Section 1: introduces the reasoning behind the text as well as an
overview of the neuroanatomy of the cervical spine
*Section 2: the clinical anatomy, pathology and biomechanics of the
cervical spine
*Section 3: diagnosis and management

This book is the second volume in the series of three books bringing together a truly multidisciplinary approach to the management of mechanical spinal pain. Each volume provides a thorough review and analysis of clinically relevant information on the basic sciences leading to diagnosis and treatment of mechanical spinal disorders. The books are aimed at both undergraduate and postgraduate students of chiropractic, osteopathy and physiotherapy, as well as all clinicians who seek a comprehensive review of mechanical spinal pain.

Author Information
By Lynton Giles, MSc, PhD, DC, Former Director, Mutidisciplinary Spinal Pain Unit and Honorary Clinical Scientist, Townsville General Hospitial, Queensland, Australia and Kevin Singer, PT, MSc, PhD, Associate Professor, Centre for Musculoskeletal Studies, Department of Surgery, The University of Western Australia, Royal Perth Hospital, Perth, Western Australia