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What causes a clicking sound in the neck?

By Expert HERWriter September 20, 2009 - 9:58pm
 
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Hi everyone,

I was having lunch today with a good friend of mine and she was telling me how she's been having this really weird clicking sound in her neck that she notices when she turns her head from side to side.

I asked her more about it and she said as far as she can tell she is the only one who can hear it, it came on suddenly, and she does not have pain or numbness or anything.

She spends a lot of time on the computer and I'm voting for poor posture contributing to a neck issue of some type. She said that lately when she kind of rolls her head around she can make her neck kind of do a popping thing. She said she's also under a lot of stress lately so she's wondering if that's part of it.

Does anyone else here have a clicking neck when you turn your head? If so, did it go away on its own or did you need to see a doctor and or a chiropractor? I want to try to help my friend if we can. Thanks everyone! Michelle

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EmpowHER Guest
Anonymous

I too also have a clicking sound in my neck ( only when i turn it from left to right ).There is no pain but it's very annoying, i sometimes get muscle pain around that area. it happened all of a sudden one day, I have had it now for the past 7 months. I am the only one who can hear it, but on the odd occasion others can to.

I have been to the chiro a few times, but still the clicking is there. The chiropractor says that the clicking is due to the other muscles or joints etc around that area over compensating for weaker ones. He believes that it may have been a fall or a jolt in my early childhood that is only now coming to light. I have been getting massages as well as chiro sessions and am now thinking about trying acupuncture.

Fiona

January 24, 2010 - 9:05pm
EmpowHER Guest
Anonymous

yes i have got a ckicking neck no pain same as your friend i recently had a hystrorectomy and i blame the way i was pulled about

December 29, 2009 - 2:59pm
EmpowHER Guest
Anonymous (reply to Anonymous)

I woke up with the "clicking" today. I plan on seeing a chiropractor and see if I can get it taken care of. No pain just annoying "snapping" and others can hear it too.

January 16, 2010 - 9:17pm
(reply to Anonymous)

Please let us know how your visit with the Chiropractor is, and if it helped to relieve the "clicking" in your neck!

January 17, 2010 - 1:22pm

Hi, Michelle,

If your friend's symptom came on suddenly, I wonder if it is the way she's sleeping or a change in a chair at work.

Some people deliberately "pop" their neck by holding their head in their hands and pulling it back and forth. (This always gives me the creeps! It just doesn't sound good!)

Our EmpowHer encyclopedia discusses osteoarthritis, which can cause pain and neck popping (so glad your friend is not in pain). It begins a when the cartilage between the vertebrae begins to age and degenerate, leaving less space between the vertebrae:

https://www.empowher.com/media/reference/osteoarthritis#definition

Here's a chiropractor's explanation of joint deterioration in the neck that can cause this popping or cracking sound:

http://en.allexperts.com/q/Neck-Injury-2727/constant-neck-popping.htm

Here is a summary of osteoarthritis from the Merck Manual; however, it also emphasizes that pain is a symptom for most people:

http://www.merck.com/mmhe/sec05/ch066/ch066a.html

The fact that your friend is under a lot of stress does seem to suggest that it may be connected. When we are stressed, our neck, shoulders and lower back tense up to an amazing degree. An archived story in the New York Times emphasizes what heppens to our muscles when we are feeling stress:

''People in tense, sedentary jobs are particularly prone to a chronic shortening of the muscles,'' said Steven Wolf, associate professor in the department of physical and rehabilitative medicine at Emory University School of Medicine in Atlanta.

''Without even realizing it, they hold their bodies in a tense, alert pose day after day,'' said Mr. Wolf, who is both a physical therapist and a neurophysiologist. ''The buildup continues each day as the tensions repeat. As time goes on, their neck and shoulder muscles get shorter and shorter.''

And this talks about the neck's role:

"Headaches and a stiff neck are the most common symptoms of problems in the tension triangle. Tense muscles in the jaw and neck cause headaches by constricting blood flow to the head and scalp. And a stiff neck is usually the product of tightness in the trapezius muscle; the knot that stiffens the neck may actually be in the shoulders or back.

"These muscle tension symptoms can be caused by emotional turmoil. Fear, anger and frustration register in the body's muscles, and the ones in the tension triangle are quite sensitive to these emotions. Researchers have found, for example, that in the first two or three seconds of emotional upset, the muscles around the eyes, mouth and jaw almost always tighten.

"While emotion-bound muscle tension has long been familiar to clinicians, a new wave of muscle tension problems plagues people in the modern office, caused in part by the computer revolution."

Here's the whole story, which also discusses relieving this stress:

http://www.nytimes.com/1986/09/28/magazine/relieving-stress-mind-over-muscle.html?sec=health

The Mayo Clinic has a video of some neck stretches we can do at our desks (it takes the page a moment to load):

http://www.mayoclinic.com/health/neck-stretches/MM00708

And this may be an excellent reason for your friend to start getting regular massages!

September 22, 2009 - 8:49am
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