luckily these sort of manoeuvres only very rarely cause any harm (e.g. vertebral artery dissection, delay in diagnosis of rare conditions (tumours etc))
@Flagdue You are correct that the cervical spine is supposed to have a natural lordotic curve, but posture in either extreme of flexion or extension can cause problems contributing to or caused by lack of segmental mobility. Are you familiar with manual therapy?
luckily these sort of manoeuvres only very rarely cause any harm (e.g. vertebral artery dissection, delay in diagnosis of rare conditions (tumours etc))
BigRedNZ1 1 month ago
her neck is better because her purse gets lighter every time she sees him.
BigRedNZ1 1 month ago
@Flagdue You are correct that the cervical spine is supposed to have a natural lordotic curve, but posture in either extreme of flexion or extension can cause problems contributing to or caused by lack of segmental mobility. Are you familiar with manual therapy?
wrxbungle 5 months ago
@wrxbungle lol please
Flagdue 5 months ago
@Flagdue He is discussing lack of mobility in one specific cervical segment.
wrxbungle 6 months ago
wrong. The neck is supposed to have a natural curve. the movement backwards has nothing to do with anything. Hes a quack.
Flagdue 1 year ago
Excellent video here as well. Thank you very much. Very functional videos and short. Great explanations and instruction! Cheers, Brandon.
BodyEpiphanies 1 year ago