Experimental neck muscle pain impairs standing balance in humans
Nicolas Vuillerme (TIMC), Nicolas Pinsault (TIMC)

TL;DR
This study demonstrates that experimental neck muscle pain in healthy humans significantly impairs standing balance, highlighting the importance of neck neuromuscular integrity for postural stability.
Contribution
It provides direct evidence that neck muscle pain alone can disrupt balance control during quiet standing in humans.
Findings
Increased CoP and CoM displacements with pain
Higher velocity and frequency of postural sway during pain
Neck pain destabilizes standing balance
Abstract
Impaired postural control has been reported in patients with chronic neck pain of both traumatic and non-traumatic etiologies, but whether painful stimulation of neck muscle per se can affect balance control during quiet standing in humans remains unclear. The purpose of the present experiment was thus to investigate the effect of experimental neck muscle pain on standing balance in young healthy adults. To achieve this goal, 16 male university students were asked to stand upright as still as possible on a force platform with their eyes closed in two conditions of No pain and Pain of the neck muscles elicited by experimental painful electrical stimulation. Postural control and postural performance were assessed by the displacements of the center of foot pressure (CoP) and of the center of mass (CoM), respectively. The results showed increased CoP and CoM displacements variance, range,…
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