Whiplash (Subscribe)
Links
British Columbia Whiplash Initiative
B.C. Whiplash Initiative
PMRF's Whiplash-Associated Disorders A Comprehensive Syllabus
Note: Please be aware that this site is no longer actively maintained. It exists soley for archival purposes. (Posted 1997)
PMRF's Whiplash-Associated Disorders A Comprehensive Syllabus
Note: Please be aware that this site is no longer actively maintained. It exists soley for archival purposes. (Posted 1997)
Conservative treatments for whiplash
Cochrane Review
Conservative treatments for whiplash Verhagen AP, Scholten-Peeters GGGM, van Wijngaarden S, de Bie RA, Bierma-Zeinstra SMA
Whiplash is defined as an acceleration-deceleration mechanism of energy transfer to the neck. It may result from rear-end or side-impact motor vehicle collisions or during diving, among other mishaps. Whiplash-associated disorders (WAD) can be classified by the severity of signs and symptoms from Grade 0 (no complaints or physical signs) to Grade 4 (fracture or dislocation). Whiplash-associated disorders have been reported in 70 in 100,000 inhabitants in a Canadian province, to 188 to 325 per 100,000 inhabitants in The Netherlands. Conservative treatments (for example, physiotherapy, acupuncture, or a collar) are the most common treatment options for whiplash patients, but the evidence supporting their effectiveness remains conflicting.
Since we were unable to pool any of the studies, we remain unable to either support or refute the effects of conservative treatments for acute, subacute or chronic whiplash-associated disorders with the current evidence.
Conservative treatments for whiplash Verhagen AP, Scholten-Peeters GGGM, van Wijngaarden S, de Bie RA, Bierma-Zeinstra SMA
Whiplash is defined as an acceleration-deceleration mechanism of energy transfer to the neck. It may result from rear-end or side-impact motor vehicle collisions or during diving, among other mishaps. Whiplash-associated disorders (WAD) can be classified by the severity of signs and symptoms from Grade 0 (no complaints or physical signs) to Grade 4 (fracture or dislocation). Whiplash-associated disorders have been reported in 70 in 100,000 inhabitants in a Canadian province, to 188 to 325 per 100,000 inhabitants in The Netherlands. Conservative treatments (for example, physiotherapy, acupuncture, or a collar) are the most common treatment options for whiplash patients, but the evidence supporting their effectiveness remains conflicting.
Since we were unable to pool any of the studies, we remain unable to either support or refute the effects of conservative treatments for acute, subacute or chronic whiplash-associated disorders with the current evidence.
University of Washington Medical Center Whiplash Research Center
University of Washington Whiplash Research Study
Whiplash Associated Disorders Guidlelines
Whiplash-Associated Disorders (WAD) is the single most frequently recorded injury amongst Compulsory Third Party (CTP) claimants in NSW. In October 1999 new legislation was enacted governing the operations of the New South Wales Motor Accident Authority (MAA) and the CTP insurance scheme it administers.
Chiropractic and Osteopathic College of Australasia
Chiropractic and Osteopathic College of Australasia
Whiplash injury
The new web page of Neurofisiologia Otooftalmologica and the (4-G-F). Patients and scientific information about cervicocephalic trauma. Lesions and symptoms.
Whiplash Injury Diseases Database
Whiplash injury
may cause or feature
Neck pain, dizziness, vertigo Whiplash injury: Definition(s) via UMLS
"Hyperextension injury to the neck, often the result of being struck from behind by a fast-moving vehicle, in an automobile accident. (From Segen, The Dictionary of Modern Medicine, 1992)" Source: Medical Subject Headings, 2007_2006_08_08
Neck pain, dizziness, vertigo Whiplash injury: Definition(s) via UMLS
"Hyperextension injury to the neck, often the result of being struck from behind by a fast-moving vehicle, in an automobile accident. (From Segen, The Dictionary of Modern Medicine, 1992)" Source: Medical Subject Headings, 2007_2006_08_08
Whiplash--what's in the name?
Archive Copy 2004: Whiplash--what's in the name? State University of New York Upstate Medical Center Neurology Department