Loyola study finds women suffer more neck pain than men
Women are 1.38 times more likely than men to report neck pain due to cervical degenerative disc disease, according to a study of adult patients treated at Loyola Medicine’s Pain Management Center.
The study by Meda Raghavendra and Joseph Holtman, of Loyola University Medical Center and Loyola University Chicago Stritch School of Medicine, was presented at the annual meeting of the American Academy of Pain Medicine.
The findings add to the growing body of research on the differences in which men and women experience pain. Previous studies have found that females are more likely to be treated at pain clinics for chronic pain and that certain painful conditions, such as migraine headaches and fibromyalgia, are more common in women. Various explanations have been proposed, including hormonal differences and the belief that men may be less willing to report pain.
Cervical degenerative disc disease is a common cause of neck pain. Symptoms include stiff or inflexible neck, burning, tingling and numbness. Pain is most prevalent when the patient is upright or moving the head.
The Loyola study included 3,337 patients who were treated at Loyola’s Pain Management Center, 61 per cent were female.
Raghavendra and Holtman conducted a similar study of patients who were treated at Loyola’s Pain Management Center for lumbosacral degenerative disc disease (lower back pain). The prevalence in females, 12 per cent, was slightly higher than the prevalence in males, 11 per cent, but this difference was not statistically significant.
Reference: Gender Differences in the Prevalence of Cervical Degenerative Disc Disease , Meda Raghavendra, MD . Presented at the American Academy of Pain Medicine 33rd Annual Meeting 2016
Source: Loyola University Health System and EurekAlert