Abstract
Fourteen patients with cervicogenic headache (9F, 5M) with a mean age of 42.8 (29–58) years were examined, before and within two hours after unilateral anaesthetic C2-blockades, clinically as well as by means of electronystagmography, subjective visual vertical test and posturography. After C2-blockade, patients exhibited a slight gait deviation to the injected side without eye movement disorder, dysmetria or ataxia. Although in two of nine patients there was a small influence on lateral body sway on posturography, no specific pattern of abnormalities in eye-head-body coordination could be found before or after C2-blockades. Thus, there is no clinical evidence for a significant reproducible influence of the second cervical root on oculomotor or cerebellar function in cervicogenic headache. These findings confirm earlier data in animal experiments.
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