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. 2021 Mar 26;9(9):2027–2036. doi: 10.12998/wjcc.v9.i9.2027

Table 3.

Chinese Association for the Study of Pain recommendations for the management of cervicogenic headache

Item
Recommendation
Quality
Strength
Pharmacologic management Pharmacologic treatment is recommended as the first-line therapy for CEH Moderate Strong
NSAIDs are recommended for patients with CEH Low Weak
Muscle relaxants are recommended for patients with CEH Moderate Strong
Antiepileptic drugs are conditionally recommended for patients with CEH Low Weak
Antidepressants are recommended for CEH patients with serve anxiety and depression Low Strong
Anesthetic blockade Anesthetic joint injection or nerve block are often used both diagnostically and therapeutically Moderate Strong
Atlantoaxial joint injection for patients with suboccipital or occipital pain aggravated by cervical rotation or pain due to inflammatory stimuli Low Weak
C2-C3 zygapophyseal joint injection can be considered for patients with upper neck pain spreading to the occipital region or pain that increases when the neck is rotated or back is stretched Low Weak
Selective nerve root injection could be used in patients with cervical spondylotic radiculopathy Low Strong
Third occipital nerve block can be used to diagnose CEH and predict the efficacy of radiofrequency treatment Low Strong
The occipital nerve injection is used to diagnose and treat occipital pain. Low Strong
Imaging technology (ultrasound, X-ray and CT) are recommended for guidance of invasive therapies High Strong
Glucocorticoid injection is recommended for CEH Low Strong
Minimally invasive interventional management Radiofrequency intervention is conditionally recommended for patients with persistent CEH Moderate Strong
Pulse radiofrequency is preferred over ablation for patients with persistent CEH Low Strong
Ozone injection is recommended for CEH Low Weak
PLDD is conditionally recommended for CEH Low Weak
Surgical procedures Surgery is not recommended for CEH unless there is compelling evidence of a surgically amenable lesion causing the cervicogenic headache that is refractory to all reasonable nonsurgical treatments Low Strong
Nonpharmacological and nonsurgical therapy is recommended as a complementary management for CEH Low Strong
Physical therapy Physical therapy is the preferred initial treatment recommended for CEH Moderate Weak
Cervical manipulation and mobilization are recommended for CEH Moderate Strong
TCM TCM is conditionally recommended for CEH. Low Weak
Psychological therapy Patients with refractory severe CHE need psychological assessment and intervention Low Strong
Health education Health education is recommended for CEH Low Strong

CEH: Cervicogenic headache; CT: Computed tomography; NSAIDs: Nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs; PLDD: Percutaneous laser disc decompression; TCM: Traditional Chinese medicine.