X RAY CERVICAL SPINE FLEXION AND EXTENSION VIEW

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X RAY CERVICAL SPINE FLEXION AND EXTENSION VIEW
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X RAY CERVICAL SPINE FLEXION AND EXTENSION VIEW, in Visit Clinic

X-ray views that show how neck bones move when you bend forward and backward to detect instability in Visit Clinic.

centreCentre Visit
SAMPLE TYPE
Tissue
FASTING REQUIRED
No
GENDER
Male/Female
GET REPORTS IN
24 hours
TEST INCLUDED
1
Customers
20K+Customers
Labs
CertifiedLabs
Rating
4.5+Rating
Accuracy
ProvenAccuracy

What is a X RAY CERVICAL SPINE FLEXION AND EXTENSION VIEW Test in Visit Clinic?

This X-ray series measures how the neck bones (cervical vertebrae) move when you bend forward and backward. It looks for abnormal motion, misalignment, or slippage between vertebrae. Normal movement keeps the spinal cord and nerve roots safe. Detecting instability or abnormal motion helps find causes of neck pain, nerve symptoms, or post-injury problems. Doctors use these views with other imaging to decide on treatments, surgery, or the need for stabilizing procedures. The test is quick and done standing or sitting. It gives dynamic information that static X-rays cannot provide.

X RAY CERVICAL SPINE FLEXION AND EXTENSION VIEW Test Preparation in Visit Clinic

No special preparation is required.

X RAY CERVICAL SPINE FLEXION AND EXTENSION VIEW Test Parameters in Visit Clinic

The X RAY CERVICAL SPINE FLEXION AND EXTENSION VIEW test evaluates various parameters. Here are the main parameters checked:

  • Single test

Why Take a X RAY CERVICAL SPINE FLEXION AND EXTENSION VIEW Test in Visit Clinic?

X RAY CERVICAL SPINE FLEXION AND EXTENSION VIEW is part of neck imaging used when doctors suspect instability or abnormal motion. It is ordered for persistent neck pain, recent trauma, whiplash, numbness, weakness, or to check surgical fusion. The test helps diagnose spondylolisthesis, ligament injury, and degenerative changes. Abnormal results often come from injury, wear-and-tear, congenital differences, or prior surgery. A family history of spinal problems or connective tissue conditions may make this test more important.

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Frequently asked questions

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What is a cervical x-ray with flexion and extension in Visit Clinic?plus

A cervical X‑ray with flexion and extension obtains neck X‑rays while you bend your head forward and backward. Comparing these views shows how vertebrae move, revealing instability, abnormal motion, ligament injury or post‑surgical fusion failure. It’s used for trauma, chronic neck pain or neurological symptoms. The test is quick and generally safe, though movement may be uncomfortable and is done under radiographer instruction.

What is the flexion-extension of the cervical spine in Visit Clinic?plus

Flexion and extension of the cervical spine are sagittal-plane movements: flexion brings the chin toward the chest (forward bending), while extension lifts the chin and tilts the head back (backward bending). These motions occur mainly at the lower cervical segments (C4–C7) and the occiput–C1, enabling nodding and gaze adjustments and are limited by ligaments, discs, and facet joints.

What is the best view for the cervical spine x-ray in Visit Clinic?plus

The lateral view is the single most useful cervical spine x-ray because it shows vertebral alignment, vertebral bodies, disc spaces and prevertebral soft tissues from C1 to C7. In trauma or suspected instability, a series is standard — lateral plus AP, open‑mouth (odontoid) and oblique views — to evaluate the odontoid, neural foramina and detect occult fractures.

How many views are there for a cervical spine xray in Visit Clinic?plus

A standard cervical spine X‑ray typically uses three views: lateral, anteroposterior (AP) and an odontoid (open‑mouth) view. In many centers, the three‑view series is routine for initial assessment. Additional views — bilateral obliques, swimmer’s view, or flexion‑extension films — may be added for trauma, foraminal evaluation, or instability, raising the total to four to six films.

What is flexion and extension views of the spine in Visit Clinic?plus

Flexion and extension views are specialized spinal X‑rays taken while the patient bends forward (flexion) and backward (extension). They assess dynamic spinal alignment and intervertebral motion to detect instability, ligamentous injury, spondylolisthesis or failed fusion that may not appear on neutral images. They are performed under supervision and require patient cooperation to safely obtain useful diagnostic information.

How to measure cervical flexion and extension in Visit Clinic?plus

Have the patient sit upright with a neutral spine. Use a goniometer or inclinometer: place the fulcrum over the external auditory meatus, the stationary arm vertical (perpendicular to the floor) and the movable arm aligned with the nose/chin. Ask the patient to flex (chin to chest) and extend (look up); record end-range angles. Repeat three times and average. Normal ≈45° each.