Movement Notes — Pilates on George — by Olya Kudryavtseva
QUICK ANSWER (TL;DR)
Most neck pain is non-specific and resolves with movement. Cervical radiculopathy that is a nerve root irritation, usually from a disc herniation – is different: it produces pain, numbness, or weakness that follows a specific arm pattern. Most cases improve with conservative care within 4–6 months. Deep neck flexor work, thoracic mobility, and scapular control are the evidence-based exercise foundations.
Most neck pain in our clients is non-specific – muscular, postural, stress-related, and resolves with movement and load. But some isn’t.
Knowing the difference is one of the most useful clinical skills, whether you’re a movement professional or someone trying to figure out whether to push through or seek help.
Here’s how to tell.
How the Cervical Spine Is Built

The cervical spine has seven vertebrae (C1–C7) and intervertebral discs between C2 and C7. Cervical discs are smaller and more loaded per square millimetre than lumbar discs. Combine that with the head’s mass, the neck’s range of motion, and modern life’s tendency to keep us looking down at screens, so degeneration starts early.
Disc height loss is often visible on imaging by the third decade. That’s normal. It doesn’t mean broken.
What Is Cervical Radiculopathy?
Cervical radiculopathy means a nerve root in the neck is being irritated or compressed. In most cases, this is from a disc herniation or from foraminal narrowing due to facet osteoarthritis or osteophytes (bone spurs).
The classic symptoms:
• Pain that radiates from the neck into the shoulder, arm, forearm, or hand
• Numbness or tingling in the same distribution
• Weakness in muscles supplied by that nerve root
• Symptoms often worsened by neck extension and rotation toward the affected side
If symptoms travel into the arm in a specific pattern that’s the signal to get assessed properly. Not every neck ache is a disc, but pain that follows a clear pattern down the arm warrants attention.
Common Patterns of Cervical Radiculopathy
• C6 radiculopathy: thumb-side forearm and thumb numbness, weak wrist extensors
• C7 radiculopathy: middle finger numbness, weak triceps
• C8 radiculopathy: little finger side numbness, weak finger flexors
How Long Does Cervical Radiculopathy Take to Heal?
Cervical radiculopathy from disc herniation has a generally favourable natural history. A meta-analysis by Wong et al. (2014) found that most cases improve substantially within 4–6 months of conservative care.
Surgery is reserved for progressive neurological deficit or persistent disabling symptoms that don’t respond to conservative management.
What Exercises Help Cervical Disc Issues?
Exercise, particularly programs combining neck-specific endurance work, scapular stabilisation, and thoracic mobility, has consistent evidence for symptom reduction (Salt et al. 2011; Falla et al. 2007 specifically for deep neck flexor work).
The key components:
• Deep neck flexor endurance (longus colli and longus capitis – the deep front-of-neck muscles). Craniocervical flexion (chin nod) work in small ranges, holding for time.
• Thoracic mobility. Stiff upper backs make necks work harder. Foam roller extension work, thread the needle, mermaid.
• Scapular control. Lower trapezius and serratus anterior work – the scapula is the cervical spine’s silent partner.
• Avoiding provocation in the acute phase. End-range cervical extension and rotation toward the affected side can flare symptoms.
Frequently Asked Questions
How do I know if my neck pain is a pinched nerve?
Pinched nerves typically cause pain, numbness, tingling, or weakness that travels down the arm in a specific pattern – not just generalised neck and shoulder soreness. If symptoms follow a clear path into the arm or hand, get assessed properly.
Can a cervical disc herniation heal without surgery?
Most cases improve substantially within 4–6 months of conservative care including exercise, education, and sometimes medication. Surgery is reserved for progressive neurological deficit or persistent disabling symptoms that don’t respond to conservative management.
Is Pilates safe for neck disc issues?
Generally yes, with appropriate programming. Working with an instructor who understands cervical pathology and can avoid provocative positions during acute phases is important. Our Sydney CBD studio specialises in personalised Pilates for clients with these conditions.
What’s the difference between neck pain and cervical radiculopathy?
Neck pain stays in the neck and possibly the upper shoulders. Cervical radiculopathy involves nerve root irritation and produces symptoms that travel down the arm in a specific dermatomal pattern, often with numbness, tingling, or weakness.
Should I avoid neck exercises if I have a disc bulge?
Not typically. Most cervical disc issues respond well to specific exercise — deep neck flexor work, thoracic mobility, scapular control. What matters is matching the exercises to your current symptoms and avoiding positions that provoke radicular signs.
The Bottom Line
Most necks aren’t broken. But the few that are need different programming and the only way to know the difference is to listen carefully to the symptoms.
When the symptoms travel into the arm, when they follow a pattern, when extension makes them worse that’s the conversation that matters. That’s when slowing down and getting assessed makes all the difference.
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