Stiff neck

Healthwise
By Jan Nissl, RN, BS

Did you find this helpful?

Be the first to rate!
Not yet rated

Neck pain is most often related to injury, tension, arthritis, or chronic misuse of the neck. However, in rare cases neck stiffness may be a sign of bleeding or infection (meningitis, encephalitis, or an abscess) within or around the brain.

A stiff neck may be a symptom of one of these serious conditions when it:

  • Develops rapidly and occurs along with other symptoms, such as nausea or vomiting, fever, headache, sleepiness, confusion, extreme grouchiness, or a seizure.
  • Occurs in the middle of the back of the neck (not to one side or the other) and causes pain when the person tilts the head backward or forward. The person may be unable to move the chin toward the chest, for example.
  • Is unexplained (for example, there was no injury and the person did not sleep in an awkward position).
Author:Jan Nissl, RN, BS
Medical Review:
Last Updated: 04/24/2007

Health Resources

help

Yahoo! Health Groups

Join the Conversation

Join a Yahoo! Group and discuss with other memebers in the group. Share tips and experiences

See All Yahoo Groups »

Tip of the Day

Provided by: RealAgeNov 5, 2009

Piling your favorite sandwich fixings on the right kind of bread could mean healthier blood pressure. The right choice? One hundred percent whole-grain.

Read More »

View All Tips »