Physiotherapy for Neck Pain in Delhi | Dr. Dharam Pandey | PhysiotherapistIndia.com
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📹 Spine & Orthopaedic

Physiotherapy for
Neck Pain

Expert cervical physiotherapy for neck pain, cervical spondylosis, whiplash, radiculopathy, and posture-related pain — across 15 centres in Delhi, Gurugram, Pune & Greater Noida. Most acute cases resolve in 4–6 sessions.

🦵 Manual Therapy & McKenzie 🏠 Home Visits Available 📹 Cervical Traction
Quick Information
Acute neck pain resolves in 4–6 sessions
🏁 Manual therapy, cervical traction, McKenzie
📹 Cervical radiculopathy & spondylosis treated
🏠 Home visits across all Delhi/NCR
💰 Free initial enquiry — no booking fee
💬 WhatsApp — Reply in <30 Min
80% of neck pain resolves with physiotherapy alone No injections needed in most cases Home visits available <30 min WhatsApp response
4–6
Sessions for Acute Pain
Most cases resolved
80%
Avoid Injections
With physio alone
25+
Years Experience
Dr. Dharam Pandey
15
Centres
Delhi | Gurugram | Pune | NCR
Home
Visits Available
All Delhi/NCR

Why Physiotherapy is the Best Treatment for Neck Pain

Neck pain is one of the most prevalent musculoskeletal complaints in India, affecting an estimated one in three people at some point in their lives. The dramatic rise of work-from-home culture, prolonged screen use, and sedentary lifestyles has made cervical pain an epidemic among working-age adults in Delhi and across urban India.

The good news: the vast majority of neck pain — including cervical spondylosis, radiculopathy, and postural neck pain — responds extremely well to physiotherapy, typically without the need for injections, long-term medication, or surgery.

Did you know? Studies consistently show that manual therapy combined with specific exercise is superior to both medication and rest alone for neck pain. A course of 4–8 physiotherapy sessions produces better long-term outcomes than weeks of NSAID use.

Types of Neck Pain We Treat

Very Common
Acute & Postural Neck Pain

Sudden onset neck pain from awkward sleeping positions, prolonged desk work, or muscle strain. Usually resolves quickly with the right treatment. Postural neck pain is now epidemic among WFH workers.

4–6 SessionsManual TherapyPostural Rehab
Common
Cervical Spondylosis

Age-related degenerative changes in the cervical spine causing stiffness, aching pain, and reduced range of motion. Physiotherapy addresses the functional impairment rather than the structural changes, producing lasting relief.

6–8 SessionsTractionStrengthening
Specialist Rehab
Cervical Radiculopathy

Nerve root compression causing pain, numbness, or weakness radiating into the arm or hand. Often caused by disc herniation or osteophytes at the neuroforamen. Neural mobilisation and cervical traction are highly effective.

Neural MobilisationTraction8–12 Sessions
Trauma-Related
Whiplash Associated Disorder

Following RTA or sudden deceleration injury, causing cervical soft tissue damage, pain, and often headache. Graded activity and manual therapy produce the best outcomes; rest alone leads to chronicity.

Graded ActivityManual Therapy6–10 Sessions
Persistent Pain
Chronic Neck Pain

Pain lasting more than 3 months, often involving central sensitisation alongside structural and functional factors. Requires a biopsychosocial approach combining manual therapy, exercise, and pain education.

Pain EducationGraded Exercise10–16 Sessions
Tech-Related
Tech Neck / Forward Head Posture

"Tech neck" from prolonged smartphone and screen use creates excessive load on cervical structures. Deep cervical flexor strengthening, thoracic mobilisation, and ergonomic correction are curative.

Deep Neck FlexorsErgonomics4–6 Sessions

Cervicogenic Headache

A significant proportion of chronic headaches — estimated at 15–20% of all recurring headaches — originate from the cervical spine rather than the head itself. Cervicogenic headache is characterised by unilateral, non-throbbing head pain that starts in the neck and radiates forward, worsened by neck movements or sustained postures.

Physiotherapy — particularly manual therapy targeting the C0–C3 segments and deep neck flexor exercise — is the evidence-based treatment of choice and can dramatically reduce or eliminate cervicogenic headache.

Treatment Approaches at APARC

🧠
Manual Therapy

Joint mobilisation and manipulation of cervical and thoracic segments to restore movement and reduce pain.

🦵
McKenzie Method

Directional preference assessment and mechanical diagnosis to identify and treat disc-related cervical pain.

Cervical Traction

Mechanical or manual traction to decompress nerve roots and disc structures in radiculopathy and spondylosis.

🚶
Neural Mobilisation

Neurodynamic techniques to mobilise the brachial plexus and peripheral nerves in cervical radiculopathy.

🏋
Cervical Strengthening

Deep cervical flexor training (CCF test-guided) and scapular stabilisation to address muscular imbalances.

📋
Postural & Ergonomic Rehab

Workstation assessment, thoracic mobility, and posture correction to address tech neck and WFH-related pain.

The Work-From-Home Neck Pain Epidemic

Delhi's large knowledge-worker population has seen a dramatic surge in neck pain since the rise of hybrid and remote working. Poor home workstation setups — laptops on low tables, sofas used as desk chairs, screens at wrong heights — create sustained awkward cervical postures that lead to muscle fatigue, joint dysfunction, and eventually structural changes.

📸
Screen Height

Screen should be at eye level. Every 10° of forward head tilt adds approximately 5kg of effective load to cervical structures.

💼
Keyboard & Chair

Elbows at 90°, chair height supporting lumbar curve. Laptop use without a stand or external keyboard is a major risk factor.

🕐
Movement Breaks

Every 45–60 minutes, stand and perform cervical retraction and thoracic extension exercises for 2 minutes.

🌟 Our physiotherapists can conduct a virtual workstation assessment via video call alongside your treatment programme — identifying the ergonomic factors driving your neck pain and providing specific corrections for your home setup. Ask about this when you book.

Cervicogenic Dizziness

Dizziness arising from the neck — rather than the inner ear — is an often under-recognised condition caused by dysfunction of proprioceptive signals from the upper cervical spine. It produces a sense of unsteadiness, light-headedness, and occasionally visual disturbance, most pronounced during head and neck movements.

Physiotherapy is highly effective for cervicogenic dizziness — targeting the upper cervical joints, sensorimotor training, and gaze stability exercises. It is commonly confused with BPPV but responds to different treatment.

Read more: Vertigo & Dizziness Physiotherapy →
80%
of patients avoid injections or surgery with physiotherapy
4–6
sessions resolves most acute and postural neck pain
95%
of APARC neck pain patients report significant improvement
⚠️ Red Flags — Seek Urgent Medical Attention
  • Neck pain following trauma, RTA, or fall from height
  • Progressive weakness in arms or legs with neck pain
  • Difficulty walking, bladder or bowel changes with neck pain (possible myelopathy)
  • Fever, night sweats, unexplained weight loss with neck pain
  • Neck pain in someone with a history of cancer
  • Severe unremitting pain not responding to any position changes

Neck Pain — Common Questions

Questions from patients about neck pain physiotherapy.

How many sessions does neck pain physiotherapy take?
Most acute neck pain resolves in 4–6 sessions of physiotherapy. Cervical spondylosis and postural neck pain usually need 6–8 sessions. Cervical radiculopathy and chronic neck pain may require 8–16 sessions depending on severity. Your physiotherapist will assess you at the first appointment and provide a personalised estimate with clear milestone goals.
Can physiotherapy help cervical spondylosis permanently?
Physiotherapy produces excellent results for cervical spondylosis. The structural bony changes (osteophytes, disc narrowing) cannot be reversed, but physiotherapy addresses the functional impairment — restoring movement, reducing pain, and strengthening the supporting musculature — so that the structural changes no longer cause significant symptoms. Most patients achieve long-term relief with a combination of treatment and ongoing home exercises.
What is cervical radiculopathy and can physiotherapy treat it?
Cervical radiculopathy is compression or irritation of a nerve root in the neck, typically causing pain, numbness, pins and needles, or weakness radiating into the arm or hand. It is commonly caused by disc herniation or bony spur formation. Physiotherapy — including neural mobilisation, cervical traction, and specific strengthening — is the recommended first-line treatment and avoids injections or surgery in most cases.
Is my neck pain from my posture or something structural?
Both are possible, and a skilled physiotherapist can determine which is dominant at your first assessment. Postural neck pain from WFH and screen use is now extremely common and responds rapidly to treatment and ergonomic correction. Structural problems such as disc herniation or spondylosis require different treatment emphases but are equally treatable with physiotherapy in the vast majority of cases.
Can I have physiotherapy at home for neck pain?
Yes. We provide home physiotherapy for neck pain across all of Delhi, Gurugram, Noida, Faridabad, and Ghaziabad. Our physiotherapists bring all necessary equipment for cervical assessment, manual therapy, and traction. WhatsApp us with your area and we'll confirm availability and timing.
Can neck problems cause headaches?
Yes — cervicogenic headache is estimated to account for 15–20% of all recurring headaches. It originates from dysfunction in the upper cervical spine (C0–C3) and is characterised by unilateral head pain starting in the neck, worsened by sustained neck positions or movements. It is often misdiagnosed as tension headache or migraine. Physiotherapy targeting the cervical spine is the most effective treatment.
Do I need an MRI before starting physiotherapy for neck pain?
In most cases, no. A skilled physiotherapist can assess your neck pain comprehensively through clinical examination and will only refer for imaging if red flags are identified or the presentation is atypical. Starting physiotherapy without an MRI does not delay recovery — in fact, early physiotherapy produces better outcomes than waiting for imaging results in uncomplicated neck pain.
What exercises help neck pain at home?
The most effective home exercises for most neck pain are cervical retraction (chin tucks), cervical rotation stretches, deep neck flexor activation, and thoracic extension over a rolled towel. However, specific exercises should be prescribed based on your diagnosis — the wrong exercises for the wrong type of neck pain can worsen symptoms. Your APARC physiotherapist will prescribe a personalised home programme at your first session.

End Your Neck Pain — Book Today

Most acute neck pain resolves in 4–6 sessions. WhatsApp us now for a response in under 30 minutes. Home visits, centre appointments, and online consultations across Delhi, Gurugram, Pune & Greater Noida.

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