When Headache Starts in the Neck: Gwen Jull & Zhiqi Liang on Migraine, Cervicogenic Headache, and Clinical Reasoning
Neck pain and headache often travel together. But as Gwen Jull and Zhiqi Liang explain in this episode, that does not automatically mean the cervical spine is driving the headache.
In this AAOMPT and IFOMPT collaborative episode, hosts Amy McDevitt and Michael Boney explore the evolving science around cervicogenic headache, migraine-associated neck pain, sensitization, and clinical examination.
Gwen Jull discusses the development and validation of physical criteria for cervicogenic headache, emphasizing the need for a cluster of comparable musculoskeletal signs involving joint, movement, and muscle impairments.
Zhiqi Liang expands the conversation into migraine, reminding clinicians that neck pain can be part of a migraine presentation rather than proof of a cervical source. She challenges clinicians to rethink the meaning of symptom reproduction during upper cervical examination and to consider sensitivity, irritability, and migraine cycles when examining and treating these patients.
Together, the guests make a compelling case for more careful clinical reasoning: listen to the patient’s story, examine without over-provoking symptoms, look for comparable signs, and match treatment to the impairments that are actually present.
Big takeaway:
The neck may matter — but clinicians need to prove it through the whole clinical picture.
Timestamped Chapters
00:00 — Welcome to Hands On, Hands Off
00:31 — Introducing the AAOMPT and IFOMPT collaboration
01:19 — Meet Gwen Jull and Zhiqi Liang
03:19 — Why headache and neck pain matter to manual physical therapists
03:40 — Major shifts in clinical thinking around cervicogenic headache
04:09 — Validated physical criteria for cervicogenic headache
05:37 — Joint, movement, and muscle signs
07:33 — The physiotherapist’s role in differential diagnosis
08:02 — How headache can refer pain into the neck
08:51 — Are cervicogenic headache and migraine distinct or a spectrum?
09:26 — Migraine as a primary neurological condition
11:33 — Sorting out mixed headache presentations
12:05 — Patient history clues: migraine vs cervicogenic headache
13:27 — Comparable signs and why intensity matters
14:51 — How much does pain location matter?
16:20 — Why no single feature is enough
17:17 — Neck pain in migraine may not be a neck problem
17:53 — Rethinking symptom reproduction during examination
19:22 — How to decide whether the neck is a driver
20:01 — Avoiding confirmation bias
21:27 — Why non-provocative examination matters
23:08 — Scapular dysfunction and other regional contributors
24:37 — Broadening beyond the diagnostic cluster
26:05 — Sensory-motor control, dizziness, and balance
28:41 — Local cervical findings and global systems
29:31 — Listening for migraine evolution over time
30:46 — Central sensitization and comparable physical findings
31:28 — PIVM vs PAVM assessment considerations
32:08 — Avoiding symptom provocation in migraine
33:04 — Migraine cycles and changing sensitivity
34:36 — Trial treatment and rigorous re-evaluation
35:41 — Individualized care beyond guidelines
36:19 — Who may benefit from a cervical-focused approach?
37:07 — Education, exercise, sleep, stress, and lifestyle strategies
39:02 — Let the physical exam guide treatment
39:46 — PTs as rehabilitation experts, not just pain reducers
41:38 — One assumption clinicians should rethink tomorrow
42:12 — Don’t forget the jaw
42:27 — Neck pain may reflect sensitivity, not source
43:16 — Final reflections and closing
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