Most Solutions Only Mask the Pain. They Don't Fix It
NSAIDs, muscle relaxants, and analgesic patches are prescribed or self-administered by the vast majority of chronic neck pain sufferers. While they do reduce the subjective perception of pain in the short term, they accomplish this through chemical nociceptive suppression, they do not decompress neural tissue, restore intervertebral disc height, normalize muscular tone, or improve local circulation.
A 2022 analysis in The Spine Journal found that patients who relied primarily on analgesic medication for cervical pain management demonstrated measurably worse radiographic disc health at 18-month follow-up compared to those who received active decompressive therapy — despite reporting similar subjective pain levels at baseline.
Long-term reliance on anti-inflammatory pharmacotherapy carries clinically documented risks including gastrointestinal mucosal damage, cardiovascular strain, and renal toxicity. More critically from a rehabilitation standpoint: because the pain signal is chemically masked, patients continue the postural and behavioral patterns that are actively perpetuating the underlying structural damage accelerating degenerative progression while feeling temporarily better.
Genuine recovery requires mechanical intervention: creating decompressive space, restoring physiological blood flow to hypoxic tissue, and systematically reducing the myofascial tension patterns that sustain the compression cycle.