Welcome to back pain Guide
Back Pain Symptoms Article
. For a permanent link to this article, or to bookmark it for further reading, click here.
You may also listen to this article by using the following controls.
Chronic Back Pain…No End in Sight
from:Chronic back pain is pain that generally lasts longer than 3 months. Like any long lasting pain, it can interfere with normal daily functioning and create emotional and psychological, as well as, physical problems. There can be a fine line distinction between recurring and chronic pain, when the incidences of pain come close together over a long period of time. No matter how the pain is defined, it’s important to deal with all of the contributors to chronic back pain.
Medical science has slowly been coming to the conclusion that controlling pain for some people is as much as about controlling the pain center responses in the brain as it is to fixing the physical cause of the pain. In other words, you may have a physical reason for the chronic back pain, but the pain can be much worse due to psychological factors such as stress or worry. You can also increase your back pain by reducing your physical activity in response to the pain, resulting in an increasing deteriorating physical condition.
There are many approaches that can be taken to deal with chronic back pain. A doctor can prescribe medicine that blocks the pain response in the brain. Surgery is sometimes suggested, though it’s seldom the first choice. Often, the best way to deal with back pain is by increasing physical activity on a planned schedule.
All too often, people with back pain quit doing certain activities because of the pain. As a result, the muscles in the back weaken and are not exercised regularly. This can create even more pain as the spinal column fails to get adequate muscular support. Many people believe the only way to deal with chronic back pain is to take medicine, but that should be only one option you consider. Chronic back pain can often be temporarily lessoned with simple measure like ice or hot packs and massage. But when these fail, there are other alternatives.
* Trigger point injections of an anesthetic into the muscle area causing the most pain
* Minor surgery to implant electrodes along the spine to block pain signals from the brain (called spinal column stimulation)
* Spinal epidural which deadens the area on the spine where the pain is emanating
* Major surgery which such as a spinal fusion
Most of time some form of medication will be tried before deciding to have surgery. Surgery is the last resort, because it’s the most invasive. Also, since the source of a lot of back pain can’t be pinpointed, surgery becomes more exploratory than curing. Medications used to deal with chronic back pain include painkillers, anti-inflammatory medication, muscle relaxants and sedatives or anti-depressants. Since the feeling of pain starts in the brain, some drugs intended to calm a person mentally can sometimes result in less pain due to the changes they bring to brain chemicals.
As you can see, there are many alternatives to deal with chronic back pain. They range from temporary relief enabling you to handle a bout of long term recurring pain to invasive solutions.
Back Pain Symptoms News
Back pain tends to improve quickly, not completely
NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - Lower back pain often fades fairly quickly, but it may stubbornly linger to some extent for months or more, a new study finds. "The clear good news is that if you seek care for your back pain, you do improve pretty quickly, and some folk do a lot better than others," said Christopher G. Maher, at researcher at the George Institute for Global Health in Sydney ...
Read more...Back pain improves in first six weeks of treatment but lingering effects at one year, study suggests
For people receiving health care for acute and persistent low-back pain, symptoms will improve significantly in the first six weeks, but pain and disability may linger even after one year, states a large study.
Read more...Back pain improves in first 6 weeks but lingering effects at 1 year
For people receiving health care for acute and persistent low-back pain, symptoms will improve significantly in the first six weeks, but pain and disability may linger even after one year, states a large study published in CMAJ.
Read more...Chiropractor in Gahanna Announces New Website for Back Pain Patients
GAHANNA, Ohio -- Progressive Health and Rehab in Gahanna, OH is expanding access to wellness resources. The practice announced the launch of a new website, http://www.progressivehealthohio.com, to make ...
Read more...Health Tip: Work on Good Posture
(HealthDay News) -- If you have lower back pain, sitting at an office desk all day can aggravate your symptoms.
Read more...Understanding back pain, Part 1: NetWellness
Whether the pain is short-lived (acute) or long-term (chronic) depends on the nature of the injury. Sometimes tasks like reaching for a book on a high shelf or bending over in the garden are enough to bring on pain in the muscles of the back or spinal bones (vertebrae).
Read more...Professional Therapy Associates Releases Spine Pain Statistics Supporting New APTA Low Back Pain Survey Findings
Montana Physical Therapy Clinic’s Data Indicate Nearly Half of All Patients Seek Relief From Spine Pain, Corroborating American Physical Therapy Association Survey ResultsKalispell, MT (PRWEB) April 30, 2012 According to Professional Therapy Associates, a Flathead Valley, Montana, physical therapy clinic, spine pain is one of the most common ailments reported by its patients. The clinic’s ...
Read more...

