Solving the Perplexing
Puzzle of Back Pain
By
Arnel Ricafranca
An estimated eight out of ten people in the United States will injure
their back at some point during their lives. Few of these problems will
require extended treatment, but back problems are invariably painful.
Managing and relieving back pain is not a simple process. The
experience of pain is subjective; it cannot be measured from the
outside. Health providers who treat back pain find it challenging to
obtain the objective or measurable signs that verify and diagnose a
patient's painful back symptoms.
Additionally, everyone's experience of pain is different. Pain
descriptors encompass numerous adjectives - dull, sharp, throbbing,
pulsating, stabbing and shock-like, just to name a few.
People experience and describe pain so differently partly due to
its varied and complex origins. In fact, pain originates from numerous
places in the body, such as muscles, bones, nerves, organs or blood
vessels.
Pain is also described as acute or chronic. The word "acute"
derives from the Latin word for needles and is usually described as a
severe, sharp sensation. The initial stage of an injury is called the
acute phase.
The word "chronic", on the other hand, originated from the Greek
word for time. Chronic pain is pain that persists after a length of
time, often months to years. Many back injuries tend to become chronic,
especially when not treated properly during the acute phase. Chronic
pain is often experienced as a dull ache or constant nagging irritant.
Acute and chronic pain sensations also travel different nervous
system pathways inside the body. When you injure muscles or ligaments
in your back, nerve endings called pain receptors pick up the pain
impulses and transmit them to the spinal cord. From here, the pain
message ascends to the brain. This process takes place at varying rates
of speed depending on the size of the nerve fiber involved.
Acute pain tends to travel on faster, larger diameter fibers, while
chronic pain prefers smaller, slower pain fibers. Experts suggest that
chronic pain affects the brain's limbic system, which is associated
with emotional states. Anyone who has ever had a long-term painful
injury knows that negative or distressing emotions may accompany or
perpetuate the initial injury.
The best way to treat chronic back pain syndromes is to prevent
them. Although proficient early treatment does not always prevent an
acute injury from turning into a chronic problem, it is a good
insurance policy. Early treatment is especially important with injuries
to the soft tissues (muscles, tendons and ligaments) to prevent them
from becoming weaker, less elastic and more pain-sensitive.
One of the best ways to treat both acute and chronic soft tissue
injuries is a hands-on approach that works to repair the injured
tissues. Some examples are joint and soft tissue manipulation and
mobilization, typically performed by a doctor of chiropractic or
osteopath. Other good options are massage and physical therapy. A
formal rehabilitation program at a health club or therapy clinic may
also help to strengthen weakened and damaged muscles, especially the
core stabilizers of the back.