Unfortunately for sufferers and their doctors, most of this pain has no clear cause and no great remedy available.
There are two specific causes of chronic back pain that have a defined cause and a potential surgical treatment: spinal stenosis and ruptured disk.
Lumbar spinal stenosis is rare in young people but gets more common with age. The symptoms are classically pain in the legs when standing or walking with almost immediate relief upon sitting down. If it is truly disabling, surgery is an option to consider.
A ruptured disk can put pressure on the nerve root coming out of the spine; the pain will run down the back of one leg, usually as far as the ankle. On examination, lifting the leg when you are lying on your back is very painful. Most acute disk ruptures will improve with time. Unless you have obvious leg weakness, you should NOT rush to surgery. In a minority of people, however, the pain persists.
What about the majority of sufferers, whose back pain has no clear cause?
There are numerous treatments available, their number and variety testify to the fact that most do not work well for most people.
Anti-inflammatories such as ibuprofen and naproxen have the best success rate. There is no good evidence supporting nerve ablation, epidural injections or intramuscular injections, and all of these have potentially serious side effects.
Unless there is strong clinical evidence for spinal stenosis or a nerve root compression, do not get imaging of your back. If you are over 50, there is a 60% likelihood imaging will show one or more abnormalities, and if you are over 70 this rises to almost 100%. This is true even if you have never had a backache in your life! Never allow anyone to operate on you based on imaging; imaging should confirm a clinical diagnosis, not substitute for one.
Finding arthritis in the spine will not change treatment.
What can you do?
Exercise helps, particularly exercises that strengthen the core. Heat and massage often help. Spinal manipulation by a physical therapist or a chiropractor may help.
Avoid narcotics. They may help initially but often must be taken in increasing doses and carry the risks of addiction and side-effects.
Proper use of pillows or other forms of back support are key when sitting or driving.
If surgery is recommended, ALWAYS get a second opinion.
Try to stay as active as possible. Exercise within your limits.
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