28 January 2006
Back Pain - Treatment - Part 1
So what can be done for back pain?
People seem to think the answer is "Not a lot". This is WRONG.
There are a number of areas to cover:
- What other people can do.
- What nature will do.
- What you can do.
I'll deal with these in order.
What other people can do.
These can get split even more into
- General (family) doctors - most people's first choice.
- Specialist doctors - orthopaedics, rheumatology and pain.
- Physios - me and my ilk.
- People who live with you.
- Colleagues and bosses.
1 - General Doctors
I'll repeat this again: "A general doctor will not know huge amounts about musculo-skeletal problems". Everyone should remember this. You need to either get to a specialist doctor OR get yourself referred to a physio.
What can a general doctor do? General advice that would be useful in part for most cases of back pain. They can also prescribe drugs for pain relief or for reducing inflammation or relaxing muscle spasm.
If you're in the UK they can also refer onwards to physio or orthopaedics or rheumatology. I assume that's similar in other countries.
A general doctor SHOULD be able to make sure that you have nothing nasty happening. Look at the "What is" back post to see what the worrying signs are. If you have some of these make sure you tell the doc, don't wait to be asked.
2 - Specialist doctors
Specialist doctors, by definition, know plenty more about their area than generalists. Having said that my experience is that specialists have egos the size of Belgium and they have their own preferred ways of doing stuff. This means that one doc may want to operate whilst another may want to inject, a third may refer you on to a physio. You may have noticed by now that there is rarely much agreement about specific treatments for back pain.
Some docs will suggest injections - these are not well proven to my knowledge. Some people have good responses but that's not the norm.
Surgery - Really please avoid this if at all possible. There is a general lay-person view that surgery will heal all their ills. It really won't in most cases. Back surgery should be avoided like little else. "But there's new surgical techniques!" That's true but the problem with new techniques is that the long-term success is very poor. They have developed replacement discs but these invariably go wrong after a short while causing far more problems than there were before the op.
Think about what structures are in the area. If the surgeon slightly nicks your central nervous system (CNS) then you'll be buggered (excuse the term but I don't think I'm being over dramatic). If you wish to know how well the CNS repairs itself then take a look at Christopher Reeve. CNS does NOT repair itself.
I can't state this more urgently: Do NOT let a surgeon anywhere near your back until you have discussed everything about what might happen. Ask about short-term prospects, long term prospects, chances of screw up etc... And don't even think about surgery until you've exhausted as many other options as you can first.
Scans are another thing that people think are necessary. They're really not that useful in 90% of cases. They're a waste of your money or time. In the UK whilst you're waiting for an NHS one you could be having some useful intervention. If you pay for treatment directly you'd be better off spending less on physio treatment.
X-rays are generally even more useless than scans and not ony are they (usually) useless they increase your chances of getting cancer. Do you still want a back x-ray?
3 - Physios
Now we're into my happy zone.
"There is plenty a decent physio should be able to tell you about how to deal with your problem. "
Now have a look at that sentence again. The first important word is "decent"; sadly there are poor physios just as there are bad doctors or even bad jugglers (like me). If your physio treats you like my brother's did him then tell him to stuff his payment. (My bro was told: "You've got a bad back mate, live with it". Not bad from a person who supposedly spends his working life dealing with back pain.)
The next important words are "your problem". Much as you want someone to do this for you it doesn't work like that. This IS your problem, you are going to have to deal with it. The physio should be able to tell you how YOU are going to get you better and then help YOU try to do it. There is no magic trick that will suddenly take your pain away and keep it away.
First some myths:
I see people who have been to a local private physio. He uses ultrasound, interferential therapy (electricity basically) and heat. The heat MIGHT be vaguely useful but people are paying this guy through the nose to have their time wasted with useless treatment; they all say that they had no benefit. Ultrasound has NEVER been shown to be particularly useful generally but it really has NEVER been used as a treatment for backs. If you have had lots of sessions that you've paid for then go back and demand that your physio gives you your money back.
In short - ultrasound or electrotherapy is no use for you.
Truth? You need to work the right muscles and move and hold yourself correctly. That's basically it but I'm sure you can appreciate there's quite some variation that needs to be addressed. The physio should look at how far you can move into every different direction, how good the quality of that movement is, how poorly controlled the back is, the nerve supply to the legs and more. In addition they should check for all the worrying signs as noted in the "What is" article.
You will most likely get quite a lot of explanation of what's happening and some exercises. That's all I'll say for now. Much of what you'll get will be an explanation of what's in the final section of this post only tailored precisely for your presentation.
4 - Those who live with you or friends that you see regularly
The first and most useful thing they can do for you is not to mollycoddle you (I like that word). If you stop doing stuff or you're always asking for help then your back will be getting less fit and more likely to end up causing you chronic problems. But people are generally nice and will want to help. If you're the patient try and do as much as possible. If you're the other person then make him/her get up off his backside occasionally to do some activity. Just because their back hurts doesn't mean they can't do stuff.
If you let someone sit in their own juices and complain there will be a few effects.
- Firstly you'll get hacked off with doing everything for them quite quickly. They are probably already grumpy because of the pain they have - you getting annoyed with them will not help.
- Second: they'll get less fit thus worsening their problem NOT easing it. So by leaving them you're making their problem both worse and longer lasting.
- Third: their reduction in fitness will lead to increased weight which in turn leads to more back pain and less use of the right muscles. Again this leads to increased chronicity.
Don't let someone with your basic back pain waste their time with inactivity but allow that they may not be able to help with heavy tasks. Normal activity should not cause more injury although it may cause pain.
"Pain" is not the same as "harm".
5 - Boss and Colleagues
We spend a third of our lives working (unless you're very lucky) so work is probably the single most likely place you'll have problems. We know that the longer you are off work the less likely you are to ever get back to work. This should be prompting you to think about working as soon as you can.
The points for bosses are the same as for those who live with you. Don't mollycoddle but don't expect full fitness at first. Bosses also have legal responsibilities for the safety of all staff and if they don't think you can safely do your job they're not going to be happy about taking you back until you're better. This leaves us in a Catch-22 situation. You need to return to work to get active and fit but you can't until you're active and fit. You need a good Occupational Health team or a pushy doctor.
Try and go back part-time at first. Or go onto light duties. Then build up to full-time and normal duties. The process will probably cause you some pain. Sorry that's how it goes. If you're not doing anything stupid you're not doing damage.
Colleagues can help by not griping too much that they're doing all the heavy work.
Bosses (in the UK at least) have a responsibility to make sure all the physical tasks you do are safe. If there is a code of practice, use it! If there isn't, ask why not.
Health and Safety law also requires that every worker has their own responsibility to themselves and to their colleagues. So if you see someone trying to lift a large photocopier then it's worth suggesting they don't. If they injure themselves and you saw it was likely and let them carry on then you are as culpable as they are. If you specifically ordered them to do it then expect a legal action coming your way.
What Nature can do
This is easy to split into 2 parts.
- What nature does that is helpful.
- What is unhelpful.
1 - Helpful
Your body repairs itself - that's it really. If you have damaged a structure then the body will heal it as well as it can. This is why most back pain episodes last less than 6 weeks.
2 - Unhelpful
It'll make you want to do less - not good (see above).
The muscles that you need will stop working when you get pain. This is normal for any area of the body. If you bang your elbow your biceps won't pull as hard until the pain's gone. But the back works slightly differently in that the muscles you need will NOT return to use when the pain goes. You will need to specifically train them yourself.
Right this is loads longer than expected so I'm going to split the topic into 2 posts. The next post is what you can do for yourself.
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12:55 Posted in Treatment | Permalink | Comments (2) | Email this | Tags: Juggling


Comments
Apologies i could not find your e-mail address. I have started running in the last few weeks and run just over 5 miles every other day. I just wanted to check should i be warming up?? if so do you know any simple exercises i could do and also ive noticed ive started to get lower back pain as a result of running. Is this normal?? Thanks
Posted by: Chris Parry | 01 August 2006
Hi Chris. I did send a reply here a couple of days ago but it seems not to have worked.
Here goes again:
>i could not find your e-mail address.
Look in "About me".
>I have started running in the last few weeks and run
>just over 5 miles every other day. I just wanted to
>check should i be warming up??
What are your reasons for wanting to warm-up? If you want a reduction in injuries then don't bother. There's very little evidence that warm-ups stop injuries.
If you want a little while to get your head in gear before running then why not but don't fret too much about "getting it right".
Likewise cool-downs have no effect on injury rates. People wind themselves up because they think they don't do things the "right" way. There is no "right way".
Stretches are useful as a daily thing if you wish to gain flexibility but don't fall into the trap of thinking that stretches=warm-up.
>ive noticed ive started to get lower back pain as a
>result of running. Is this normal??
Chances are it's just your body adapting to this new stress you're giving it. But it could be poor core stability possibly not helped by your job (I'm assuming you're a sit-down kind of worker - physical workers tend not to need to do running for instance). If this seems reasonable then get yourself into a Pilates (or similar) class somewhere and add that to your fitness regime.
Hope this was useful.
Posted by: Alby | 03 August 2006
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