Lower back pain

Lower back pain occurs in
the lumbar and sacral parts of the spine which lie between the thoracic spine of the ribcage and the pelvis. The low back has 5 lumbar vertebrae, the
sacrum, which lies between the 2 ilia or pelvic
bones, and the coccyx, right at the lower tip of
the spine.
At the front of the spine, between the
vertebrae, are the discs and at the back are the facet joints, 1 on either side between each vertebrae. The
nerves from the spinal cord exit the spine between the discs and the facet joints.
Mostly Self Correcting
Most people experience some low back
pain during their life. Many of these episodes are self limiting, that is they seem to get better by themselves.
This is hardly surprising as the body is always attempting to fix any and every problem that arises during
the course of our lives.
Strain
The most common cause of low back pain
is strain. You can strain the facet joints, or the muscles, tendons or ligaments that lie over them. It can be
anywhere from a mild ache to severe and debilitating.
Prolapse
A long way behind strain is a prolapsed intervertebral disc, or slipped disc. This pain can be mild or moderate but
it's characterized by severe and debilitating pain. Often accompanied by sciatica, a line of pain down the
back of the
leg. There may also be significant
weakness Low back, back view
and numbness or tingling in the leg or
foot.
Emergency
If you have pain down the back of both
legs significant loss of strength or any loss of bladder or bowel control it is an emergency and you need
to get a CT or MRI scan immediately. Putting it off may cause
permanent damage.
Fixed or Compensated
When you get over an episode of low back pain, one of 2
things has happened. Either your body has fixed the problem or
it has merely adapted to it. If it's fixed, that's
the end of it but if it has just compensated for the strain or injury, it will be back, either
at the original site or somewhere else.
How do you know?
The trouble is you don't really know if the problem is
fixed or just compensated for. Either way, it doesn't hurt any more. So how can you tell? The answer to that
lies with time. If it's fixed, it's gone for good. If it's compensated for, it will be back. Often with very
little provocation.
Most people only think they have a problem if they have
acute pain. Fair enough, but this is actually an unreliable guide.
At work I often hear the refrain, "But I didn't do
anything". A sneeze, picking up a plate, sitting on a lounge, a long drive, yet they end up with
significant or severe low back pain.
Underlying
This tells me there is an underlying mechanical problem
just waiting to be provoked into action. As an osteopath, I assess how specific
joints and general areas of the body move. What is the range and quality of movement? This is absolutely
crucial. If a joint, or joints, are not moving properly, there is a problem and it needs to be dealt with. If
you don't, it will come back and bite you. Sooner or later, but it will be back.
If it's Tight, it's Not Right
This is an underlying, undeniable law of organic life, (that's us).
NEVER EVER underestimate it. If it's tight, it's not right.
It will give you pain, and debility, and it WILL mess with the quality of your life. Sooner or
later.
Absolutely guaranteed.
Inevitable Results
I spend my life as an osteopath treating tight joints, tight muscles and their inevitable
result, misaligned bones. It's also what I teach my patients to deal with themselves. You can deal with much, or
all of your pain and debility, if you know what to do to help yourself. You don't need to be an expert, you just
need to know what to do.
This is nowhere more obvious than with low back pain, but it applies to your entire body as
well. Every joint and every muscle. Bar none.
Limitless Ways
There seem to be a limitless number of ways you can hurt
your back.
Lifting too much or the wrong way, standing or sitting too
long, twisting, falling over, nearly falling over, sneezing, sport, over exercising, under exercising, awkward
postions, sleeping 'the wrong way', etc etc.
3 Most Common Causes
But in my experience most back pain is usually caused
by just 1 or 2 of 3 things. Damage, strain or less likely, referred organ pain.
2 Most Common
Causes
For the vast majority of
people with back pain it is caused by either damage or
strain.
The Most
Common Cause
And for most of those, the
pain is caused by strain.
Postural and traumatic
strain.
That means your pain is
probably caused by strain and you can most likely do something about it. You just have to know what to
do.
Good and Bad
It's bad because it hurts, but it's good because that means that it is highly likely strain
is causing or contributing to your problem, and strain is something you can address and minimize or
alleviate. That is what this site and my DVD is all about.
Do it Right
Doing the right stretches and the right exercise can go a country mile towards reducing or
relieving your low back pain, in fact any pain anywhere you have muscles, bones and joints. Any and all of
them.
This Means You
Do not be thinking that this doesn't apply to you, or that it is so simple it could not
explain your pain. It may not, but it WAY more likely does. Believe me when I tell you, this is based on 21
years of experience and over 50,000 treatments.
I can help YOU
If you don't live in my local area, I can't treat you, but that doesn't mean I can't help you.
The Video you can get on this site is the one I give to all of my patients. It is the home version of what
I do to them in my clinic.
Some use it, some don't, but the ones that do almost ALWAYS get the result that they are after
- less pain, less debility, and a better quality of life.
Get the Video
Get the Video, do the stretches,
just like I tell you, and get your life back.
You have nothing to lose, because if it doesn't help, I will give you your money
back
and you can keep the video.
Try it, you have nothing to lose except your pain and wouldn't that be nice??
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