Chronic back pain is defined as pain in the back that persists for 12 weeks or longer, even after an initial injury has healed or the underlying cause of acute back pain has been treated. It affects millions of people and is one of the leading causes of disability worldwide.
Defining Chronic Back Pain
Chronic back pain typically involves pain in the lower back or neck area that continues for at least 3 months. Unlike acute pain that usually goes away as injuries heal, chronic back pain persists over time and is usually more complex, involving physical, psychological, and social factors.
The location of pain can vary but generally occurs in the lumbar (lower) region of the spine, sacroiliac joints, or cervical (neck) area. The quality and severity of pain also differs among patients. Some experience a constant dull ache while others have intermittent sharp, stabbing pains. Muscle tightness and tension are also common.
Chronic back pain shares many of the same features as other chronic pain conditions. Over time, changes occur in the nervous system that amplify pain signals. Psychological factors like depression, anxiety, poor coping skills also contribute. It becomes less a purely physical disorder and more of a biopsychosocial condition.
What Causes Chronic Back Pain?
There are a variety of underlying causes and risk factors for chronic back pain:
Injuries and Accidents: Back strains, herniated discs, and fractures from falls, heavy lifting, vehicular accidents can trigger persistent back pain. Whiplash injuries from collisions also commonly transition to chronic neck pain.
Degenerative Disorders: Conditions like spinal stenosis, spondylolisthesis, degenerative disc disease lead to progressive back pain as vertebral joints and discs wear down. Age-related bone loss also plays a role.
Poor Posture & Overuse: Prolonged sitting, repetitive motions, awkward positioning slowly strains back muscles, joints and ligaments. Obesity adds more weight bearing stress.
Other Diseases: Arthritis, osteoporosis, kidney disorders indirectly aggravate back pain over time through inflammation, bone loss, and accumulation of toxins. Metastatic cancer, infections, autoimmune disease can also be culprits.
On a physiological level, chronic back pain develops from aberrant functioning of the complex web of tissues, nerves and pathways along the spine and back. Damage or dysfunction at various points can sustain the transmission of heightened pain signals to the brain.
Over time, central sensitization occurs, involving increased reactivity of neurons and glial cells in the spinal cord and brain. This leads to amplification of pain, making ordinary stimuli become painful.
Assessing Chronic Back Pain
A comprehensive medical workup is key to properly diagnosing chronic back pain. This includes:
Medical History: Information is gathered about the onset, location, quality and intensity of pain. Associated symptoms like numbness/tingling are also noted. Past injuries, treatments tried and lifestyle factors provide helpful clues.
Physical Exam: Range of motion, motor strength, reflexes and sensory function are assessed to detect nerve involvement or structural damage. Palpation identifies areas of muscle spasm and tenderness. Special maneuvers can provoke symptoms of certain spinal conditions.
Imaging Tests: X-rays, CT scans and MRIs visualize bones, joints, discs and soft tissues. Findings are often nonspecific but can detect tumors, fractures, stenosis, herniations explaining nerve impingement.
Psychosocial Evaluation: Questionnaires and interviews evaluate contributing emotional, cognitive and behavioral influences on pain perception and disability. This biopsychosocial perspective guides more holistic treatment.
Lab/Other Tests: Bloodwork helps rule out inflammatory, metabolic and infectious causes. Electromyography assesses nerve function. Discography injects dye to pinpoint discogenic sources undetected on imaging.
Treating Chronic Back Pain
Integrating multiple types of treatments is the most effective approach for managing chronic back pain:
Medications like NSAIDs, muscle relaxants, gabapentin/pregabalin, antidepressants and opioids can provide varying degrees of symptom relief. However, benefits are often modest over the long-term and risks need to be weighed.
Physical Therapy utilizes therapeutic exercise, manual techniques, electrical stimulation, ultrasound and heat/ice therapy to improve strength, flexibility, posture and pain. It forms the cornerstone of conservative treatment before considering more invasive options.
Injections like epidural steroid injections and nerve blocks can reduce inflammation and irritation of spinal nerve roots. However, pain relief tends to be temporary and benefits unclear from repeated procedures.
Lifestyle Measures include managing weight, nutrition, physical activity, sleep and stress. This empowers patients to take an active role in controlling pain. Pacing activities to avoid overexertion is key. Assistive devices and ergonomic modifications further offload the spine.
Mind-Body Therapies like CBT, biofeedback, meditation/mindfulness training help develop psychological tools to manage pain and alter pain processing. Relaxation techniques reduce muscle tension and anxiety.
Interdisciplinary Rehab features coordinated care from physicians, physical/occupational therapists, psychologists, and other allied health staff. These intensive programs aim to restore function and quality of life with a holistic biopsychosocial approach.
Surgery like spinal fusion, laminectomy, or disc replacement may offer pain relief when conservative measures fail and clear anatomical derangements amenable to correction are present. However, outcomes are mixed and risks like infection, nerve damage, continued pain need to be discussed.
The Outlook for Chronic Back Pain
For many dealing with chronic back pain, the reality is learning to live with some degree of discomfort rather than expecting a complete cure. But with the right treatment plan tailored to one’s specific needs, significant improvements in pain severity and quality of life are possible.
Setbacks are expected with symptom flares, but the goal is preventing acute episodes from spiraling into function-limiting pain. Self-management strategies mentioned above reinforce one’s internal capacity to dampen pain when it arises while maintaining daily activities.
While chronic back pain remains challenging to treat, continuing innovation and research around integrated neuromuscular, biopsychosocial and interdisciplinary approaches gives much reason for optimism.
Written by Dr. Tony Mork
Orthopedic Spine Surgeon
I’m Dr. Tony Mork, MD, a Minimally Invasive Orthopedic Spine Surgery Specialist in Newport Beach, California. With over 40 years of experience, I’m dedicated to providing information for all topics that involve neck and back pain.
January 25, 2024
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