Depression and Back Pain | What is the Link?
Woman suffering from depression

Back pain and depression—two common health issues that deeply impact quality of life. The link between back pain and depression has become increasingly clear through research, with science revealing some profound biological and psychosocial connections.

How Common is Back Pain and Depression?

Back pain causes more global disability than any other condition. Over 1 billion people worldwide suffer from chronic back pain. In the US alone, about 31 million people report experiencing low back pain at any given time.

Meanwhile, depression affects over 300 million people globally. It is the leading cause of disability for ages 15-44. In any given year, about 8% of American adults experience depression.

So these are clearly two far-reaching health concerns that touch millions of lives. But how often do they intersect?

Studies reveal that there is a high rate of co-occurrence between chronic back pain and depression. About 50-60% of people with chronic low back pain also meet criteria for major depression. And that co-existence is linked to greater pain, disability, and reduced quality of life.

So what explains this common overlap? As it turns out, back pain and depression share intimate biological and psychosocial connections.

Biological Factors Linking Back Pain and Depression

Inflammation

Chronic inflammation appears to be an important process contributing to both back pain and depression. People with inflammatory back pain conditions like arthritis have a higher risk of mood disorders.

Inflammation releases proteins called cytokines into the bloodstream. Cytokines can cross into the brain, where they activate microglia cells. Chronic activation of microglia can hamper the release of key neurotransmitters like dopamine.

Dopamine Deficiency

Dopamine plays a vital role in both pain perception and mood regulation. When dopamine release is impaired, it can translate to worsening pain and depression.

People with Parkinson’s disease clearly demonstrate this phenomenon—their dopamine deficiency leads to both increased pain sensitivity and higher rates of depression.

Brain Changes

Chronic back pain is associated with tangible changes in the brain’s structure, connectivity, and functioning—changes that resemble those seen with major depression.

For example, people with chronic low back pain exhibit a loss of gray matter density in areas related to emotion, motivation, and reward processing. Similar gray matter abnormalities occur with depression.

Mind and Body Factors Contributing to Pain and Depression

Beyond biological mechanisms, there are some key psychosocial factors that contribute to the intersection of chronic back pain and mood changes.

Stress and Exhaustion

Debilitating low back pain strains mental health by disrupting sleep, provoking anxiety about the future, and hampering enjoyable activities. Over half of people with chronic lower back pain experience symptoms of insomnia. Tossing and turning every night quickly leads to irritability and low frustration tolerance from fatigue.

Back pain also commonly causes people to withdraw from hobbies, social engagements, and physical activities that previously brought joy. This loss of meaningful connection and movement can contribute to depressed mood.

Catastrophizing Thoughts

The way someone thinks about and interprets their pain has a big impact on their suffering. Many with chronic back pain become mired in an endless loop of catastrophizing thoughts, ruminating endlessly on worst-case scenarios related to their pain. They magnify any ache into a sign of serious injury or illness, which leaves them feeling helpless and doomed.

This type of exaggerated negative mental chatter certainly does not help improve one’s spirits or outlook. In fact, studies consistently show higher rates of catastrophizing thoughts in people with chronic lower back pain who have comorbid mood disorders.

Avoidance Tendencies

Out of fear of causing further harm, people with chronic back pain often avoid physical activities that could potentially provoke pain. However, over time this avoidance and inactivity can worsen pain and depression by promoting muscle atrophy and withdrawal from enjoyable movements.

Believing You Can Get Better Matters

Self-efficacy refers to how much someone believes they can successfully manage challenging tasks or situations. When it comes to handling chronic back pain, self-confidence makes a big difference.

People with higher self-efficacy regarding their pain tend to be less disabled by it on a daily basis. They trust in their ability to follow through on helpful pain self-care habits. They have an easier time pushing past pain flare-ups to maintain a full life.

On the flip side, those with low self-efficacy often doubt their capacity to positively impact their pain. They lack faith in their own skills to cope with and overcome pain obstacles. “I could never do that” becomes a refrain whenever exercise, posture corrections, or pacing get suggested.

This tendency to undermine personal abilities translates to higher rates of disability and mood problems. After all, feeling incapable leaves one helpless and hopeless—prime emotional soil for depression roots.

Self-efficacy lives closely alongside the concept of self-compassion. When people judge themselves harshly for “failing” at pain management, it erodes self-confidence. They begin to view themselves as broken. Without self-compassion to counterbalance, self-efficacy suffers.

Building resilience against the emotional toll of chronic back pain involves nurturing kindness towards oneself. Recognizing daily progress, however small, and avoiding comparison to others, helps support intrinsic healing motivation. Our belief in betterment blossoms when watered with compassion.

Self-efficacy refers to one’s confidence in their ability to manage challenging tasks. Low self-efficacy is linked to higher disability and mood disturbance in those with chronic pain conditions. When someone doubts their capacity to positively impact their pain, they feel more helpless and hopeless.

The Downward Spiral of Pain and Depression

So in many people with chronic back pain, elevated pain levels contribute to depressed mood through biological changes, exhaustion, social withdrawal, and negative thought patterns.

But perhaps even more detrimental is that this resulting depression then further intensifies and prolongs pain.

People living with both pain and depressed mood tend to catastrophize more about their pain and perceive it as far worse because of distorted negative thinking patterns. They often disengage from enjoyable distractions and physical activity which could alleviate pain. They struggle to maintain pain self-management behaviors without motivation. They report higher pain levels in general, likely due to wonky dopamine signaling.

In essence, pain and depression become mutually reinforcing—more pain worsens depression, and worsening depression amplifies pain. This sets the stage for a self-perpetuating downward spiral.

Pain Medication Pitfalls

This vicious cycle gets even more complicated when considering the mental health effects of many pain medication regimens. Due to dysfunctional dopamine signaling, those with chronic lower back pain often find standard opioid analgesics to be ineffective. In an effort to find pain relief, some then increase their medication dose too quickly, or combine opioids with other substances that promote mood changes. This puts them at higher risk for medication overdose or accidental addiction and withdrawal—which certainly does not help depression.

Hope Deferred

Finally, depression develops partly from feeling hopeless about pain improvement and losing faith in treatment effectiveness. Recovering from back surgery or completing pain rehabilitation programs takes incredible effort and patience to slowly rebuild strength. When depression steals motivation and perspective, people feel utterly defeated when progress stalls or reverses. They lose confidence in their body’s healing capacity.

Without positive social support and reframing of expectations, people get trapped in despair thinking their pain will forever dominate life. This mindset obviously takes an immense toll on mental health.

Other Factors to Consider

Genetics

Research suggests that a person’s genes may play a part in whether they develop chronic back pain or depression. Certain gene variations seem to make some people more prone to these issues.

For example, scientists have discovered genes involved with controlling inflammation levels. People born with faulty versions of these genes would likely run “hot”—with more inflammatory cytokines circulating that could sensitize their pain pathways over time.

Similarly, there are genes that regulate how dopamine gets utilized in the brain. Folks with dysfunctional forms of those genes might have baseline lower dopamine. We know dopamine deficiencies often translate to worsening mood changes and perceived pain levels.

Additionally, studies on twins provide clues about genetic components. Identical twins possess the exact same DNA since they split from one fertilized egg. So when identical twin siblings both suffer from chronic pain and major depression, it strengthens the idea of shared genetics influencing susceptibility.

Admittedly, untangling contributors from heredity versus environment remains challenging. But many experts argue certain genomic variants definitely increase risk for developing central sensitivity syndromes linked to pain and mood dysregulation.

While we cannot alter DNA coded at birth, understanding genetic drivers can help inform preventative wellness strategies and determine best treatment approaches that work with each person’s hardwiring. Genetics serve as roadmaps illuminating why pain gets severe enough to invite in depression—guiding us toward the least bumpy pathways back to vitality.

Pain Generalization

Sometimes following a specific back injury, residual nerve sensitization provokes body-wide pain amplification over time even after the tissues heal. This manifests as worsening pain in areas unrelated to initial injury.

Generalized pain seems linked to depression risk. It also makes accurate diagnosis more complicated, leading to frustration when pursuing treatment.

Conclusion

Back pain and depression can both cause tremendous suffering. Unfortunately, they often go hand-in-hand, making each other worse. New research shows promise in helping people cope with chronic back pain and depression. Therapy and tools like journaling, exercise, and meditation may help ease your suffering. The mind and body are connected.

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 23, 2024

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