Upper (Thoracic Spine) Back Pain | Prevention and Treatment
Upper Back Pain

Dealing with upper back pain can be truly frustrating. However, there are many self-care remedies, medical treatments, physical therapy exercises, and lifestyle changes that provide real relief. This definitive guide explores the underlying causes, common symptoms, and most importantly—how to prevent and get rid of debilitating upper back pain for good.

Understanding Upper Back Pain

The upper back area, known medically as the thoracic spine, consists of the 12 vertebrae below the cervical spine (neck) and above the lumbar spine (lower back). This section supports much of the core and is involved in most torso movements. Upper back conditions can arise somewhat suddenly or gradually over time from poor posture, strained muscles, traumatic injury, arthritis, and other issues.

While painful and frustrating, the majority of upper back problems often respond very well to simple home treatment methods like heat, ice, OTC medications, and gentle stretches. However, more stubborn cases may require prescription medications, spinal injections, physical therapy, or rarely, surgery.

Learning how to properly strengthen the upper back through targeted exercises and maintain good posture are crucial for keeping this area flexible and supported long-term.

Common Causes of Upper Back Pain

There are a variety of potential sources behind upper back discomfort and pain. Recognizing what may be specifically provoking symptoms provides insight toward the best relief options.

Poor Posture

One widespread contributor to upper back pain is poor posture, especially from prolonged sitting at desks or looking down at phones over time. Slouching forward strains the muscles along the thoracic spine while also compressing the discs and joints.

Maintaining bad posture for hours on end creates muscular tightness and imbalance along with joint and spinal misalignment. This added pressure commonly results in inflammation and middle/upper back pain. The effects worsen over many years leading to accelerated disc degeneration and even arthritis formation.

Muscle Overuse and Strain

Another prevalent source of upper back pain is overworked muscles from repetitive activities involving heavy lifting, intense exercise, or regular forward bending and twisting. These motions gradually fatigue the back muscles and tendons.

Sudden increases in upper body activities like sports training or yardwork leads to acute pulls or tears in unconditioned muscles as well. Pain stems from strained overextended tendons along with miniature ruptures within muscle fibers themselves, known as microtears.

Herniated Thoracic Discs

While less frequent than in neck or lower back regions, ruptured/herniated discs do occasionally impact the thoracic spine too. Intervertebral discs act as small shock absorbers between vertebrae throughout the entire spine. They contain a jelly-like nucleus pulposus core encased by a rigid outer wall.

When excessive straining/twisting movements cause discs to bulge, tear, or rupture, the inner gel pushes outward against nerves exiting the spinal canal. This nerve compression produces inflammation and sometimes sharp pain signals.

Up to 15-20% of overall back problems involve disc issues. Fortunately though, fewer than 1% of herniated discs occur in upper back areas.

Traumatic Injury

Direct blows or trauma from accidents, falls, or sports collisions often fracture thoracic vertebrae or badly sprain/strain surrounding tissues. Sudden whiplash neck motions sustained in car accidents wrench tendons/ligaments between vertebrae too.

Crushing injuries that compress the mid back area under heavy weights also damage muscle fibers and discs. Fractured ribs are another common injury leading to upper back pain, especially in older individuals with weaker bones.

Common Symptoms of Upper Back Problems

In addition to localized soreness and tenderness, several other characteristic warning signs indicate upper back issues:

  • Sharp or stabbing pain sensations ranging from mild to severe
  • General radiating ache into the ribcage, arms, shoulders, and abdomen
  • Pain accompanied by muscular spasms, stiffness, cramping or reduced mobility
  • Numbness, tingling, or pins-and-needles feelings from nerve compression
  • Difficulty taking deep breaths due to intercostal (between ribs) nerve irritation

Feedback signals like these help distinguish musculoskeletal discords versus something more serious like lung, heart, or digestive distress.

Any excruciating or persistent upper back pain lasting beyond two weeks warrants medical examination to pinpoint the exact underlying disorder and craft an appropriate treatment plan.

At-Home Remedies for Upper Back Pain

Treating minor to moderate thoracic back pain often starts first with conservative do-it-yourself home care methods before escalating to professional medical interventions:

Heat Therapy

Applying heat through warm towels/compresses, heating pads, or baths boosts blood circulation to oxygen-starved muscles. This helps gently relax irritated nerves and painful back spasms. The increased nutrient blood flow also accelerates healing to strained/torn tissues. Use caution to avoid burns and limit sessions to 20 minutes max.

Cold Therapy

Icing injured areas with wrapped gel packs, bags of frozen vegetables, or cold compresses constricts local blood vessels to reduce swelling and inflammation chemicals that sensitize pain nerves. Less inflammation equals less pain signals. Apply ice for no more than 20 minutes at a time to avoid frostbite.

Over-The-Counter Oral Medications

Common oral OTC drugs like acetaminophen (Tylenol) or various nonsteroidal anti-inflammatories such as ibuprofen (Motrin/Advil) or naproxen (Aleve) help relieve painful symptoms too. These medications work either by blocking pain/inflammation nerve signals in the brain or stopping inflammation formation itself throughout the body. Beware of possible stomach, liver, and kidney side effects with long-term usage however.

Massage Therapy

Kneading and releasing tight upper back muscles through massage improves circulation and flexibility while reducing inflammation/cramping. Self-massage techniques using tennis balls against walls work. Visiting a professional massage therapist offers better clinical pain relief and mobility recovery through targeted myofascial release, pressure point stimulation, and range of motion restoration.

Back Extension Stretches and Strengthening Exercises

Performing light resistance training plus gentle back bending activities like yoga cat/cow poses takes pressure off compressed discs and nerves while safely stretching contracted painful muscles. This improves flexibility and blood flow. Targeted thoracic extensions also strengthen core muscles enabling better spinal support. However, check with a physical therapist prior starting any new strenuous back routines.

Improving Spinal Alignment and Posture

One of the most crucial yet overlooked factors exacerbating upper back woes is poor daily posture and improper spinal mechanics. Hunching forward over desks/devices for hours chronically strains the entire upper body kinetic chain.

Practicing mindful upright posture throughout daily routines realigns the upper skeleton. This reduces gravitational pressure on discs, nerves, and connective tissues deprived of adequate sustaining oxygen/nutrient delivery. Good posture also avoids overtaxing joint stabilizing muscles already functioning in a weakened state.

While these conservative remediation’s aim to alleviate various mild to moderate upper back pain causes, proper medical intervention is still required for severe, unrelenting, or radiating nerve symptoms potentially signaling serious spinal pathology.

Professional Medical Treatments 

If anti-inflammatory home care strategies provide little lasting relief beyond two weeks, consulting a spine specialist or pain management physician opens up more advanced pharmaceutical and procedural options. These include:

Prescription-Strength Oral Medications

Physicians may prescribe stronger dose-controlled tablets, compounds, or topical creams containing FDA-regulated versions of over-the-counter medications. These include prescription NSAID pills, muscle relaxants, membrane stabilizers, corticosteroids, and opioids for short-term application. Each class targets pain through different pharmacological mechanisms. However, several display possible addiction and organ damage risks requiring vigilant laboratory monitoring under doctor supervision.

Spinal Nerve Block Injections

Minimally-invasive fluoroscopy-guided injection procedures aim to bathe irritated spinal nerves directly in anti-inflammatory steroid mediations or numbing agents sometimes mixed with analgesics. Commonly injected regions include spinal facet joints, dorsal root ganglia, intervertebral discs and epidural spaces surrounding inflamed nerve roots or herniated discs. Injected drugs may offer temporary symptom relief ranging from days to years. However, injections risk complications like nerve trauma, bleeding, or introducing infection. Most patients receive injections in controlled series since single shots rarely provide permanent pain cessation.

Physical Rehabilitation Therapy

Working closely under an orthopedic physical medicine specialist, therapists craft personalized rehabilitation programs utilizing gentle strengthening/stretching exercises combined with manual spinal joint manipulation techniques and neuromuscular release methods. This alleviates muscle spasticity while restoring range of motion and optimal spinal biomechanics. Physiotherapists also train patients on proper home exercise maintenance regimens. Most insurers cover limited physical therapy visits with a doctor prescription.

Interventional Spinal Surgery

If conservative care options and injection procedures fail providing adequate pain relief after 6-12 months, complex spinal operations become the last resort. Surgeries include removing herniated disc fragments, repairing seriously degenerated vertebrae, replacing ruptured discs with artificial parts, or fusing multiple segments to eliminate motion entirely. Each intervention carries substantial procedural risks including vascular injury, infection, fluid leaks, instrumentation failure, limited mobility, and persistent pain. Thorough diagnostics scrutinize suitable surgical candidates beforehand.

While these measures better equip pain management doctors to combat severe spinal disorders, focused lifestyle changes that strengthen the upper back still offer the best pain prevention.

Lifestyle Changes 

Implementing the following proactive modifications enhances overall spinal protection and function:

Stretching and Light Resistance Training

Regularly performing lower impact aerobic activity plus targeted thoracic mobility stretches keeps muscles supple and toned. This stabilizes the upper back while stimulating nourishing blood circulation to discs and connective tissue through compression and decompression. Even basic daily stretch routines make substantive improvements over time.

Achieving/Maintaining Ideal Body Weight

Slimming down through proper nutrition and calorie reduction lessens mechanical loading across upper back joints, discs and ligaments. Just a 10% bodyweight decrease provides quantifiable relief equivalent to massive spinal decompression. For overweight or obese individuals already displaying advanced arthritis, substantial weight loss delays surgical joint replacement 5-10 years.

Smoking Cessation

Cigarette byproducts severely diminish oxygenated blood delivery to spinal discs. Smoking also introduces toxins that heighten inflammation while retarding mineral bone density crucial for fracture prevention. Kicking nicotine improves cardiovascular nourishment facilitating disc/tissue healing and better pain resilience.

Ergonomic Home/Workstation Setups

Poor home/jobsite ergonomics are prime triggers constantly aggravating upper back conditions. Just reorienting computer monitors directly at eye level avoids sustained shoulder elevation and hunching which strains the thoracic spine. Supportive back rests, kneeling chairs and specialized keyboard trays also help maintain neutral upright spinal postures minimizing disc pressure accumulation and muscular fatigue.

While painful back episodes can’t always be avoided as we age, focusing on improving modifiable risk factors offers the best odds minimizing repeated issues. Catching emerging problems early alongside discovering all available treatment options provides the greatest chances conquering upper back pain when it strikes. Arm yourself with the right knowledge for combating debilitating mid back discomfort well into the future through proper strengthening, stretching, posture, diet and lifestyle adjustments

Conclusion

Dealing with upper back pain can really get in the way of daily life. But learning about what typically causes pain in this area and recognizing early symptoms helps find the right treatment sooner. Lots of times, basic home remedies like heat, rest, over-the-counter meds, and gentle stretches can ease muscular back pain. But if the pain doesn’t get better or feels like nerve pain, seeing a back specialist is important to keep things from getting worse. The best way to handle back pain long-term is try preventing it in the first place. Making some positive lifestyle changes like improving posture, building core strength, losing extra weight, and avoiding other risk factors can keep your back stay healthier and help avoid pain problems down the road. Making just a couple of these healthy changes can have big benefits over time.

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.

February 14, 2024

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