Back
Pain Information
Back pain is
an all-too-familiar problem that can range from a dull, constant
ache to a sudden, sharp pain that leaves you incapacitated. It can
come on suddenly – from an accident, a fall, or lifting something
too heavy – or it can develop slowly, perhaps as the result of
age-related changes to the spine. Regardless of how it happens or
how it feels, you know it when you have it. And chances are, if you
don’t have it now, you will eventually.
How Common Is It?
At some point,
back pain affects an estimated 8 out of 10 people. It is one of our
society’s most common medical problems.
What Are the Risk
Factors for Back Pain?
Although
anyone can have back pain, a number of factors increase your risk.
They include:
Age: The first
attack of low back pain typically occurs between the ages of 30 and
40. Back pain becomes more common with age.
Fitness level:
Back pain is more common among people who are not physically fit.
Weak back and abdominal muscles may not properly support the spine.
“Weekend warriors” – people who go out and exercise a lot after
being inactive all week – are more likely to suffer painful back
injuries than people who make moderate physical activity a daily
habit. Studies show that low-impact aerobic exercise is good for the
discs that cushion the vertebrae, the individual bones that make up
the spine.
Diet: A diet
high in calories and fat, combined with an inactive lifestyle, can
lead to obesity, which can put stress on the back.
Heredity: Some
causes of back pain, including disc disease, may have a genetic
component.
Race: Race can
be a factor in back problems. African American women, for example,
are two to three times more likely than white women to develop
spondylolisthesis, a condition in which a vertebra of the lower
spine – also called the lumbar spine – slips out of place.


The presence of other
diseases:
Many diseases can cause or contribute to back pain. These include
various forms of arthritis, such as osteoarthritis, rheumatoid
arthritis, and ankylosing spondylitis, and cancers elsewhere in the
body that may spread to the spine.
Occupational risk factors:
Having a job that requires heavy lifting, pushing, or pulling,
particularly when this involves twisting or vibrating the spine, can
lead to injury and back pain. An inactive job or a desk job may also
lead to or contribute to pain, especially if you have poor posture
or sit all day in an uncomfortable chair.
Cigarette smoking:
Although smoking may not directly cause back pain, it increases your
risk of developing low back pain and low back pain with sciatica.
(Sciatica is back pain that radiates to the hip and/or leg due to
pressure on a nerve.) For example, smoking may lead to pain by
blocking your body’s ability to deliver nutrients to the discs of
the lower back. Or, repeated coughing due to heavy smoking may cause
back pain. It is also possible that smokers are just less physically
fit or less healthy than nonsmokers, which increases the likelihood
that they will develop back pain. Furthermore, smoking can slow
healing, prolonging pain for people who have had back injuries, back
surgery, or broken bones.
Discover How to
Stop
Back Pain
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Claims made on this
site have not been evaluated by the United States Food and Drug
Administration and are for informational purposes only and is not intended
as a substitute for advice from your physician or other health care
professional. This product is not intended to diagnose, treat, cure or
prevent disease. Zymosine is a trademark of Boulder Natural Labs, LLC. |
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