Let's Talk About Back Pain Relief

Jane DoCampo • April 28, 2022
Should I get a cortisone injection?
 
When we have back pain, and we can often extend this to include shoulder pain and hip pain (because these are both heavily influenced by spinal alignment), it's a common practice to want a quick fix like a cortisone injection or pain medicine. Sometimes we opt for a nerve block or surgery that we think will fix the problem...anything to deaden the sensation of pain.

What is my back pain telling me?

Back or joint pain is certainly no fun, but it gives us a lot of information, if we'll listen to it. It tells us where we are out of balance. What muscles are too tight and which are too loose? Am I compressing the front, back or sides of my spine, and at which level? What's over-efforting? What's under-efforting? Are my legs and core helping me enough? Are my shoulders overworking because my core is underworking? How should I alter my approach to working out because of back pain?

Make sure you understand your imaging report.

I believe there are no shortcuts. We can enlist aid, but we have to take the long view of what's creating the problem. We need to educate ourselves about our imaging report. Don't place your blind trust in a doctor to fix you. Master neutral spine and body position. (In almost 100% of cases, stop doing cat/cow!) And do the appropriate physical work to resolve the misalignments, structural imbalances, and weaknesses that fail to support your joints. This is the only real way to take pressure off the nerve that is sending the pain signals.

A quick fix is not a permanent solution.

A quick 'fix' will mask the underlying problem and allow the misalignments to continue so the pain will show up again...and probably worse. Take time. Gather information. Look at a dermatome map. That will tell you which nerve is compressed by the body part that is affected.

Correct your alignment for a real solution to back pain.

Decompression (taking body weight and pressure off the nerve), postural correction, and targeted positional exercise to strengthen your weaknesses to be able to hold the corrected alignment, is the only solution. There are no shortcuts.

If you need help understanding your imaging report, or productive ways to exercise for your condition, I can help you!
By Jane DoCampo July 28, 2022
Nearly any article I come across for improving back pain will invariably recommend the cat/cow exercise (a repeated arching and rounding of the spine). This is a thoughtless, rather than thoughtful addition to a sequence for back pain. Anyone providing recommendations to total strangers should only include harmless exercise with consideration of what potential serious issues can be creating back pain. While some people searching the internet for back pain relief may have no damage in their spine whatsoever, many have serious issues for which cat/cow is contraindicated and harmful such as: disc herniation; spinal stenosis; spondylolisthesis; or scoliosis. Cat/cow would aggravate and worsen each of these conditions. Moreover, when a spine is in enough distress that someone is searching for relief, often in the form of back spasms or the feeling of a pulled muscle, that spine will respond much better to stability work performed in neutral spine alignment rather than excessive motion. In fact, most likely the reason an otherwise healthy spine would be in distress, would be because of lack of awareness of neutral spine alignment as they were performing some task, exercise, or just sitting or standing in misalignment. A muscle in spasm is asking to return to its normal resting length rather than being stretched. The takeaway here is that it is much better and useful to teach neutral spine work rather than repeatedly and mindlessly including cat/cow not knowing what brought the reader to you. If you would like to learn neutral spine work, contact me at SarasotaScoliosis.com. Jane DoCampo is certified by the International Association of Yoga Therapists and is a NASM corrective exercise specialist specializing in scoliosis, herniation, and pelvic floor dysfunction.
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