Back
Pain and Chiropractic:
"...patients suffering from back and/or neck complaints experience
chiropractic care as an effective means of resolving or ameliorating
pain and functional impairments, thus reinforcing previous results
showing the benefits of chiropractic treatment for back and neck pain."
Source: Journal of Manipulative and Physiological Therapeutics, Verhoef
et al. (1997)
"...for the management of low-back pain, chiropractic care is the most
effective treatment, and it should be fully integrated into the
government`s health care system."
Source: The Manga Report (1993)
In the past year over 75% of Americans had back problems. Almost two thirds of those patients were more satisfied with chiropractic therapies than the care given by a medical doctor. Seventy percent of Americans feel it is important to include chiropractic in their health care plan.
ACA`s
Booklet, American Perception of Practitioners & Treatments for Back
Problems
A
team of researchers has identified a catch-22 of lower back pain. Those
with lower back injuries can worsen their pain by avoiding using hurt
muscles. Other muscles, including those in the abdomen or on the sides
of the torso, contort to compensate, leading to greater pressure on the
spine and damaging discs.
Source: 2004 Dr. Joseph Mercola.
Back
Pain Is The Leading Cause Of Limitation!
According to the National Institutes of Health (Harris et al. 1999),
lower back pain is one of the most significant health problems in the
United States, with back pain being the most frequent cause of activity
limitation in people younger than 45 years of age: 65-80% of all people
have back pain at some time in their life.
Source: 1995-2004 Life Extension Foundation .
Researchers state of the 300,000+ spinal disc surgeries as many as 90% are unnecessary and ineffective
Source: Finneson BF. A lumbar disc surgery predictive score card: a retrospective evaluation," Spine (1979): 141-144
Annual costs of back pain in the U.S. range from $20 to $75 billion, and as much as $100 billion worldwide.
Source: Bigos S, et al. Acute Low Back Problems in Adults, Clinical Practice Guideline No. 14. Rockville, MD: U.S. Public Health Service, U.S. Dept. of Health and Human Services, AHCPR Pub. No. 95-0642, Dec. 1994
It is
estimated that more people see chiropractors for back problems than for
all other ailments combined. Chiropractic spinal manipulation has been
recognized by the U.S. Agency for Health Care Policy and Research as an
effective therapy for acute low-back pain. Chiropractic treatment has
been found to be more beneficial to patients with persistent back and
neck complaints than other forms of manipulation. Research in Great
Britain found chiropractic to provide "worthwhile, long-term benefits"
for patients with low back pain in comparison to hospital outpatient
management. This study also found chiropractic benefits to persist for a
three-year period, indicating long-term benefits. For patients with
uncomplicated, acute low back pain, chiropractic has also been found to
be effective. A cost comparison study of back related injuries showed
the number of work days lost for patients treated with chiropractic to
be nearly ten times less than that of patients treated under medical
care. Also, average compensation costs for chiropractic care were
$68.38, compared to $668.39 for patients treated with standard,
non-surgical treatments.
Source: 1998-2004 ICBS, Inc.
Low Back Pain Facts
Source: Bigos S, et al. Acute Low Back Problems in Adults, Clinical Practice Guideline No. 14. Rockville, MD: U.S. Public Health Service, U.S. Dept. of Health and Human Services, AHCPR Pub. No. 95-0642, Dec. 1994.
In August 1999, Blue Cross/Blue Shield of Kansas, presented a study aimed at determining the cost and effectiveness of treating back pain with chiropractic compared with other techniques.
The results showed that 38 percent of the patients chose to seek chiropractic care rather than medical care.
Source: 1998-2004 ICBS, Inc.
Does
Back Pain Go Away on Its Own?
Eighty percent of people suffer from back pain at some point in their
lives. Back pain is the second most common reason for visits to the
doctor`s office, outnumbered only by upper-respiratory infections. Most
cases of back pain are mechanical or non-organic, i.e., not caused by
serious conditions, such as inflammatory arthritis, infection, fracture,
or cancer.
What
Causes Back Pain?
The back is a complicated structure of bones, joints, ligaments, and
muscles. You can sprain ligaments, strain muscles, rupture disks, and
irritate joints, all of which can lead to back pain. While sports
injuries or accidents can cause back pain, sometimes the simplest of
movements-for example, picking up a pencil from the floor-can have
painful results. In addition, arthritis, poor posture, obesity, and
psychological stress can cause or complicate back pain. Back pain can
also directly result from disease of the internal organs, such as kidney
stones, kidney infections, blood clots, or bone loss.
Back injuries are a part of everyday life, and the spine is quite good at dealing with these often "pulled" muscles. These very minor injuries usually heal within 1 or 2 days. Some pain, however, continues. What makes some pain last longer is not entirely understood, but researchers suspect that the reasons may include stress, mood changes, and the fear of further injury that may prevent patients from being active. In addition, sometimes a painful injury or disease changes the way the pain signals are sent through the body, and, even after the problem has gone away or is inactive, the pain signals still reach the brain. It is as if the pain develops a memory that keeps being replayed.
Will
Back Pain Go Away on Its Own?
Until recently, researchers believed that back pain will "heal" on its
own. We have learned, however, that this is not true. A recent study
showed that when back pain is not treated, it may go away temporarily
but will most likely return. The study demonstrated that in more than
33% of the people who experience low-back pain, the pain lasts for more
than 30 days. Only 9% of the people who had low-back pain for more than
30 days were pain free 5 years later.1
Another study looked at all of the available research on the natural history of low-back pain. The results showed that when it is ignored, back pain does not go away on its own.2 Those studies demonstrate that low-back pain continues to affect people for long periods after it first begins.
What
Can I Do to Prevent Long-Term Back Pain?
If your back pain is not resolving quickly, visit your doctor of
chiropractic. Your pain will often result from mechanical problems that
your doctor of chiropractic can address. Many chiropractic patients with
relatively long-lasting or recurring back pain feel improvement shortly
after starting chiropractic treatment.3 The relief they feel after a
month of treatment is often greater than after seeing a family
physician.4
Chiropractic spinal manipulation is a safe and effective spine pain treatment. It reduces pain, decreases medication, rapidly advances physical therapy, and requires very few passive forms of treatment, such as bed rest.5
How Can I Prevent Back Pain?
Don`t lift by bending over. Instead, bend your hips and knees and then squat to pick up the object. Keep your back straight, and hold the object close to your body.
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References
1. Hestbaek L, Leboeuf-Yde C, Engberg M, Lauritzen T, Bruun NH, Manniche C.
2. The course of low-back pain in a general population. Results from a 5-year prospective study. J Manipulative Physiol Ther 2003 May;26(4):213-9.
3. Hestbaek L, Leboeuf-Yde C, Manniche C. Low-back pain: what is the long-term course? A review of studies of general patient populations. Eur Spine J 2003 Apr;12(2):149-65.
4. Stig LC, Nilsson O, Leboeuf-Yde C. Recovery pattern of patients treated with chiropractic spinal manipulative therapy for long-lasting or recurrent low back pain. J Manipulative Physiol Ther 2001 May;24(4):288-91.
5.
Nyiendo J, Haas M, Goodwin P. Patient characteristics, practice
activities, and one-month outcomes for chronic, recurrent low-back pain
treated by chiropractors and family medicine physicians: a
practice-based feasibility study. J Manipulative Physiol Ther 2000
May;23(4):239-45.
Time to recognize value of chiropractic care? Science and patient
satisfaction surveys cite usefulness of spinal manipulation. Orthopedics
Today February 2003;23(2):14-15.