THE HEALTHY
GEEZER
Question: Have you ever thrown your back
out? I hear an awful lot of geezers complain about their backs. How common is
back pain?
Answer: Yes, I’ve had back problems most of my
adult life and I know how debilitating they are.
When I was 30, I put myself in bed for a week
by carrying heavy stacks of newspapers to the curb. Back problems have been a
recurring problem in the decades since then.
The first attack of low back pain usually
happens to people between the ages of 30 and 40. Back pain becomes more common
with age.
Back pain is very common. It affects about 8
out of 10 people.
This affliction incapacitates so many people
and the subject is so extensive that I’m going to do a three-part series on
back pain. This first one is about causes.
Back pain is more common among people who are
not physically fit. Weak back and abdominal muscles may not properly support
the spine.
If you’re sedentary most of the time and then
exert yourself on rare occasions, you are more likely to injure your back than
someone who exercises daily.
If you’re carrying a big belly, you put added
stress on the muscles in your low back and are a candidate for agony.
Some back pain, including disc disease, may
spring from your genes.
Race can have an influence, too.
African-American women, for example, are two
to three times more likely than white women to develop spondylolisthesis, a
condition in which a bone — vertebra — of the lower spine slips out
of place.
Your job can be a major influence on back
health. If your work requires heavy lifting or sitting all day, you risk
hurting your back.
Many sanitation workers and writers suffer
from back troubles.
Once again, cigarette smoking is a health
hazard.
While smoking doesn’t cause back pain
directly, it increases your risk of developing sciatica, a pain that runs down
the back of your leg from spinal-disc pressure on a nerve.
Smoking can block the body’s ability to
deliver nutrients to the discs of the lower back.
Mechanical problems can cause back pain.
Perhaps the most common mechanical cause of back pain is disc degeneration.
The cushioning discs between the vertebrae of
the spine break down with age. If there is stress on these compromised discs,
they press against spinal nerves and you may experience what feels like a
toothache in a buttock.
At almost any age, an injury can force these
discs to bulge or rupture, causing the same kind of pain.
Spine injuries such as sprains and fractures
can cause either short-lived or chronic pain. Fractured vertebrae are often the
result of osteoporosis, a condition that causes weak, porous bones.
Many medical problems can cause back pain.
They include scoliosis, which causes curvature of the spine; various forms of
arthritis, and spinal stenosis, a narrowing of the spinal column that puts
pressure on the spinal cord and nerves.
Your emotions have a major impact upon back
pain.
Never underestimate how they can tighten
muscles and elevate your awareness of pain.
I recall vividly being free of sciatica when I
received some troubling news. Within minutes, I couldn’t put my left foot down
because the pain in my leg was so intense.
If you have a question, please write to
fred@healthygeezer.com
All rights reserved.
Copyright © 2008
by Fred Cicetti.