Back pain (also known "dorsalgia") is pain felt in the back that may originate from the muscles, nerves, bones, joints or other structures in the spine.
The pain may have a sudden onset or it can be a chronic pain, it can be felt constantly or intermittently, stay in one place or refer or radiate to other areas. It may be a dull ache, or a sharp or piercing or burning sensation. The pain may be felt in the neck (and might radiate into the arm and hand), in the upper back, or in the low back, (and might radiate into the leg or foot), and may include symptoms other than pain, such as weakness, numbness or tingling.
Back pain is one of humanity's most frequent complaints. In the U.S., acute low back pain (also called lumbago) is the fifth most common reason for all physician visits. About nine out of ten adults experience back pain at some point in their life, and five out of ten working adults have back pain every year.

Monday, April 6, 2009

Understanding Chronic Treatment-Resistant Pain - Psychosomatic Back Pain

science has shown that it is an incredibly powerful connection between the mind and the body. In many cases, the underlying cause of neck pain, back pain and sciatica, also known as the back pain is complex, may be psychological. Many times when a person in pain and said that it is psychological or psychosomatic, the patient immediately defensive, often stating: "It is not in my head, the pain is real!" The fact is, it is indeed very real, regardless of whether the pain is characterized as a psychosomatic or not. When dealing with the treatment resistant, chronic pain of the Mind /Body link needs to be examined, it can be excluded. In this article we will look at mental pain, psychosomatic pain, mental and chronic back pain. While in a previous article, we will again briefly, but the relationship between chronic back pain and depression. Chronic pain, and in what form, can be the worst, disability and disabling of a medical complaint. To view the full treatment of the disease, underlying causality must be thoroughly investigated and diagnosed. It is true that most cases of neck pain, back pain, sciatica, and are or have their origin in an existing pathological or other physiological condition. However, psychological back pain is quite common and in fact is one of the major causes for treatment-resistant chronic pain.

Unfortunately, if an illness is psychosomatic, there is often an immediate stigma or negative perception associated. Very often when an individual suffers from neck pain, back pain and /or sciatica hears the term psychosomatic, they immediately react defensively. If a condition is known as a psychosomatic attached is the connotation that the condition "all in your head" or somehow "imaginary." There is even a stigma of mental illness, with the patient protested: "I'm not crazy, this pain is real!" Even people close to, in times of individual members of your family, will say unkind things like: "I knew that he is counterfeiting" or "I knew that they just try to focus, I felt sorry for me!" For these reasons and others, the resistance to a psychosomatic diagnosis is considerable, often socially and culturally.

As in a previous article, it is a powerful link between stress and psychosomatic disorders, in this case, neck pain, back pain, and /or sciatica or treatment-resistant chronic back pain. In addition, the relationship between depression and psychosomatic disorders, especially as we age, is often very powerful. People suffering from psychosomatic illnesses can be incredible pain or other symptoms or physical symptoms without physical diagnosis. Paradoxically, there are a number of physical conditions, such as brain injuries and vitamin deficiencies to name only two, possibly profound psychological symptoms. However, it is often the case that many people Exhibitor treatment resistant chronic pain, with no underlying medical diagnosis, a psychological or psychosomatic condition.

As opposed to commonly held beliefs, pain is the result of a psychosomatic condition, an emotional or psychological process is actually quite real. Psychosomatic pain, in this case, the treatment-resistant chronic back pain is not imaginary, it is not in our heads, "it is not the result of a delusional or a sick mind, and it is not the result of mental illness. The fact is that all suffering, tension headaches, ulcers, colitis, back pain, tension, and a variety of other stress-related disorders has a psychosomatic condition. Of course, all these people are not "crazy". I guess the best way for an individual to understand how real psychosomatic pain can be is that they think back to the last tension headaches and ask a single, simple question: "What the pain real?"

Psychological back pain is simply another name for psychosomatic back pain and is sometimes referred to as stress-induced back pain. Once again, pain associated with this condition is indeed very real. While the pain may be ultimately connected with the Mind /Body Link, the physical expression of pain, regardless of whether the pain is neck pain, back pain or sciatica, may be disability and disability. Therefore, dealing with psychosomatic, therapy-resistant chronic pain is often difficult, if not almost impossible, without actually using the underlying condition. As an evolutionary scientist noted, once pointed out, psychosomatic pain, can be considered as evolutionary anomaly, but it is quite normal people. Since our system, and that includes our mind, too cluttered, it aims to alleviate or eliminate the problem as quickly and efficiently as possible. Unfortunately for the patient, he does so by focusing away from the actual cause, the real danger with the expression in a very uncomfortable, often intense manner, and in this case by chronic treatment resistant back pain.

Psychosomatic pain is the most frequently diagnosed and least understood form of acute and chronic back pain. It is noteworthy that most of the treatment of chronic back pain resistant patients with unresolved back pain, which means that there is no clear diagnosis, by definition suffer from a fundamental and misdiagnosed mental illness or condition. While medical schools start to this very important medical issue, psychosomatic disorders has long been banished to the back burner of medical training. Consequently, doctors are simply not willing or able to understand, let alone treat this condition. As a result, many people are misdiagnosed with this "blame the state", made up of individuals with very real physiological, structural and medical conditions are diagnosed.

Unfortunately, with the solutions available, they are still relatively unknown. Since the medical community begin to educate themselves so they are better prepared to deal with this condition, we begin to see the first steps towards a holistic approach to solving this problem. Psychosomatic medicine has been talked about for centuries, even Sigmund Freud was fascinated by him in his time, but it is only in recent years that we have a real movement to deal with this ongoing epidemic. The treatment of chronic pain sufferers-resistance, especially those with a long history of unresolved pain and diagnosed, are most likely to exhibit a variety of medical complaints, ulcers, colitis and depression, to name a few. The combination of unresolved neck pain, back pain and /or sciatica and depression leads to a profound impact on the individual, the family, community, and the state. The impact of this poorly understood and often misdiagnosed condition or a series of wave conditions in the entire system, with consequences far beyond that of a medical nature.

Ultimately, and up to the time when the underlying condition was diagnosed, treated, and eliminated the symptoms must be recognized and mitigated. For this reason, it is advisable for the individual to begin a comprehensive, individual and medically supervised program to deal with symptoms, and causality has not yet been determined. Exercise, in and of itself, they have a remarkable and immediate impact on most people. Not just an exercise program, properly administered and monitored, the wonder to alleviate stress, but also to improve the self esteem and confidence. With movement, especially to the muscles fit and adjusts to the new routine, certain other measures. The additional treatment, together with the exercise program, a stretching program, 2-3 times per day (see: "simple and straightforward program of exercises for sciatica relief ... Part I and Part II"). Self-education, both individually and in a group setting, is also a better understanding, self-knowledge and self awareness. Most importantly, either individual or group therapy should be tackled to get to grips with the underlying issues that needed to open and /or misdiagnosed psychosomatic pain condition. The concert of Bad back strategies is the question, to alleviate the symptoms, leading ultimately to a solution, if it is next to a sound therapy program underlying stressors to understand what in the complex of back pain, neck pain, back pain and sciatica.

 

For further information and an intelligent program of treatment for neck pain, back pain, and sciatica, what I refer to as the "back pain complex" try the program below:

http://www.TheBackPainGuy.info

For additional resources dealing with neck pain, back pain, and sciatica, including additional treatment plans and a community for support; an awesome resource for New Balance running shoes, great for heel cushioning and a must for anyone suffering from neck pain, back pain, and/or sciatica; ice-compression braces, crucial for inflammation and swelling; orthotics for the times when the New Balance can't be worn; and, natural antinflammatories for the back pain complex:

Go to:

http://www.UltimateBadBackStrategies.com

John P. Zajaros, Sr., The Bad Back Guy

Article Source: http://EzineArticles.com/?expert=John_Zajaros

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