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Studies of Stress Related Back Pain

Topic: Back and Neck PainBy Raymond ShawPublished Recently added

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Life is full of stress and its physical effects can be felt throughout the body. Too much stress can lead to heart and blood pressure problems, ulcers and strokes, and the list goes on. You can hurt your back by lifting something but accumulated emotional stress and mental strain can also create pain and damage.

Sometimes back or neck pain is the body’s way of protecting itself and literally forcing a general slowdown. Stress creates tension in the muscles which leads to spasms that squeeze the blood vessels and reduce the flow of oxygen and nutrients to the tissues. Just as it brings nourishment to the tissues, the circulatory system also carries away the waste byproducts of muscle activity. With increasingly tense muscles, there is a buildup of carbon dioxide and waste chemicals, such as lactic acid, in the tissues, leading to increased fatigue and pain. Stress also increases nerve activity in the muscles which increases tension and decreases flexibility. As the muscles lose their fuel supply, they weaken and are more susceptible to strain and injury.

The back is much less able to tolerate any abuse when under stress. Lifting a box incorrectly, making a sudden twist, poor posture, sitting too long in one position, can lead to back pain. Literally, your back can’t bear it, and that ‘pain in the neck’ or pain in the back’ becomes a protest against the stress.

A person who has a ‘bad back’ due to a degenerative disease or secondary to an old injury often notices the effects of stress more quickly than someone with a healthy back. If spinal nerves are all ready being compressed by the calcium deposits of arthritis or spinal stenosis, it may take just a small amount of stress with minimal muscle tension to further compress nerves, triggering pain. Sciatica from a disc’s compression of the spinal cord or nerve roots may flare up when a person is feeling stressed and tense. The slightest muscle tension may become ‘the straw that broke the camel’s back’.

Studies Of The Relationship Between Stress And Back Pai

Swedish Army Recruits
Recently, a study of more than 48,000 men in the Swedish Army showed the link between back problems and the ability to cope with stress. A battery of medical examinations, intelligence tests, and assessment of their ability to cope with stress were carried out on these Swedish recruits. Researchers found that in this group:
• Over 5000 men had back problems severe enough to interfere with their military service. The vast majority of their disorders were ‘nonspecific back pain and disease’.
• The recruits who had poor coping skills were also most likely to have back pain.
• Those with good coping skills also had higher intelligence scores, which may indicate that the smarter you are, the better you have learned how to handle stress.

US Army Soldiers
In another study, 368 US Army soldiers who came to a clinic complaining of low back pain, completed a questionnaire about their work habits and their health.
• The study linked job stress to emotional stress and this was directly related to their clinic visit complaining of back pain. The greater the emotional distress felt by the soldier, the more visits that were required to relieve his back pain.
• This study confirmed research that linked psychological distress and the physiological demands of work to the increased risk of back pain symptoms.
• The Army researchers believe that job stress plays an important role in persistent low back pain and that reducing the stress can also reduce the pain.

Great Britain StudynA study in Great Britain of nearly 6000 people showed:
• If you are under psychological stress when in your 20s, you are more than twice as likely to suffer low back pain when you reach your thirties.
• Researchers believe that early stress may have an adverse effect upon muscle tone which will eventually lead to pain and injury in a vulnerable area.

Stress expert, Venetta Campbell, Ph.D. at Mount St. Mary’s College in Los Angeles, says, “”People who don’t learn how to cope effectively get sick”. She offers some basic stress fighting suggestions:
• Get regular exercisen • Eat a balanced dietn • Keep your finances in orde
• Follow your own dreams and let go of exte
al expectationsn • Set goals – having a vision for your future helps reduce the stress of uncertainty.

Article author

About the Author

Raymond Shaw is a spinal decompression therapist, who has worked with individuals with back pain problems for seven years. If you would like to receive a free weekly newsletter on back pain relief visit USSpineCare.com and also to get more in-depth information.

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