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What
Is Causing The Pain?
Your
spine must be stable to support upright posture, and
also flexible, allowing you to bend and twist. This
is mechanically very challenging and makes your spine
vulnerable to injury.
The
spine is made up of a chain of bones, called vertebrae,
which are connected together by ligaments and muscles.
The vertebrae cover and protect the spinal cord, which
carries sensory messages to and from the brain, controlling
all your body functions.

A
disc separates each vertebrae and acts like a cushion,
absorbing shock along the spine. The disc is made up
of jelly like substance known as the nucleus, covered
with many strong outer layers called the annulus. The
discs do not have a supply of blood vessels to nourish
and replenish them, rather, they depend on a transfer
of fluids, nutrients and oxygen from the bones (vertebrae)
above and below them. This transfer of fluid depends
on the difference in pressure between the inside of
the discs and the surrounding vertebrae and blood vessels.
This is why most disc nutrition and regeneration takes
place when we lie down and the pressure inside the discs
is reduced. This process is not very efficient, and
as we age, the disc is exposed to wear and tear greater
than its ability to heal and regenerate.
The
discs are prone to injury and degeneration as we use
our backs each day, as they are compressed and torqued
through sitting, bending and lifting. In the two lower
levels of the lumbar spine, stress forces can equal
2,000 to 3,000 pounds of pressure per square inch. Repeated
injury weakens the annulus, while the earliest changes
that occur in the discs are tears in the annulus. With
increased pressure inside the disc, the tears in the
annulus may allow the disc to bulge like an old tire
with a broken casing. Any internal damage to the disc
may cause severe pain in the back. If all of the layers
of the annulus break, the jelly-like nucleus will ooze
out of the disc, causing a disc herniation. A bulging
or herniated disc may press on spinal nerves, causing
sciatica, which can be felt as weakness in your muscles,
loss of sensation in the skin or a tingling or burning
sensation along the nerves in your buttock and legs.
Repeated episodes of injury results in the degeneration
of the disc, which becomes stiff and dry, causing it
to lose its shock absorbing properties. This process
may continue until the disc is collapsed, which increases
the mechanical pressure on the bones and joints lending
to arthritis (facet syndrome).
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