Spinecare Topics

  • By: ISA Content Team
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Understanding Back Pain
The Different Types of Back Pain?

The general categories of pain are acute pain, chronic pain, and intermittent or recurrent pain.  Acute pain is defined as pain that generally lasts less than one month.  Acute pain can often be attributed to a specific injury or area of tissue damage.  This is the type of pain that you would experience when you suffer back strain/sprain, fracture bone, or a cut finger.  Chronic pain is generally defined as pain that lasts more than three to six months.  This is generally the pain that remains after the tissue has healed.  Chronic pain may occur secondary to the way tissue healed or to the degree of scar tissue that may have formed.  Chronic pain can also occur as the result of changes which take place in the spinal cord and brain, referred to as pain of central origin.  The termed intermittent or recurrent pain is actually the subcategory of acute pain.  This refers to acute pain, which occurs time and time again.  A good example of recurrent acute pain is local back pain associated with inflammation, which comes and goes.   

Pain can be described as focal, diffuse, or radiating in nature.  Focal pain refers to pain within a small area, whereas diffuse pain refers to pain which migrates away from a focal region resulting in a larger and relatively symmetric distribution.  The term radiating pain refers to pain which extends from a focal point of origin in a specific direction.  Sciatic pain is a type of radiating pain associated with compression of the lumbosacral nerve roots, usually from disc herniation. This pain may be described as electric jolts in the back of the thigh and leg or a deep constant ache in the posterior thigh and leg.


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To learn more about your spine. spinehealth, and available spinecare go to the International Spine Assocition (ISA) at www.spineinformation.org. The primary mission of the ISA is to improve spinehealth and spinecare through education. The ISA is committed to disseminating need-to-know information throught the World Wide Web in numerous languages covering many topics related to the spine, including information about spine disorders, spine heath, advances in technology and available spinecare



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All health information posted on the site is based on the latest research and national treatment standards, and have been written or reviewed and appoved by the American Acedemy of Spine Physicians and/or International Spine Association physicians or health professionals unless otherwise specified.



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