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FDA Approved Back Pain Treatment! | |
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 pulposus,
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.
>>>>Click Here to Read More: "Is Spinal Decompression For Me?"
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