Back Pain
Causes Of Back Pain
Back pain often develops without a cause that shows up in a test or imaging study. Conditions commonly linked to back pain include:
Muscle or ligament strain.Â
Repeated heavy lifting or a sudden awkward movement can strain back muscles and spinal ligaments. For people in poor physical condition, constant strain on the back can cause painful muscle spasms.
Bulging or ruptured disks.Â
Disks act as cushions between the bones in the spine. The soft material inside a disk can bulge or rupture and press on a nerve. However, a bulging or ruptured disk might not cause back pain. Disk disease is often found on spine X-rays, CT scans or MRIs done for another reason.
Arthritis.Â
Osteoarthritis can affect the lower back. In some cases, arthritis in the spine can lead to a narrowing of the space around the spinal cord, a condition called spinal stenosis.
Osteoporosis.Â
The spine’s vertebrae can develop painful breaks if the bones become porous and brittle.
Ankylosing spondylitis,
It is also called axial spondyloarthritis. This inflammatory disease can cause some of the bones in the spine to fuse. This makes the spine less flexible.
Physical Therapy Treatment Plan for Lower Back Pain
To develop a physical therapy treatment plan explicitly addressing your needs, we carefully evaluate your medical history, test results, and any additional information you have provided.
The goal for your physical therapy visits
Physical therapy can positively impact your life, especially if you are dealing with a condition like lower back pain. Goals for the physical therapy include:
- Decreasing pain
- Increasing function
- Learning how to keep your back healthy long-term
Physical therapy sessions
Modalities that your physical therapist may use to treat your lower back pain include:
- Hot or cold packs (for acute pain)
- Transcutaneous electrical stimulation (TENS) is a therapy that uses mild electrical waves to help muscles and nerves recover.
- Spinal manipulation to relieve pain and improve spinal mobility
- Exercises to strengthen your abdominal and pelvic floor muscles (core) to support your back better, relieve pain, and improve movement
- Exercises to strengthen abdominal, gluteal, and quadriceps muscles (flexion exercises) to decrease stress on the lower back
- Stretching exercises to improve range of motion and mobility
- Low-impact aerobic exercises (stationary bike, treadmill, bicycling, water therapy) to increase endurance
Your therapist will teach proper body posture techniques for sitting, standing, and lifting that reduce the likelihood of back strain or injury. You will also learn specific exercises to do at home. Regularly performing these recommended home exercises can help your back muscles strengthen more quickly.
Benefits of Physical Therapy
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Personalized Care.
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Decreased pain.
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Restored mobility.
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It may eliminate the need for surgery.
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Reduces the risk of further injury.
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Reduces the risk of falls.
Duration of Physical Therapy Session
Why Physical Therapy?
Physical therapy can be a holistic alternative to surgery, medication, and other treatment methods, especially if you’re experiencing lower back pain for the first time.
Physical therapy as a first step after experiencing acute low back pain decreases the long-term need for surgery or medications.
Frequently Asked Questions
I’ve Been Referred To Physical Therapy. Isn’t There Else My Doctor Can Do?
First bump!! This is excellent news. You’ve chosen a good doctor who’s read the research and knows the best place for you to start.
Yes, doctors can prescribe medicines and order imaging, but increasingly, the research supports not doing this from the get-go. It’s better to gain some PT first. The back pain can be managed and subdued in most cases with a tailored physical therapy approach.
How Long Will The Lower Back Pain Last?
Generally, an acute episode of lower back pain can last up to 6 weeks. A sub-acute episode lasts 6-12 weeks, and chronic lower back pain lasts over 12 weeks.
Unlucky individuals who descend into dependency on painkillers can have lower back pain for months or even years. Physical therapy can help prevent that and get you off a life conditional on prescription drugs.
Will Lower Back Pain Come Back?
Estimates of having a recurrence in the first year after an episode are up to 80%. Don’t get discouraged just yet because here’s what we see. Patients who actively participate in therapy (do their home exercise program, change daily habits, reach all their activity goals) are much less likely to experience a recurrence.
Those who see healthcare as a passive experience (i.e., you fix me) tend to experience higher recurrence rates. Similarly, patients often stop therapy after getting pain relief from a few sessions of PT. Unfortunately, the problem hasn’t magically gone away. Odds are the pain will return within the year.
Which Exercises Or Activities Should I Avoid With Lower Back Pain?
The only uniformly recommended treatment for lower back pain in the literature is exercise. However, it’s good to modify activities that increase pain.
Ideally, the exercises your physical therapist prescribes should be pain-free and not increase your baseline pain level.
Sometimes, it isn’t the activity’s problem but how you perform it. Physical therapists are experts at teaching correct posture, body mechanics, and lifting mechanics. We will guide you through and take it exercise-by-exercise in a form that aids your recovery in a non-injurious way.
What is physical therapy for back pain?
Physical therapy for low back pain may include the following: mobilization and manipulation (what some people call adjustments), stretching, strengthening, and specific exercises to improve motion in tight areas of your spine and joints.
Dry needling and electrical stimulation can help reduce pain. Our therapists address the underlying movement, strength, and control limitations to eliminate low back pain and prevent it from returning. Learn more about back physical therapy.
Does physical therapy help arthritis in the back?
Arthritis can contribute to low back pain. However, while most people attribute their low back pain to arthritis, multiple problems can usually be the cause. Often tight joints and areas of the spine around arthritis increase stress and pain. Most of these problems can be significantly improved with physical therapy treatment. Learn more about the benefits of back physical therapy.
How does physical therapy help back pain?
Physical therapy reduces low back pain by improving movement, strength, stability, and quality of motion in the hips, pelvis, and low back, reducing the abnormal pressure on the painful areas. Pain is also reduced by decreasing the pain sensitivity with exercises, mobilization, manipulation of the spine and pelvis, and dry needling performed by a physical therapist.




