Acute low back pain (LBP) is an interesting animal. Affecting 80% of the population and much more popular among the younger crowd, LBP is generally overwhelmingly harmless and in most cases resolves naturally within a couple of weeks. But sometimes this seemingly benign condition takes a turn for the worse. Two weeks turns into two months, two months turns into two years and now your harmless LBP has turned into a disability. LBP is the leading cause of work absenteeism in America for ages 19-45 and the second most common reason for seeing your primary care doctor. Are you curious as to why this happens? What if I told you its all in you mind?
One article in The New England Journal of Medicine compared medication, bed rest, mobilization exercises and simple reassurance and encouragement to continue normal activities in the treatment of LBP and found that simply advising people that it is safe to continue living life normally was more effective than the other options. In fact it has been shown that providing self-care advice and reassuring the patient that there is no need for fear or anxiety provided an nine-fold decrease in risk of LBP becoming chronic.
A fancy term used to describe this phenomenon is fear-avoidance beliefs (FAB). FAB turn acute pain into chronic by mentally disabling you. Vlaeyen stated that a misconception of pain being a threat can cause an individual to completely avoid physical activity and become deconditioned based on fear and anxiety. Deconditioning coupled with a feeling of hopelessness delays the recovery process.
The Agency for Health Care Policy and Research has properly stated that "the main goal for treatment of back pain has shifted from treatment of pain to treatment of activity intolerances related to pain." This means that your health care provider's job is to not simply treat your pain, but to strengthen your ability to live your life normally as quickly as you will let him or her. There is no problem with laying on a table while your health care provider attempts to decrease the pain for you, at least not initially. The problem arises when there is not a speedy transition from passive treatment to active treatment (ie full range of motion exercises).
No, chronic LBP is not purely mental. You can not just think happy thoughts and make it disappear. However, you can control how quickly you will recover. Happy thoughts can help get you pain free again. So be optimistic, the sky is not falling. Live your life, only bed rest could
truly hurt you.
Tuesday, October 13, 2009
I Think I can! I Think I can! Mind over low back pain.
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