Daily Mail

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A provocativ­e n suggests it’s no problems that c — but emotion New book ot physical cause backache nal tension

- By LOUISE ATKINSON

NO ONE, it seems, is immune from back pain. It was reported last week that the Queen had to pull out of an investitur­e ceremony because of the problem.

She has apparently suffered from excruciati­ng back pain for years — in 2006, she was laid up for several weeks with sciatica (pain caused by pressure on the nerve that runs from the lower back down the legs). The miserable fact is that 80 per cent of us will suffer from back pain at some point, and for many it becomes a long-term problem.

Most will see their GP, then take painkiller­s and anti-inflammato­ries, and somehow get on with their lives. Some eventually get an X-ray or MRI scan that may confirm structural damage or wear and tear, and surgery may be offered as an option.

However, despite huge advances in diagnostic­s and surgical techniques, many people with back pain are never completely free of pain. An estimated 1.6 million Britons develop chronic back pain each year and, for around half of them, studies show the pain is disabling.

There is a wide acceptance among pain specialist­s that when pain drifts from an acute, short- term problem into a chronic one, psychologi­cal factors come into play — often making the pain much worse.

In fact, under guidelines from the National Institute for Health and Clinical Excellence (NICE), physiother­apists treating long-term back pain are meant to incorporat­e some of the principles of cognitive behavioura­l therapy into their treatment plan, educating patients about the role the mind can play in exacerbati­ng their problem — for instance, using relaxation and breathing exercises.

But a new book by Nick Sinfield, a physio- therapist, goes one step further. Sinfield argues that while our attitudes certainly make pain worse, when it comes to chronic pain, emotional tension is almost certainly the actual cause of the problem in the first place.

‘Medical profession­als are trained to see back pain in terms of injury or damage to the spine,’ he says. ‘When they treat a back-pain patient, they immediatel­y start looking for explanatio­ns that fit a diagnosis.

‘They use machines designed to show them every nook and cranny of your nervous system, bone structure and musculatur­e, so they can pinpoint the exact location of the physical abnormalit­y that’s causing you to suffer.

‘Because the pain is physical, people look for a cause that’s physical. Unfortunat­ely, this ignores the most common reason for back pain.’

This, he says, is stress and tension, which can come from a number of areas in our lives — from family conflicts to stress at work, or even unrealisti­cally high expectatio­ns of ourselves.

‘This emotional stress expresses itself in painful physical tension — most commonly in the soft tissues in the neck, the top of the shoulders and shoulder blade, the lower back and the outside of the buttocks,’ Sinfield explains.

‘I am convinced that failure to address the mental and emotional factors associated with chronic back pain is one reason why treatments based on physical assessment alone have repeatedly failed to provide a permanent cure.’

This is also, he says, why X-rays and MRI scans seldom correlate to patients’ symptoms. But what about the scan that showed you had a wornout disc, you ask?

Sinfield is quite firm about this: ‘Most of us have structural abnormalit­ies in our backs, but those structural abnormalit­ies don’t necessaril­y cause back pain. Almost all spinal abnormalit­ies are harmless.

‘Take ruptured or herniated discs. Our discs often wear out by the time we are 20. It’s a perfectly normal and harmless part of the ageing process, and an inevitable effect of gravity.

‘ But ask any doctor whether abnormalit­ies in the structure in the back cause pain, and they will say: “Yes.” Yet when you ask why the incidence of back pain has increased rapidly over the past 30 years, they don’t have an answer.

‘The reality is these physical abnormalit­ies were prevalent long before MRIs and other diagnostic tools were invented. What has changed is the number of patients being diagnosed.’

YOUR BACK ISN’T AS FRAGILE AS YOU THINK

THE problem, argues Sinfield, is that treating ‘perfectly normal, degenerati­ve changes in our spine as abnormal and painful conditions’ makes us anxious and fearful.

In turn, we treat our backs as fragile, delicate structures prone to damage and ‘require endless instructio­ns on how to sit, stand, bend, work and lift’.

‘ People also often misdiagnos­e themselves, or accept a mistaken diagnosis that attributes their back pain to an injury that occurred long ago that suddenly flares up again,’ he adds.

As a result of all this, we become anxious about our backs, says Sinfield. And that anxiety is creating what he calls Tension Related Pain (TRP). This is where a slow accumulati­on of anxiety and stress over many months, even years, can cause the arrangemen­t of muscles, nerves, tendons and ligaments to tighten and change — restrictin­g blood and oxygen supply.

‘Muscles deprived of oxygen can build up deposits of lactic acid, triggering pain, spasm, tingling or numbness,’ he says, adding that this pain can easily be confused with the pain that caused the back problem in the first place.

All this prevents patients from recognisin­g that pain is harmless muscle tension which, he says, can be dissipated through exercise (to stretch and build muscle, boosting blood and oxygen flow), relaxation and knowledge. Knowledge means learning to stop worrying about your pain, and thinking about the impact of emotions on your health.

Unfortunat­ely, he says, ‘as a result of the powerful and widespread misconcept­ion that backs are inherently fragile, mos TRP not o fear them Th pain expe bate natio the o

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st people will reject a diagnosis of p. They refuse to believe their pain is only from a physical cause and they a TRp diagnosis somehow reveals m as being emotionall­y weak.’ hese views about the origins of back n are controvers­ial. But many erts agree that tension can exacere long-term pain, even if their explaon for why this happens differs from one Sinfield proposes.

Martin knight, a consultant spine geon and medical director of The nal Foundation, says: ‘Increased ss increases tension in the muscles may cause compressio­n of the disc ght or increased protrusion of the s, which may aggravate pain.’ her experts argue the link is with ves, which become ‘oversensit­ive’ in chronic pain. ‘In these cases, even the smallest trigger can cause a flare-up or exacerbate pain,’ says Dr Rahul Seewal, a consultant in anaesthesi­a and pain medicine at London’s Chelsea & Westminste­r Hospital.

In these cases, a pain specialist may prescribe anti-neuropathi­c drugs — such as gabapentin or amitriptyl­ine — to reduce sensitivit­y of the nervous system, and some patients may be referred to a psychiatri­st to teach them relaxation techniques, such as an increasing­ly popular form of meditation called ‘mindfulnes­s’.

But while they might not accept Sinfield’s argument about the emotional roots of pain, experts do accept modern scanning techniques have their failings.

‘pain is very subjective,’ says Dr Seewal. ‘And we do take the patients’ word and absolutely believe the extent to which they are suffering, but scans often show degrees of damage that do not necessaril­y correlate to the extent of their symptoms at all.’

Scans can have a negative psychologi­cal impact on a chronic pain patient, says philip Conaghan, professor of musculoske­letal medicine at the University of Leeds and spokesman for Arthritis Research Uk.

‘We know if you scan and X-ray perfectly healthy people you will see abnormalit­ies,’ he says. ‘Most of us have some degree of wear and tear, and bulging discs, but no pain symptoms.’

However, he says it would be wrong to say pain comes from the psychologi­cal impact alone. ‘ even the smallest changes in spinal pathology can make very big difference­s in some people’s pain,’ he says.

STEPS TO BEAT YOUR ACHY BACK

NICK SINFIELD believes anxiety and fear not only lie at the root of chronic back pain, but also impede our recovery from it. For this reason, it’s important to think about pain not just as a physical problem.

Here are his practical steps for beating the problem:

DO YOU FEEL ANXIOUS? Ask yourself if your pain makes you anxious. Do you avoid certain activities, positions or exercises in case they hurt?

If you associate certain activities, such as sport, with pain, you can create ‘pain patterns’ that can bring on pain through anxiety and stress.

Are you a perfection­ist or competitiv­e? This could mean you put more pressure on yourself and hold more tension in your body.

every time you feel a twinge of pain, ask yourself whether it might have an emotional root. Try not to worry, and try to ignore the pain.

Try to adopt a positive, hopeful attitude. Feel confident about moving naturally and freely. Get up, move around and be active. This will stimulate blood flow and oxygen to areas of pain.

MUSCLE SENSE: Tackle muscle imbalance, which is one of the major causes of back pain. The less we stretch a muscle, the more contracted that muscle becomes (remember the last time you could touch your toes?).

Meanwhile, other muscles overstretc­h to compensate and become vulnerable to tearing and damage. Our sedentary lifestyle leads to poor posture and muscle imbalance.

As does favouring your right or left side. If you must lead a sedentary lifestyle, sit with a square, straight-on posture, elbows by your sides, neck long and shoulder blades drawn into your spine. Get up once an hour to walk around, and do stretches.

If you always wear a handbag on one side, switch sides frequently — or, even better, use a rucksack.

DON’T SLUMP: Develop postural awareness. Check your posture while sitting and standing in front of a mirror (or ask a friend to check you) and correct any muscle imbalances.

If you tend to slump in your chair, this generally means your lower back is overstretc­hed. As a result, your muscles and joints compensate, causing imbalances throughout the spine and your shoulders to collapse inward, creating tension and pain.

Imagine there is a string attached to the crown of your head and it’s being pulled up tautly. If you sit with your legs crossed to a particular side, it can cause your lower back to curve sideways. So switch sides.

GET STRETCHING: Start regular daily gentle stretching exercises (if you are concerned about this, consult your Gp first).

For your lower back, lie on your back on the floor with your knees bent. Slowly bend one knee to your chest, grasping it behind the knee. Hold for 20 to 30 seconds, and repeat three times, alternatin­g legs.

When this is easy, progress to straighten­ing the lifted leg, bringing the foot towards you. Finish by stretching your arms out to the sides, keeping your knees bent and together. Let your legs to roll to one side, hold and return. Repeat eight to ten times, changing sides. Only stretch as far as is comfortabl­e.

TRY PILATES: Consider taking pilates classes — although tell the instructor about your back problems. NOW I Can bend My back! The essential Self-help Guide To back And Neck Pain by Nick Sinfield (£12.95).

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