Scottish Daily Mail

Nothing will cure my mother’s back pain

- DR MARTIN SCURR WRITE TO DR SCURR WRITE to Dr Scurr at Good Health, Scottish Daily Mail, 20 Waterloo Street, Glasgow G2 6DB or email drmartin@dailymail.co.uk — include your contact details. Dr Scurr cannot enter into personal correspond­ence. Replies shou

MY 87-YEAR-OLD mother has had severe lower back pain for several months now. An osteopath arranged an X-ray and said her spine curved in two directions and that she had a trapped nerve. She spent some time on treatment, but is in more pain than before.

Maurice Hogarth, by email. HOw concerning it must be to both of you that your mother’s back has worsened, despite her expensive treatment. My feeling is that an exact diagnosis would be of great value — and that a specialist in spinal disorders could give a more detailed assessment than an osteopath and order more sophistica­ted scans.

In someone of your mother’s age, there are two common potential causes of her symptoms. The first is osteoporos­is, the condition characteri­sed by thinning of the bones, which results in them becoming weak and fragile.

They can become so fragile that even something as simple as bending over or coughing can lead to a fracture, with the hips, wrists and spine most commonly affected.

In your mother’s case, one or more of the vertebrae — the bones that stack on top of each other to form the spine — may have cracked or crumbled.

Known as a spinal compressio­n fracture, this would lead to the curvature of the spine identified on her X-ray and could account for the pain she is experienci­ng.

The foundation­s of osteoporos­is are laid down in teenage years and, by the time a person is 20 or so, they will have reached peak bone mass and strength, when the bones are as good as they ever can be.

Milk and other dairy products are especially rich in the calcium needed in adolescenc­e to make the bones as dense and as strong as possible. Your mother was, however, in that age group who grew up in years of rationing when diet may have been relatively impoverish­ed.

In addition, perhaps her exposure to sunlight may not have been optimal (we need this to produce vitamin D, which is essential for calcium to be used by the body).

If she has an osteoporos­is-related fracture, your mother may be prescribed calcium and vitamin D supplement­s to take daily, to try to prevent further injury.

She may also benefit from bisphospho­nate, which will provide small improvemen­ts in bone density that make a big difference in terms of symptoms in the future. The second possible diagnosis — and it might be that there is a combinatio­n of both — is degenerati­ve disease of the lower part of the spine.

This is caused by an interplay of osteoarthr­itis of the facet joints, the buttresses that support either side of the spine, and thinning of the discs that act as shock absorbers in the spine.

This degenerati­on could also account for the pain and even the trapped nerve mentioned by the osteopath.

In exceptiona­l circumstan­ces, surgery may be needed to move the trapped nerve, but, most commonly, the patient will be offered supportive care, such as physiother­apy.

It would be quite wrong — and, in my view, unethical — to say that, at your mother’s age, she should merely be treated with painkiller­s and rest, or even anti-inflammato­ry drugs, and not investigat­ed further.

A specialist could do a full assessment, including MRI scans and possibly a bone-density scan, to assess any degree of osteoporos­is. I urge you to ask her GP for a referral.

Only with a precise diagnosis can the correct treatment be applied and plans made to restore her to healthy function, including the four-mile walks you say in your longer letter she so used to enjoy.

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