from ACA website http://www.amerchiro.org/level2_css.cfm?T1ID=13&T2ID=68
Although chiropractors
care for more than just back pain, many patients visit chiropractors
looking for relief from this pervasive condition.In fact, 31 million Americans experience low-back pain at any given
time.1
A few interesting
facts about back pain:
One-half of all working Americans admit to having back pain symptoms
each year.2
Back pain is one of the most common reasons for missed work.In fact, back pain is the second most common reason for
visits to the doctor’s office, outnumbered only by
upper-respiratory infections.
Most cases of back pain are mechanical or non-organic—meaning they
are not caused by serious conditions, such as inflammatory arthritis,
infection, fracture or cancer.
Americans spend at least $50 billion each year on back pain—and
that’s just for the more easily identified costs.3
Experts estimate that as many as 80% of the population will
experience a back problem at some time in our lives.4
What
Causes Back Pain?
The back is a complicated
structure of bones, joints, ligaments and muscles. You can sprain
ligaments, strain muscles, rupture disks, and irritate joints, all of
which can lead to back pain. While sports
injuries or accidents can cause back pain, sometimes the simplest of
movements—for example, picking up a pencil from the floor— can have
painful results. In addition, arthritis,
poor posture, obesity, and psychological stress can cause or complicate
back pain. Back pain can also directly result from disease of the internal
organs, such as kidney stones, kidney infections, blood clots, or bone
loss.
Manipulation
as a Treatment for Back Problems
Used primarily by Doctors
of Chiropractic (DCs) for the last century, manipulation has been largely
ignored by most others in the health care community until recently. Now,
with today's growing emphasis on treatment
and cost effectiveness, manipulation is receiving more widespread
attention.
Chiropractic
spinal manipulation is a safe and effective spine pain
treatment. It reduces pain, decreases medication, rapidly advances
physical therapy, and requires very few passive forms of treatment, such
as bed rest.5
In fact, after an
extensive study of all currently available care for low back problems, the
Agency for Health Care Policy and Research—a federal government research
organization—recommended that low back pain sufferers choose the most
conservative care first. And it recommended spinal
manipulation as the only safe and effective, drugless form of initial
professional treatment for acute low back problems in adults.6
The American Chiropractic
Association (ACA) urges you to make an informed choice about your back
care. To learn more about how chiropractic manipulation may help you,
contact a Doctor of Chiropractic in your area.Search our online database of ACA members to find
a doctor of chiropractic near you.
Tips
to Prevent Back Pain
Maintain a healthy diet and weight.
Remain active—under the supervision of your doctor of
chiropractic.
Avoid prolonged inactivity or bed rest.
Warm up or stretch before exercising
or other physical activities, such as gardening.
1. Jensen M, Brant-Zawadzki M, Obuchowski N, et al. Magnetic Resonance
Imaging of the Lumbar Spine in People Without Back Pain. N Engl J Med
1994; 331: 69-116.
2. Vallfors B. Acute, Subacute and Chronic Low Back Pain: Clinical
Symptoms, Absenteeism and Working Environment. Scan J Rehab Med Suppl
1985; 11: 1-98.
3. This total represents only the more readily identifiable costs for
medical care, workers compensation payments and time lost from work. It
does not include costs associated with lost personal income due to
acquired physical limitation resulting from a back problem and lost
employer productivity due to employee medical absence. In Project Briefs:
Back Pain Patient Outcomes Assessment Team (BOAT). In MEDTEP Update, Vol.
1 Issue 1, Agency for Health Care Policy and Research,
Rockville
,
MD
, Summer 1994.
4. In Vallfors B, previously cited.
5. Time to recognize
value of chiropractic care? Science and patient satisfaction surveys cite
usefulness of spinal manipulation. Orthopedics Today 2003 Feb;
23(2):14-15.
6. Bigos S, Bowyer O, Braen G, et al. Acute Low Back Problems in Adults.
Clinical Practice Guideline No.14. AHCPR Publication No. 95-0642.
Rockville, MD: Agency for Health Care Policy and Research, Public Health
Service, U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, December, 1994.