Top Back Pain Triggers And How To Prevent ThemIt turns out that certain specific combinations of activities up your odds for back pain more than others.

The World Health Organization reports that, at one point or another, roughly 10 percent of the global population experiences a bout of back pain. However, medical experts haven’t yet come up with a truly effective way to prevent it.

A new study published in Arthritis Care & Research, gets a little closer. Experts examined different combinations of a dozen modifiable risk factors and found that exposure to these risks increase the odds of developing lower back pain.

The study was conducted in Sydney, Australia, and asked 999 subjects entering clinics for back pain to share their exposure to 12 different key risk factors in the 96 hours before they started experiencing discomfort. From there, researchers measured the increased risk of experiencing back pain following each of the “triggers.”

Top Back Pain Triggers And How To Prevent ThemManual Tasks

  • – heavy loads
  • – awkward positioning
  • – handling of objects far from the body
  • – handling live people (think: holding your squirming toddler)
  • – handling live animals
  • – unstable loading

Physical Activity

  • – engagement in moderate or vigorous physical activity
  • – sexual activity
  • – a slip, trip or fall

Psychosocial triggers

  • – alcohol consumption
  • – being distracted
  • – being fatigued

A new bout of lower back pain increased across a range of triggers, including a 2.7 times greater risk for those engaging in moderate or vigorous physical activity, and a 25 times greater odds if you happened to be distracted.

Top Back Pain Triggers And How To Prevent ThemResearchers also combined triggers, and saw significant jumps in risk, as well: For instance, manual tasks involving heavy loads associated with awkward posture upped the odds of back pain by 6.2, and when manual tasks were associated with feeling fatigued, odds of back pain increased by 5.3. Likewise, physical activity in general bumped the risk of back pain by 7.7 if a person was also feeling fatigued or tired.

Maybe most interestingly, the researchers found that people were most likely to experience back pain between 7 AM and noon each day. The scientists suggest this may have something to do with the fact that subjects were more commonly exposed to triggers involving awkward posture and lifting cumbersome objects during this morning window.

Even though there’s not a ton of research on effectively curbing the back pain and injury epidemic, there are still a few things you can do right now to avoid back pain.

Here are three major keys to prevent back pain:

Warm up

Top Back Pain Triggers And How To Prevent Them

Warm-ups aren’t just for sports. No matter what, if you’re going to be doing a physical task — whether that’s lifting a dresser or changing a tire on your car — you need to move your body before you say go. You are simply priming your body (back included) for movement.

Avoid repetition

That whole awkward-position factor from the study is true: back strain frequently happens when you engage in an activity that’s repetitive, or stay in one position for a prolonged time. The solution is to seek a comfortable position first, and then take breaks and adjust as necessary so you’re not totally locked into one place.

Listen to your body

Mindfulness is a crucial aspect of avoiding back pain because most know (at least subconsciously) when muscles are strained or tweaked — but many ignore it, especially if they’re already “distracted” with a task, per the new research findings. This can turn a minor problem into a full-blown bout of back pain if you’re not careful.

And if you need to stop lifting that dresser or changing that tire, stop. Asking for help, or waiting until someone else can do a task that might damage your back will save you from unnecessary pain down the road.

Source: www.yahoo.com; Jenna Birch; February 10, 2015.

Leave A Comment

related news & insights.

  • September 17, 2024||News||2 min||

    Welcoming Dr. Daniel LeCavalier: Our New Orthopedic Spine Surgeon Fellow

  • September 17, 2024||News||3.4 min||

    How to Improve Knee Mobility with Simple Exercises