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Back pain in Athletes Rajesh Rao, MD FAAPMR

Back Pain in Athletes

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Back pain is not restricted to one cause. Dr. Rajesh Rao discusses the most common causes and the things you can do to help prevent it.

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Page 1: Back Pain in Athletes

Back pain in Athletes

Rajesh Rao, MDFAAPMR

Page 2: Back Pain in Athletes

Topics

• Anatomy• Incidence• Sports associated with back injury• Prevention • Treatment approach• Take Home message• Questions

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Anatomy

• Structure of the Bones• Muscles• Ligaments• Disc• Facet joints

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Bones

• 5 Lumbar Vertebrae• Sacrum• Discs in between the bones

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Muscles

• Anterior (flexors)• Posterior (extensors)• Lateral (abdominals)

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Back pain related to sports

• Repetitive stress• Acute injuries• Relations to specific sports

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Incidence

• 5-8% of injuries in all sports• 15 % of spinal injuries ( all levels) in

US – related to sports and recreational activity.

• MusculoLigamentous injures of paraspinal muscles common causes in all sports involving Rotation

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Incidence

• MusculoLigamentous injures of paraspinal muscles common causes in all sports involving Rotation.

• ( Golf Baseball Tennis)• Contact ( Basketball, football, soccer)• Repetitive injury mechanisms( gymnastics, swimming, diving,

volleyball)

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Incidence

• Full contact sports – football and rugby common causes of spinal injury

• High speed sports such as down hill skiing and snowboarding

• Reported incidence of spinal injuries among snowboarders 3-4 times higher than Skiers.

• Jumping is responsible for 80% among snowboarders and affect the thoracolumbar spine.

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Clinical syndromes

• Musculo-Ligamentous Injuries • Disc herniations• Fracture subluxations and dislocation• Osteoporotic fractures in elderly• SpondyloLysis and spondylolisthesis

( Extension based sports- Gymnastics, Cheerleading, Diving)

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Evaluation

• Clinical Examination• X Rays• MRI• CT scan • Bone scan

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Clinical Examination

• Important Clues pertaining to cause • Helps formulate a Plan of action• Important in determining any

Neurological involvement

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X rays

• Important for Bone anatomy• Look for fractures or Subluxations

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MRI

• Muscle and Ligamentous issues• Disc Hernations• Nerve compression• Stenosis

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Bone Scan

• Sensitive test for Fractures and stress reactions

• Spondylolysis

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CT scan

• Evaluation of new and old fractures

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Treatment

• Prevention• Active treatment

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Prevention

• Exercise program• Stretching program• Sport specific training

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Getting F.I.T.depends on:

• Frequency (How often?)

• Intensity (How hard?)

• Time / duration (How long?)

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Flexibility

• Stretching: especially HAMSTRINGS• Include all major muscle groups

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Motion

• Range of motion and movement (Flexion and Extension Lateral motions)

• F: daily• I: easy• T: 2-15 minutes

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Aerobic Conditioning

• More than walking, jogging or running• More than one way to get aerobic benefit

• 3-4 times per week• Atleast 20 minutes duration

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Strengthening

• Key component of any good exercise program

• Even more important as we get older• Pain causes inhibition which leads to

weakness

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Stabilization Exercises

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Flexion Exercises

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Treatment Approach

• Relative rest• Physical therapy• Anti-Inflammatory medications• Injection therapy• Surgical treatment

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Physical Therapy

• Exercise program• Modalities ( Heat, Ice , Estim, TENS

unit)• ROM • Pain Modulation

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Medications

• Limited use of the NSAIDS• Pain Medications• Muscle relaxants• Anti-inflammatory Steroids

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Injection therapy

• Specific Conditions are amenable to injection therapy

• Epidural injections• Facet joint injections.

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Surgical treatment

• Neurological Deficits• Instability• Persistent pain

Need to establish One to One relation between Symptoms and Pathology.

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Overview of treatment approach

• Therapy- most useful for muscular issues

• Limited use of NSAIDS recommended• Injections useful for Pinched nerve and

facet joint issues• Surgery- useful in case of Neurological

deficit, instability.

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Take Home Message

• Prevention is better than Cure• Low back pain is amenable to

conservative treatment.• Evaluation needed for specific

conditions e.g Spondylolisthesis• Small percent of cases need surgical

treatment.

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Questions