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Carrolltown Chiropractic Treatment of Back Pain and Related Fatty Infiltration of Paraspinal Muscles

Undoubtedly, our Carrolltown chronic back pain sufferers have heard about related paraspinal (multifidus, psoas, quadratus lumborum, erector spinae) muscle fatty infiltrate. They are all linked together: fatty muscle infiltration, disc degeneration, spinal stenosis, facet joint degeneration, back pain. Gormish Chiropractic & Rehabilitation addresses all of them, too, to lessen back pain, strengthen the spine, and enhance your quality of life.

WHAT IS PARASPINAL MUSCLE FATTY INFILTRATE?

Paraspinal muscle fatty infiltrate is the growth of fat within the tissue of the muscles found near the spine, the paraspinal muscles. This condition may be caused by aging or genetics although it can also be activated by lifestyle factors like poor nutrition or little to no exercise. This condition doesn’t always produce symptoms, but if it does, they can include low back pain and related stiffness in the lower back and legs or difficulty walking due to gait disturbances. Intervertebral disc degeneration is a well-recognized culprit of chronic back pain, disc inflammation, and even spinal stability. Strong, well-functioning paraspinal muscles assist spinal stability. With back pain comes fatty infiltration of the paraspinal muscles that interfere with that. (1) Gormish Chiropractic & Rehabilitation tests for these issues carefully during the chiropractic examination with an understanding of this the potential connection.

THE BACK PAIN AND WEAK PARASPINAL MUSCLE CONNECTION

A recent study summarized that disc degeneration and paraspinal muscle weakness were strongly associated, facet joint degeneration and paraspinal muscle weakness were weakly associated, and facet joint degeneration and disc degeneration were strongly correlated. The authors noted that the level of paraspinal muscle weakness rose with level of lumbar disc degeneration and facet joint degeneration while fatty infiltration of the multifidus paraspinal muscle was vulnerable to weight. (2) Further, the published literature on the degree to which low back pain and fatty infiltration of multifidus and other paraspinal muscles (erector spinae, psoas, quadratus lumborum) influenced each other was somewhat conflicting – which comes first (pain or fatty infiltrate), can fatty infiltrate be reversed, is one predictive of the other (back pain that there is fatty infiltrate or fatty infiltrate that points to future back pain)? (3) Gormish Chiropractic & Rehabilitation keeps abreast of published research and encourages our back pain patients to bolster the muscles that they can so that they can support the spine in healing and preventing future episodes of pain as best as possible.

CHIROPRACTIC CARE OF BACK PAIN AND MUSCLE WEAKNESS

Gormish Chiropractic & Rehabilitation realizes that low back pain patients do not just have pain; they also get to deal with muscle quality loss due to more fatty infiltration of the paraspinal muscles. The extent of muscle loss is highly correlated with the severity of the back pain and related dysfunction. (4) That’s the reason that rehabilitation is so crucial alongside treatment of back pain for pain relief and prevention. Using The Cox Technic System of Spinal Pain Management as well as other chiropractic services, nutrition and exercise, Gormish Chiropractic & Rehabilitation is here to help! While researchers are still analyzing whether fatty infiltration is reversible, Gormish Chiropractic & Rehabilitation sees the attempt to tone and improve strength a worthwhile effort.

Listen to this PODCAST with Dr.  Kurt Olding on The Back Doctors Podcast with Dr. Michael Johnson as he describes the multitude of options available to back pain sufferers when it comes to healthcare providers and highlights the benefit of seeking a chiropractor trained in the protocols of The Cox® Technic System of Spinal Pain Management.

CONTACT Gormish Chiropractic & Rehabilitation

Schedule your Carrolltown chiropractic visit to address your back pain and weakened paraspinal muscles. Relief and an improved quality of life are in your future!

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"This information and website content is not intended to diagnose, guarantee results, or recommend specific treatment or activity. It is designed to educate and inform only. Please consult your physician for a thorough examination leading to a diagnosis and well-planned treatment strategy. See more details on the DISCLAIMER page. Content is reviewed by Dr. James M. Cox I."