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Older people

It is estimated that 90% of people aged over 65 suffer from back pain. It was once thought that this was always due to vertebral arthritis, facetary arthritis or other organic disorders of the spinal column caused by wear and tear on the component structures of the spine. We now know that this is frequently not the case. Sedentariness and physical inactivity increase the likelihood of loss of muscle mass, muscular malfunctioning and spasm.

This is good news. Studies have shown that the muscles can be rehabilitated and trained at any age. This goes for older people, provided that they follow a suitable training program for their age and general health and do the exercises best suited to their particular case.

What is it that increases the risk of back pain in old age?

Of the factors that increase the risk of back pain occurring or persisting, there are several that particularly affect older people.

Age increases the risk of back pain in several ways:

  • Age-related wear and tear on the vertebral structures can increase the likelihood of organic disorders of the spinal column, such as vertebral arthritis, facetary arthritis and spinal stenosis.
  • Vertebral arthritis is caused by wear of the vertebral disc, which becomes thinner so that vertebrae are closer together. At more advanced ages this causes the person to lose height. This wear can increase the burden on the vertebra enough to deform it, producing protrusions known as "osteophytes". However, contrary to what was once thought, vertebral arthritis is a normal consequence of the passage of time. Its beginnings are visible in x-rays of people aged over 30, and it does not normally cause pain. If it does, this is usually a local pain which appears after intense strain, or most frequently at the first movement - for instance when you get up in the morning. It gets better as you move about, and only in exceptional cases will an osteophyte compress a nerve and produce more serious symptoms. For more information about vertebral arthritis, see the relevant section of this site.
  • Facetary arthritis is wear and tear on the back joint of the vertebrae. There are no nerves on the surface of the joint, and so wearing does not produce pain. In fact, it is not normally perceptible until it is advanced enough to affect the bone beneath, and this is not common. If it does occur, it normally appears in the lower back and causes pain, sometimes with referred pain in the leg. The pain is typically more intense when walking than when standing still and improves or disappears when sitting down. For more information on facetary arthritis, see the relevant section of this site.
  • Spinal stenosis is the narrowing of the bony channel that carries the marrow and the nerve roots, normally caused by a major deformation of the facetary joints. With spinal stenosis, you experience irradiated pain in the legs - normally both, although the pain may appear earlier or be more intense in one leg - which gets worse the more you walk, eventually forcing you to stop and sit down. Once you are seated, it may disappear completely, in which case you can start walking again until it reappears. If it progresses, spinal stenosis can cause loss of strength and may even require surgery. For more information on spinal stenosis, see the relevant section of this site.
  • However, this same age-related wear and tear does reduce the risk of other organic disorders of the spinal column. For example, wear reduces the volume of the vertebral disc and makes it more fibrous, which reduces the risk of a herniated disc. And if you do develop a herniated disc, it is more likely to cause no problems and may even go unnoticed.
  • Advancing age also increases the risk of osteoporosis. Osteoporosis is a reduction of the amount of calcium in the bones, which makes them more fragile and liable to break. In the case of the spinal column, osteoporosis can cause spontaneous fracturing and crushing of a vertebra. Osteoporosis must be very advanced to cause pain or spontaneous crushing of vertebrae, but if it does occur it produces a sudden and very severe pain in the middle of the back (where the crushed vertebra is). It is most frequent in post-menopausal women, because the sexual hormones augment the deposition of calcium on the bone and this deposition diminishes after the menopause. There are now many ways of preventing, diagnosing and effectively treating osteoporosis. Fractured vertebrae can also be effectively treated. Osteoporosis is a metabolic disorder and not a mechanical disorder of the back and this site does not therefore have a section on it.
  • The muscles. Although organic disorders of the spinal column in older people are most commonly associated with structural degeneration, in most cases the pain is due to a mechanical pathology of the back, associated with malfunctioning of the muscles. There are several factors that make this more common in older people:
  • Loss of muscle mass ("muscular atrophy"). With age, all tissues atrophy more readily, including the muscles. Weakness of the back or abdominal muscles has been identified as one of the factors that increase the risk of new or persisting pain. This is because the lack of muscle mass increases the likelihood of the muscle becoming overloaded and going into spasm in response to apparently light burdens. Moreover, the less muscle mass there is, the less protection there is for the other structures of the spinal column and the less this is able to withstand the load. On the other hand, it has been demonstrated that appropriate exercise can delay, prevent or even reverse muscular atrophy, even in very old people.
  • Physical inactivity. In normal conditions the different muscle groups involved in back function, such as the abdominals and the paravertebral musculature, coordinate with one another to o maintain a posture or maintain balance in movement. This coordination depends on nerve reflexes, which need to be repeated in order to work properly. Physical inactivity causes loss of training and deterioration of these reflexes, so that the muscles contract in the wrong way or at the wrong time and become susceptible to spasm. However, these reflexes can be preserved or even recovered by regular physical activity.
  • Repose. Repose is bad for the back, and older people are sometimes forced to take repose for other ailments. Repose accelerates muscular atrophy, especially in older people, and worsens the muscles loss of training in the reflexes that enable the various muscle groups to coordinate. It also aggravates osteoporosis. Repose should be avoided, and where it is necessary due to other ailments, it should be as brief as possible.
  • Can back pain have harmful consequences for older people?

    Yes. But due less to the pain itself than to the consequences of not treating it properly.

    If an older person becomes less physically active or takes repose because of back pain, this will accelerate osteoporosis and muscular atrophy, and they will find it increasingly difficult to recover their autonomy of movement. If the situation continues for long enough, such an older person may eventually find it impossible to return to normal life.

    In cases like this, the loss of autonomy is due less to the pain itself than to a limitation of physical activity prompted by inappropriate treatment or by the erroneous belief that because an X-ray or magnetic resonance has identified an organic disorder of the spinal column (very common and normally unimportant in older people), it is best to avoid physical activity and take repose.

    Anyone suffering from back pain can fall into the vicious circle of pain / inactivity / persistent pain / permanent disability, but the process is especially rapid in older people, and therefore it is particularly important to avoid repose or, if repose is strictly necessary, to keep it to a minimum.


    What to do to prevent or treat back pain in older people.


    For prevention in older people, the following are both effective and necessary:

  • Avoid repose and keep physically active. Older people should not do more physical activity than their state of health permits, but they should keep as physically active as possible. This entails doing aerobic exercises such as swimming, or walking rather than always taking the car.
  • Know and observe the rules of postural hygiene.
  • Maintain the back muscles. If done correctly and regularly, some aerobic exercises like swimming may be enough to keep your back muscles in good shape. If your general state of health prevents you from doing much aerobic exercise, there are specific exercise programs for the back muscles that you can follow with a poorer general state of health. This site contains a section that shows effective exercises for this. The programshould be adapted to the condition of the individual and intensify as he/she improves. Contrary to what was once thought, scientific studies have demonstrated that it is never too late if you have the will. There are specific exercises that can increase muscle mass even in very old people.

  • When pain appears, it is best not to resign yourself before you have exhausted all possible avenues of treatment. Most back pains in older people can be satisfactorily treated, but they are harder to treat if they go on for a long time. It is therefore a mistake to believe that pain is normal after a certain age and will last forever, to resign yourself to bearing it without doing anything about it. The longer it lasts, the harder it is to treat. If the pain lasts more than a few days, you should see a doctor so as to start treating it as soon as possible.


    The treatment of common back pain is the same in older people as in the rest of the population. There is a section of this site that lists the treatments for back pain, and another that indicates the common patterns of treatments that have proven effective.


    If the pain that an older person suffers is shown to be an organic disorder of the spinal column, such as facetary arthritis, spinal stenosis, or exceptionally, vertebral arthritis or herniated disc, the treatments indicated for each disorder should be followed. These are indicated in the relevant sections of this site.


    But before treating for an organic disorder, it must be established that this is the true cause of the pain. Any X-ray, scan or magnetic resonance of an older person will normally show wear or deformation of the vertebral disc, arthritis of the facetary joints or even narrowing of the channel that carries the marrow, or spinal stenosis. But the image alone is not enough; if there are no symptoms or these do not correspond exactly to what the image shows, then it is not necessary to apply a treatment specific to that anatomical disorder.


    It is therefore essential to study the characteristics of the symptoms and determine whether or not these correlate exactly with the organic disorders shown by the image. This means that the clinical history and physical examination are even more important than X-ray or magnetic resonance results. Only if the patient's symptoms correspond exactly to the image does it make sense to diagnose and specifically treat such an organic disorder. It would be wrong to propose surgery on the basis of an image without first interviewing and examining the patient.


    For example, over 30% of the healthy population exhibits protrusions or herniated discs without ever having felt any pain, discomfort or even symptoms. One day, such people may suffer common back pain due to improper functioning of the muscles or to a muscular spasm. In any case it would be wrong to attribute such symptoms to the herniated disc, and it would be counter-productive to operate.


    Therefore, complementary examinations should only be performed when there are concrete grounds to support this. If there are no such grounds, it is pointless to conduct these examinations given that their results will not modify the treatment. It could even be counter-productive, since the observation of irrelevant organic disorders may confuse the diagnosis and lead to incorrect, unnecessarily aggressive or even counter-productive treatment.

     



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