Low back pain can
often be attributed to complex origins and symptoms, and it does not
discriminate. It can originate from identified muscle trauma, or an
unknown non-traumatic event. Low back pain can also begin in other regions
of the body and eventually attack the muscles or other structures in
the lower back. Sometimes low back pain can even begin in the nerves
or nervous system. Other origins for low back pain are postneural difficulties,
congenital disorders, trauma, infections, degenerative disorders, inflammatory
diseases, circulatory disorders or any of other 30 additional causes.
It is often difficult
for physicians to pinpoint the exact cause of a patient's low back pain,
because of the complex composition of the human spine. Bone, discs,
muscles, ligaments, tendons and various other tissues are arranged like
a three-dimensional puzzle to make up the spine. The complex make up
can easily mask the exact cause of low back pain.
In addition, depression,
anxiety, frustration, reinforcement, stress, anger, fear and many other
psychological states can help to cause the onset of back pain, can be
a reaction to prolonged pain, or exist concurrently with pain.
The emotional component
can complicate the back pain diagnosis, sometimes resulting in needless
surgery and disability and can sometimes mask the underlying physical
causes of pain.