Back pain history and symptoms: Difference between revisions
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==History== | ==History== | ||
* Important history question for [[patients]] presenting with [[back]] [[pain]] should include: | |||
**Onset of [[pain]] (sudden or gradual) | |||
**Duration | |||
**Preceding event | |||
**Intensity | |||
**Location | |||
**Characteristic (dull ache, burning, tearing, sharp) | |||
**[[Pain]] present at rest, during [[sleep]] | |||
**Changes intensity with activity or while [[sleeping]] | |||
**Does the pain radiate elsewhere | |||
***Head (e.g. cervicogenic headache) | |||
***Buttocks or legs (e.g. sciatic nerve compression) | |||
***Upper/lower limbs (e.g. radiculopathy secondary to spinal nerve root compression) | |||
***Flank to the ipsilateral groin (e.g. renal colic) | |||
***Chest (e.g. myocardial infarction, dissecting aortic aneurysm) | |||
***Epigastrium (e.g. peptic ulcer disease) | |||
***Abdomen (e.g. constipation, abdominal aortic aneurysm dissection, ischaemic bowel) | |||
*In general, back pain does not usually require immediate medical intervention. | *In general, back pain does not usually require immediate medical intervention. | ||
*Mostly cases due to [[inflammation]], especially in the acute phase, which typically lasts for two weeks to three months and resolves on its own without progressing. | *Mostly cases due to [[inflammation]], especially in the acute phase, which typically lasts for two weeks to three months and resolves on its own without progressing. |
Revision as of 18:23, 27 May 2021
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Editor-In-Chief: C. Michael Gibson, M.S., M.D. [1] Associate Editor(s)-in-Chief: Zehra Malik, M.B.B.S[2]
Overview
History
- Important history question for patients presenting with back pain should include:
- Onset of pain (sudden or gradual)
- Duration
- Preceding event
- Intensity
- Location
- Characteristic (dull ache, burning, tearing, sharp)
- Pain present at rest, during sleep
- Changes intensity with activity or while sleeping
- Does the pain radiate elsewhere
- Head (e.g. cervicogenic headache)
- Buttocks or legs (e.g. sciatic nerve compression)
- Upper/lower limbs (e.g. radiculopathy secondary to spinal nerve root compression)
- Flank to the ipsilateral groin (e.g. renal colic)
- Chest (e.g. myocardial infarction, dissecting aortic aneurysm)
- Epigastrium (e.g. peptic ulcer disease)
- Abdomen (e.g. constipation, abdominal aortic aneurysm dissection, ischaemic bowel)
- In general, back pain does not usually require immediate medical intervention.
- Mostly cases due to inflammation, especially in the acute phase, which typically lasts for two weeks to three months and resolves on its own without progressing.
- In few cases back pain can be a symptom of a serious medical condition. Symptoms to look for include:
- bowel incontinence
- bladder incontinence
- Progressive weakness in legs
- Sleep interrupted due to severe back pain
- Fever
- Unexplained weight loss
- Back pain due to trauma
- Increased back pain in patients with osteoporosis or multiple myeloma
- Repetitive intense exercise involving lumbar extension
Symptoms
- It is important to understand that back pain is a symptom of a medical condition, not a diagnosis itself.
- Back pain may occur by itself, or along with other symptoms.
- Symptoms include severe low back pain that may be accompanied by muscle spasm, pain with walking, concentration of pain to one side, and no radiculopathy (radiating pain down buttock and leg).