Sciatica Can Make You Dumb

This is from “Chronic Back Pain Limits Brain Power”

    Jesse Cannone asked:

    You don’t need to be a scientist to know that chronic back pain can have a negative impact on your life, often bringing with it anxiety and depression. It can affect your ability to work, sleep, and perform other daily activities.

    Until recently, it has been assumed that whatever changes occurred in the brain as a result of chronic back pain were only temporary and that the brain would revert to a normal state once the pain stopped.

    Recent findings by researchers from Northwestern University have turned this assumption on its head. What they found was that chronic back pain—defined as pain lasting six months or longer—can cause significant and long-lasting damage to the brain, aging it up to 20 times faster than normal.

This is really bad news. Permanent changes to the brain making you an old person before your time. It does feel that way when you have chronic back pain. You can just walk around tenderly like an ancient crone afraid of falling.

What Happens In The Brain

    In fact, chronic back pain actually shrinks the gray matter of the brain—the part responsible for memory and information processing—by as much as 11 percent each year. In contrast, normal aging of the brain results in just a 0.5 percent loss of gray matter a year.

    Scientists compared 26 healthy volunteers with 26 patients who had been suffering with chronic lower back pain (some with sciatica) for more than a year. Those with chronic back pain with sciatica had the largest decrease in gray matter. Another significant finding: The longer a subject had had chronic back pain, the more brain loss he suffered.

    One theory on why there is such a large decrease in gray matter is that chronic pain forces nerve cells to work overtime. Even more troubling is the possibility that if chronic back pain is allowed to continue, it may become harder to reverse and less responsive to treatment due to these changes in the brain. Experts say the findings should sound a warning to patients with back pain to seek care as soon as possible.

    The Northwestern study is consistent with other research on chronic pain and cognitive ability. Scientists at the University of Alberta have confirmed that chronic pain can impair your memory and concentration.

Can’t Think When It Hurts

    In testing done by Drs. Bruce D. **** and Saifudin Rashiq at the university’s Multidisciplinary Pain Centre in Edmonton, Canada, two-thirds of participants who suffered with chronic pain had a difficult time paying attention and remembering simple facts.

    Participants in the study—all of whom had pain lasting six months or longer—were given computerized memory tests, along with a neuropsychological test of attention on what were identified as “pain” and “less pain” days.

    On a “less pain” day, participants were tested after they received a pain-reducing procedure as part of their ongoing treatment at the Centre. On a “pain” day, participants were tested without getting any pain-reducing procedure. Sixteen of the 24 participants—67 per cent—showed signs of cognitive impairment on their pain-testing day. Although the sample of participants was small, the findings were statistically significant, according to the lead researchers.

Can’t Remember When It Hurts

    Further evidence of a link between chronic pain and brain function comes from a study done at Keele University in the United Kingdom. Scientists compared the “prospective” memory—such as remembering to pick up groceries or keep a doctor’s appointment—of 50 subjects with chronic back pain to the memory of 50 subjects who were pain-free. Read the rest of this entry »
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Limping Rats With Sciatica

Some Duke University researchers built an animal model of sciatica described in Limping Rat Provides Sciatica Insights. One of their most interesting findings is that there is an immune response that affects sciatica too.

    Sciatica is not a single disorder, but rather a diverse range of symptoms, such as numbness or pain from the lower back to the feet, radiating leg pain or difficulty in controlling the leg. It is often caused by compression, or pinching, of any of the five nerve roots that combine to make up the sciatic nerve. These roots are the parts of the nerve that pass through openings in the spine to the spinal cord.

    Surgical simulation of nerve compression in rats was led by Mohammed Shamji, a neurosurgery resident and recent Ph.D. graduate working in the laboratory of senior researcher Lori Setton, professor of biomedical engineering and surgery at Duke’s Pratt School of Engineering. Shamji and post-doctoral research fellow Kyle Allen observed that the animals’ gait became asymmetric, and that they over-responded to temperature changes and touch in their limbs after the surgery.

    They also found, for the first time, that the physical symptoms experienced by the affected animals seemed to be linked to an increase in levels of interleukin-17 (IL-17), a protein involved in regulating the inflammatory response. Elevated levels of IL-17 have already been implicated in such autoimmune diseases as rheumatoid arthritis and asthma.

    “This finding suggests a possible role for immune system activation in contributing to symptoms of sciatica,” said Shamji, now completing his neurosurgical residency at the Ottawa Hospital in Canada. “This offers new insight into the pathophysiology of the disease, and may also identify novel therapeutic targets to treat it.”

    The results of Shamji’s and Allen’s experiments were published online in the journal Spine.

    “If immune system activation is involved, and it turns out to be an important part of the condition, it is possible that existing or new drugs that can block this immune response could offer relief to patients,” Setton said. “This new model should help us find answers for a disorder that has few good treatments.”

This calms down the immune system probably by reducing stress. Read the rest of this entry »

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Reduce Stress and Think Better

This is a lot like the body scan exercise I wrote about yesterday, but a little less focused.

This exercise, simple as it is, is the best way to reduce stress which is a big contributor to back pain.

It has many other benefits.

I find that if there was something that I was thinking about, the right decision becomes clear to me after doing this. After the back pain goes away, this is a huge reason to continue doing this every day, as I do.

Try this first thing in the morning right after a few minutes of the morning exercises before breakfast.

Sit up straight with your feet flat on the floor.

Sit in a chair without arms. Sit forward at the edge of the chair, don’t lean on the back of the chair.

Place your bare feet flat on the floor hip distance apart with the inner part of the feet parallel.

Have your knees point forward over your second toe.

Sit with the bowl of your pelvis flat neither tipping forward nor rolling back.

Hang your arms down at your side, and then place your hands on your thighs. Doing it that way keeps your shoulders relaxed.

Feel that there is a string attached to the top of your head right over your spine and someone is pulling the string straightening out your spine.

OK, now you are sitting up straight.

Set a timer, if you want, to go off after ten minutes. I do this for 30 -40 minutes every morning. To start, any length of time will do.

Close your eyes and keep them closed throughout.

On the inhale count silently 100, on the exhale count silently 99. Continue counting down until you get to 1. If you lose count, don’t worry, I lose count by 86 usually. Just start again at 100 counting the even numbers on the inhale and the odd numbers on the exhale.

Leave a comment below and tell me what you think of this one.

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Scan Your Body Without X Rays

When I first started doing this about ten years ago, I didn’t think that anything was happening. But, when I skipped a day after doing it for a few months I noticed the difference right away. I felt out of balance, off kilter, not quite right.

This is something that I do every day – first thing in the morning.

I have waited this long to tell you about it, because you weren’t ready.

Now you are ready.

Try this first thing in the morning right after a few minutes of the Morning Exercises before breakfast.

Sit in a chair without arms. Sit forward at the edge of the chair, don’t lean on the back of the chair.

Place your bare feet flat on the floor hip distance apart with the inner part of the feet parallel.

Have your knees point forward over your second toe.

Sit with the bowl of your pelvis flat neither tipping forward nor rolling back.

Hang your arms down at your side, and then place your hands on your thighs. Doing it that way keeps your shoulders relaxed.

Feel that there is a string attached to the top of your head right over your spine and someone is pulling the string straightening out your spine.

OK, now you are sitting up straight.

Close your eyes so that you can do the body scan.

Now feel how your feet are resting on the floor, start on one side, say the left, follow up the left side of the body to your left knee and inner thigh, and upper thigh. Continue to your left hip.

Continue in that way and feel each part of your body as you rest your attention there. If you lose track, don’t worry, just restart the body scan.

You will learn a lot without the radiation dosage of X rays.

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Another Silly Thing That Works

The other day Ava was crying.  She’s only five months old, so she does that a lot.

To quiet her, I was carrying her in a pouch that hangs around the front of my body.  It is a very comfortable way to hold her and it keeps both hands free.

As I was walking around the house, I slowed down my steps so that they were slow motion.

Try it.  No need for a baby as a prop.

Pay attention to how you place down your heel and roll forward on that foot to the toes and how the other leg starts its motion.  As you do it, slow down the motion as much as possible.

I tend to walk with my toes pointing at 11 O’clock and 1 O’clock, so when I do this exercise, I try to put my feet down straight ahead.

Also flat, I tend to roll out to the outside of my feet, so I have to work to place my feet down flat.

As you continue to walk super slow, work your way up from your feet to your knees.  Try to keep them pointing over your second toe.

I feel all sorts of muscles working that I don’t ordinarily feel.  In fact, my hip flexors start to cramp when I do this.

Try it and write a comment below on how it feels.

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