What’s the reason for the back pain?

Proximate spinal disease is a chronic, inflammatory disease that is primarily a spinal attack, with varying degrees of stress and cosmops and the surrounding joints, with back-back pain being a constant problem for many patients, for many reasons.

First, the inflammation response is a key factor in causing back pain. Proximate spinal disease is essentially an autoimmune disease, and the patient’s own immune system suffers from anomalies, wrongly attacking organizations in the spinal column, joints, etc. as external “enemy”. During this process, a large number of inflammatory cytogens, such as cancer cause of death-alpha, white cytin, etc., were released, stimulating soft tissues such as filaments, radon bands and muscular scabs around the spinal column, leading to inflammation in these areas, such as haemorrhage and edema, which in turn caused pain. Moreover, the inflammation is often continuous or repeated, which causes long-term back pains that may increase in the case of patients, either in the morning or after sitting.

Second, the pathology of joints and soft tissues is also important. As the condition evolves, the direct spinal disease will gradually be exhausted and the joints of the joints and the spinal column will begin with erosion and destruction of the joints, followed by fibrosis, calcification and, ultimately, skeletalization of the soft tissues that are already flexible around the joints. For example, small vertebrate joints, thorns, and thorns tend to lose their original flexibility and become rigid, as if the entire spine were “fixed”. When physical activity occurs, these already pathological joints and rigid soft tissues do not cooperate normally, creating mechanical irritation, such as tortilla and friction, among themselves, which causes pain in the back, and the greater the extent of the activity, the more often the pain becomes apparent.

Moreover, changes in the physiology of the spinal column cannot be ignored. The normal spinal column has a fine physiology that helps to buffer the body and maintain balance. However, under the influence of a strong straight spinal column, the vertebrae of the spinal column may gradually merge, with its original physiological curvatures disappearing and even deformities such as camelbacks and spinal bends. This curvature can lead to an uneven distribution of pressure on the spine, causing additional oppression and irritation to the surrounding muscles, nerves, etc., leading to a further increase in back-back pain, which patients may suffer not only during their daily activities, but also when they are in a state of static rest.

In addition, external factors such as long-term poor positions and overwork can exacerbate the symptoms of back-back pain. Bad sit-ins, such as long waiting periods and bending backs, can exacerbate the already fragile back-backed spinal areas and further exacerbate local discomfort and pain.

Understanding these causes of back pain in the direct spinal cord helps patients to better understand their condition and provides a basis for follow-up to targeted treatment and rehabilitation measures.