Back Problems
I am a 21 year old male with back problems, It just seems like I have had this all my life. I can't remember what caused it. But I remember when it started. Four years ago is when I started to feel back pains, mostly in my lower back. It took me a long time to deal with it and quit being macho about it. I used to try to ignore the pain while I played sports, during school, and even at work. Even though the pain is unbearable. The pain is so painful it sometimes knocks the nerve out of my right knee. Which is weird because I receive the pain in the bottom left side. So I am feeling pain on opposite sides, which is dramatically painful. I felt that if I quit the game that I love so much I will never be able to look at myself in the mirror or wonder what it could have been.
I still remember my last hockey game as a goalie. My team and I were up by two goals in the start of the third period (last period) when from out of nowhere I felt a tingly sensation in my spine. This always meant that my back problem was starting to come back. I remember telling myself that I just had to last until the third period was over when suddenly there was a breakaway (this is when an opposing team player has the puck and no one else is around him). As I skated out to cut down the angle, the opposing team's player shoot and as I went down to block it, I felt a popping sensation and a overwhelming pain went to my back. It hurt like hell but luckily he shot it right at my position and I covered it up. To make matters worse the guy that shot the puck tripped and started sliding uncontrollably towards me. When he made contact with me I was on my knees and when we collided, all his weight caused to fall backwards onto the ice. The only sound that I heard was my own voice screaming in pain. My teammates tried to help me up but my back wouldn't support my weight. So I limped off the ice, so angry that I throw my helmet to the ground.
My mother took me to see a back specialist named, Dr. Johnson at the Knoxville Orthopedic Center in Knoxville, TN who explained this pain I was having generated a major problem. It never came to my realization how serious this could be, or what it could do to my basketball career.
Earlier in the spring I was playing a soccer game against the South Anchorage varsity soccer team. I was playing left midfield, taking the ball up the left side of the field when the other team’s right fullback stepped up to get the ball. I cut to the right and heard a loud snap that rung in my ears. I could not stand up. Every time I tried to move my leg, waves of pain pounded from my knee. I had to be carried off the pitch. I learned a few days later
The horn blew and the game started, Dedham won the face off and is running down the field at a faster pace than I was used to. They shot the ball! I couldn’t move my stick quick enough to save it, so I threw my body in front of it and got hit right in the shoulder. It hurt a lot, but what I hadn’t realized was that it hit my shoulder and reflected ten feet away from the net where my player caught it and ran down the field and scored. The other team didn’t know what hit them. It was the half now and the score was three to nothing in our favor. Our couch told us that we needed to keep up the good work.
What I remember is playing in a softball tournament in 2013 with my travel team. It was championship game day and to me, that day was very important. I was playing outfield and it was a new position for me so I had no idea what I was supposed to do besides catch the ball and throw it in to the middle infielders. I was unaware that the ball would be so slippery from the wet grass, which made it much more difficult to control. As the game continued, it started getting very intense and all we heard was the crowd continuously yelling after every pitch thrown or play made. Soon after the fifth inning began, a shallow fly ball was hit to where I was in left field; I began running for it and all of sudden everything went black. I felt like I had just
When I was in grade seven, I was playing my second year of peewee hockey and playing for my junior high school team as well. The junior high league allowed checking and the peewee league did not. Because of this I was not accustomed to the new aspect of hockey brought on by checking. I was injured in an intense game against our rival junior high, which was filled with plenty of checking. I was on the receiving end of a brutal check from behind which is something not permitted in any league, the player that hit me received a penalty and a game expulsion. I tried to continue playing but it was no use, I was barely able to raise my arm. I ended up in the hospital where the doctor informed me that I had severely dislocated my left shoulder and would have to miss up to three weeks of play. I had never been forced to miss hockey because of an injury before and it was the worst news I had ever heard. The time I missed from hockey was one of the most difficult periods I had been through up to that point.
The patient tells me this pain started just a couple of days ago on Wednesday evening. She said that it started in the left side of her back. Since then, it seems to move around the side and into her left lower abdomen, pelvis area, and right over the bladder where she feels a lot of pressure and pain. She has a history of sciatica on the left side and initially thought this just might be her sciatica type pain. However, the fact that it has radiated to the front is very different from the sciatica pain she has had in the past, which is what prompted her to seek care. When it initially happened, she was feeling nausea, but that has resolved. She
It happened during a warm night in volonia about to play a game . I was warming up in the outfield and I was warming up with a 12 oz baseball. Why was I warming up with a 12 oz base ball I don’t know? Ok back to the story. So me and another fellow teammate was throwing around a 12 oz baseball and when he threw it into my glove WHACK!! It hit me in the face and I was out cold for about ten seconds then my coach shook and almost had a heart attack. Everyone was freaking out because where the ball hit me it was a little close to my temple. So got up and me and my mom got in my truck and we went to conway to a hospital. When we got there I was hurting and a hour later i'm in the
It all started in high school, my junior year when I tore my anterior cruciate ligament(ACL). I knew something was bound to happen because I was always falling on the floor during games. January 9, 2016, the day I tore my ACL. It happened when I was trying to get a rebound, a girl from the opposing team knee bumped me, and we both fell. I tried to get up too soon, next thing you know I am laying down screaming with her on top of me. This was not my first time being injured, but it was the first time I got injured and could not bear the pain. I was token to the hospital by ambulance, and some x-rays were taken, and I was told that I had to rest, ice, and elevate my knee. I was injured many times after
I was six years old when it happened, it was after my very first baseball game. I never played before which made me nervous, but as I step foot on the smooth dirt complex field it became second nature. I remember when it was my turn to bat, I felt a slight pinch on my upper right neck, I thought it was just my nervousness, but once I saw the ball coming straight at me, I knew it was too late to back out. I swing with my eyes close I was scared that the ball may hit my face. I heard the ball hit the bat I opened my eyes and immediately started running to first place. I remember coming home from the game in pain, my neck was red and every time I moved my neck it felt as if a million of bees stung my neck because it didn’t let me breathe well.
With the rest of the basketball girls from the surrounding area, I began summer basketball camp. There was a basketball tournament where we played 4 games in one day. During the game an opponent stole the ball, so I chased her down the court. Once I reached her under their basket, I tripped over her foot, fell, and heard something snap. I was absolutely freaking out. The referees ran down to me. All I could say was “Something popped! Something popped!” I couldn’t bend my leg at the knee, it was scary. I was brought to the main lobby to walk it off. I couldn’t bend my leg for two weeks.
Physical activity is the key to success in the treatment of chronic low back pain (CLBP), and exercise itself has the most permanent and long lasting effects (Abenhaim et al. 2000). Although the variety of conservative, complementary, and surgical treatments available, such as medication, thermotherapies, ergonomic and self-care advices, and patient education, proven to be beneficial for CLBP, at the present time the main aim is to provide effective interventions as well as reduce the health care costs.
Sciatica is a term given to discomfort in the lower back that moves down the leg through the sciatic nerve, which causes pain, tingling, numbness or weakness on either side of your body. Although sciatica cannot be diagnosed as an actual medical condition, it is said to be a symptom of a previous injury or medical condition. The original cause is usually pressure on the sciatic nerve. The largest single nerve in the body is the sciatic nerve, which is composed of individual nerve roots that start by branching out from the spine in the lower back at lumbar 3 (Frymoyer 1992). The nerves that stem from each level of the lower spine intertwine to construct the sciatic nerve, which runs from the lower back down each leg. Down the leg, nerves branch out to innervate different parts of the leg. Depending on where the nerve is injured or pressured determines where the person will feel the symptoms and to what extent they will experience symptoms down the leg. A few alternative names include neuropathy of the sciatic nerve, sciatic nerve dysfunction, herniated disk, or lower back pain of the sciatic nerve (Frymoyer 1992).
Hasenbring, M.I., Rusu, A.C., & Turk, D.C. (2012). From Acute to Chronic Back Pain: risk factors, mechanisms, and clinical implications: Oxford: OUP Oxford.
It was simple, at first thought, my career was over. As I was rushed to the hospital, I thought I was never going to play football again. The pain was so unbearable, that every bump in the road would sent a shooting pain throughout my leg. I was for certain that I would never return the field again.