• Houston Medical Center
  • Perry Hospital
  • Houston Health Pavilion
  • The Surgery Center
Houston Healthcare
  • Houston Lake Rehab
  • Houston Heart Institute
  • Med-Stops

 

Symptoms of Low Back Pain and Sciatica


Most back pain is usually localized in the low back. Stress on the muscles and ligaments that support the spine produces strain in these tissues, and this is the usual cause of lower back pain, although there can be other, more serious causes.

If a nerve is irritated, the pain may extend into the buttock or leg on the affected side, and weakness or numbness may be present. Other symptoms include burning, tingling or a shooting pain down the back of one leg. This is often called “sciatica.” However, the nerve involved is usually a spinal nerve, and not the sciatic nerve. Sciatica is known by many other medical terms, such as lumbosacral radicular pain or radiculopathy.

Sciatic Nerve Pain
IMAGE
Copyright © Nucleus Medical Media, Inc.

More serious symptoms associated with back pain that may require immediate medical attention include:

  • Pain that doesn't subside or worsens with rest
  • Pain that is worse when you are reclined
  • Pain that is sudden, severe, or that has gotten dramatically worse
  • Progressive weakness or numbness in a leg or foot
  • Difficulty walking, standing, or moving
  • Numbness in the genital or rectal area
  • Loss of bowel or bladder control
  • Burning or difficulty with urination
  • Fever, unexplained weight loss, or other signs of illness
  • If there has been any trauma, fall or impact
  • If you have a history of cancer, back pain should be evaluated

References

Conn's Current Therapy 2001 . 53rd edition. W.B. Saunders Company; 2001.

Konstantinou K. Dunn KM. Sciatica: review of epidemiological studies and prevalence estimates. Spine . 33(22):2464-72, 2008 Oct 15.

Pain. National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke website. Available at: http://www.ninds.nih.gov/disorders/chronic%5Fpain/detail%5Fchronic%5Fpain.htm#Spine . Accessed October 27, 2008.

Textbook of Primary Care Medicine . 3rd edition. Mosby, Inc.; 2001.

Winters ME, Kluetz P, Zilberstein J. Back Pain Emergencies. Medical Clinics of North America. Volume 90, Issue 3 (May 2006)

Revision Information

Houston Medical Center
1601 Watson Boulevard
Warner Robins, Georgia 31093
Telephone: (478) 922-4281

 

Wi-Fi Houston Healthcare provides wireless internet accessability for our patients and visitors throughout the facilities

Perry Hospital
1120 Morningside Drive
Perry, Georgia 31069
Telephone: (478) 987-3600

Connect with Us!
  • facebook
  • twitter
  • flickr
  • you tube
  • linked in