What Is Radiating Back Pain?
Radiation pain. When the neural stem, nerve root, or central neuropathy is stimulated, pain not only occurs locally in the stimulus, but can also extend to the innervation area of the affected sensory nerve. Pain is radioactive, and conductive pain dissipates from the proximal end (near the heart) to the distal end of the limb, like a string of inductance. Treatment should find the primary disease that causes radiation pain, and treat the cause.
Basic Information
- Visiting department
- orthopedics
- Common locations
- whole body
- Common causes
- Intercostal neuralgia, congenital fusion deformity of the cervical spine, instability of the lower cervical spine, etc.
- Common symptoms
- Pain is radioactive and dissipates from the proximal to the distal end of the limb
Causes of radiation pain and common diseases
- Intercostal neuralgia
- Rib burning (pain from back to front, radiating semicircular along the corresponding intercostal space) The intercostal space may have tenderness, stomach pain, burning pain, and hypersensitivity.
- 2. Congenital malformation of cervical spine
- Short neck, radiation pain, neck soreness, pillow fall, etc.
- 3. Lower cervical spine instability
- Neck aches, neck stiffness, radiation pain, etc.
Radiation pain test
- Perform physical examinations on painful areas, such as cervical, shoulder, and lumbar spine motion examinations, joint X-rays, cervical spine CT, lumbar spine CT, and electromyography.
Differential diagnosis of radiation pain
- Radiation pain in the upper limbs
- Indicate lesions in the plexus of the neck or shoulder. Such as cervical syndrome.
- 2. Radiation pain in lower limbs
- Mostly the thoracolumbar and sacral nerves are oppressed, such as lumbar disc herniation, spinal cord tumors, sacroiliitis, etc., and the nerves are subjected to compressive damage or inflammation, and the patient has a string of radioactive pain.
Radiation pain treatment principles
- Find the primary disease causing radiation pain and treat the cause.