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Expectant mothers

During pregnancy, as many as 30% of women experience low back pain or sciatica (referred or irradiated pain in the leg). They also frequently experience pain after giving birth.

During pregnancy, pain occurs in the vast majority of cases as a result of spasm of the back muscles, which can cause pain by way of several mechanisms. Once the pain occurs, regardless of the factors that started it, there is a neurological mechanism that may cause the pain to persist until the end of pregnancy or may cause referred pain in the leg.

Only in exceptional cases does pain occur as a result of an organic disorder of the spinal column. Of the rare cases where this happens, the most common organic disorder during pregnancy is a herniated disc.

After giving birth, women often experience pain in the lower part of the back. This is frequently due to one or more of the muscular mechanisms referred to later on, but it can sometimes be caused by luxation of the coccyx.

What is it that increases the risk of back pain during pregnancy and labor?

There are several factors peculiar to pregnancy and labor that can render you more liable to back pain, although there are few studies that show which of these factors are most important:

1. Relaxation of the abdominal muscles.

  • In normal conditions, the balance of tension in the abdominal and back muscles helps keep the musculature straight in the same way as the stays that support the mast of a sailing-ship.
  • Such relaxation is necessary to allow the womb (or "uterus") to grow in the later stages of pregnancy. However, if the abdominal muscles are weak before the pregnancy, then relaxation can occur early. In fact, in the population at large lack of abdominal muscle strength is also a factor that increases the risk of pain appearing and lasting longer.
  • Relaxation of the abdominal muscles increases the tendency of expectant mothers to bend backwards - in the hyperlordosis posture (see further below) - and place too much demand on the back muscles to keep their balance. The principle is rather like that of a chair; it is stable when resting on all four legs, but if we want to keep our balance on the two back legs only, then we have to correct our posture constantly.
  • These mechanisms make it more likely for the muscles of the lower back to spasm and for pain to occur.
  • 2. Hyperlordosis.

  • Hyperlordosis increases the load on the spinal column, and more importantly forces the muscles in the lower back to work harder than necessary. This makes them liable to spasm and can trigger pain in this zone and/or referred pain in the leg.
  • In some cases hyperlordosis can also overload the facetary joint, and this can eventually be affected by a facetary syndrome. This syndrome can also cause pain in the lower back and referred pain in the leg. However, normally the overload has to be sustained for much longer than a pregnancy for the facetary joint to be affected, so that pregnancy is unlikely to cause pain in this way if the joint is perfectly sound at the outset.
  • 3. Weakness of the gluteal muscles.

  • In normal conditions, the gluteal muscles stabilize the pelvis and provide stable support for the lower spinal column.
  • During pregnancy, as the weight increases and the posture of the spinal column alters, if the gluteal muscles are too weak, they may not be capable of steadying the sacroiliac joint, which joins the column to the pelvis, and this can cause pain in the lower back and the buttocks.
  • 4. Sendentariness and repose.

    Some women are forced to repose during pregnancy for gynaecological reasons. Others do so from habit, without any medical reason to warrant it.
  • Sedentariness and repose in themselves increase the risk of pain appearing and lasting longer.
  • In normal conditions, the nerves detect the degree of tension in the muscles. This information automatically keeps you aware of your body posture, which helps you maintain the requisite postures better and with less strain on the muscles. With repose, these nerves lose their habit and cease to function properly, which makes you more liable to adopt bad postures unconsciously and to overload the muscles.
  • In normal conditions, there are reflexes that coordinate the abdominal and back muscles so that you retain proper balance at rest, and especially in movement. Training and activity keep these reflexes in good repair. But contrariwise, repose makes it harder for these reflexes to work properly and so increases the likelihood of overloading the muscles.
  • Sedentariness and repose quite rapidly produce loss of muscle strength and mass, which increases the likelihood over overloading or lesion of the muscles.
  • 5. Weight gain.

    In a normal pregnancy where the mother follows the correct diet, there is no important weight gain until after the fifth month, and this does not usually exceed 8 kilos in all.
  • Weight gain forces the lower back muscles to work harder and aggravates the tendency to spasm due to abdominal relaxation, lordosis and repose, especially if the abdominal and back muscles were not strong to begin with.
  • Moreover, in pregnancy the weight gain is concentrated in the lower half of the body. This overloads the front part of the vertebral disc, which in turn increases the pressure on the back wall of the disc, which is thinner than the front wall. This increases the likelihood of a fissure, protrusion or herniated disc, which can cause low back pain and sciatica (irradiated pain in the leg).
  • In theory, weight gain can also aggravate pre-existing spondylolisthesis. However, this does not normally happen if the spondylolisthesis is mild - grades I and II - or the muscles are strong.
  • 6. Problems of space.

    The increasing volume of the uterus and the congestion of the pelvis can increase the likelihood of compression of a nerve root, causing sciatica (irradiated pain in the leg).

    7. Labor.

    Women often experience pain in the lower back during and immediately after labor. There are several mechanisms which can cause this.
  • Muscular strain: In some cases labor can entail a great deal of strain, provoking a muscle spasm that may last for several days after labor.
  • Alterations of the pelvic joints. . During labor, the pelvis dilates to let the foetus emerge. In normal conditions, this dilation is minimal and simply entails the relative separation of the bones forming the pubis, at the front of the pelvis. There are several possible causes of excessive dilation of the pelvis, the most common being that the diameter of the mother's pelvis does not match the size of the baby. Excessive dilation can affect the sacroiliac joints at the back of the pelvis; which join the pelvis to the spinal column. if this happens, it may cause pain and muscle spasm in the lower back and buttocks.
  • Exceptionally, the strain of labor may cause a fissure, protrusion or herniated disc. In that case, there may be low back pain and/or sciatica (irradiated pain in the leg).
  • Luxation of the coccyx. . If the foetus presses the coccyx back during labor, stretching or breaking fibres in the ligament binding it to the sacrum, the coccyx may be displaced. This is known as "luxation of the coccyx". It can cause intense pain at the base of the spinal column, especially when sitting on a hard surface.
  • Can this have prejudicial consequences for the mother or the foetus?

    Not for the foetus. And not normally for the mother. Only in exceptional cases where there are pre-existing risk factors or the right treatment is not administered in time, can the pain caused by pregnancy or labor trigger off neurological mechanisms that may cause the pain to persist, irrespective of what produced it.

    However, with preventive measures and the right treatment, the vast majority of the back problems that may arise during pregnancy or labor can be prevented or satisfactorily treated.

    Can back problems be so severe as to make pregnancy inadvisable?

    They do not normally definitively rule out pregnancy.

    There are some specific disorders of the spinal column that may constitute temporary contraindications that are better dealt with before becoming pregnant. Examples of these are:

  • Herniated disc. The fact that Magnetic Resonance detects a herniated disc is not in itself important and definitely does not contraindicate pregnancy. However, if the hernia produces symptoms, it is best to have it treated before becoming pregnant. Otherwise, pregnancy will probably make it worse.
  • Spondylolisthesis, where it produces symptoms, is progressive or reaches grades III or IV. If the spondylolisthesis is there but does not produce symptoms, all that is needed is to religiously do the right exercises to control it. There is a section of this site that shows effective exercises for enhancing the strength, resilience or elasticity of the back muscles. However, patients with spondylolisthesis should be examined first by a doctor to determine what exercises are appropriate in each case.
  • In some cases of post-surgical fibrosis where the symptoms are especially intense, do not respond to treatment and hinder rehabilitation of the muscles, the mother must weigh her desire to become pregnant against the risk of increased pain during pregnancy due to mechanical factors and the fact that some treatments cannot be administered.

    It is up to the potential mother and her doctor in each case to assess the foreseeable effect of pregnancy and decide accordingly.

    What to do to prevent or treat back pain during pregnancy.

    Of the measures that are effective in preventing back pain, the most important in the case of pregnancy and labor are:

    1. Avoid taking repose unless it is necessary for medical reasons.
    2. Observe the rules of postural hygiene.
    3. Do exercises to train and strengthen the muscles that have an important function for the back.

    Some authors recommend the use of pelvic corsets (that is, corsets worn around the hips rather than the waist) to assist the gluteal muscles. Although there are no studies demonstrating their effectiveness, they can be used during pregnancy and after giving birth, when the pain at that moment is due to the effects on the rear pelvic joint.

    If you experience pain during pregnancy, although there are some medications you cannot take because of the possible danger to the foetus, there are treatments that can deal with it satisfactorily in most cases. If the pain does not respond to general measures, then neuroreflexotherapy is a highly recommended option.



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