Leg Pain and Sciatica
Sciatica is a severe pain in the leg caused by
compression, irritation, or inflammation of the sciatic nerves,
which are thick nerves extending down the back of each leg. Each
sciatic nerve consists of five smaller nerves extending from the
lower spinal column, which then join together and travel down the
legs. The sciatic nerves divide into tiny smaller nerves traveling
to the knee, foot, toes, calf, and thigh. The inflammation of any
of these nerves is called sciatica.
Symptoms
People with sciatica can sometimes experience shooting
pains down the leg and into the foot and toes, and other times a
dull ache or numbness. Sciatica is caused by many things. Sitting
at a desk for long periods of time in one position can exacerbate
the pain. Exercise can make the pain worse. Tennis or golf and other
twisting activities can cause sciatica pain to flare up. Sometimes,
the pain may be in both legs, and other times it may alternate from
one leg to the other.
Causes Of Sciatica
The sciatic nerve is very long, so there are many
places along its length at which the irritation may occur. One place
is the lower back. Often, a misaligned lumbar vertebra puts pressure
on the nerve, causing the pain. This misalignment is called a subluxation.
For further discussion of subluxations, click here.
Disc herniation can also cause sciatica. Discs
are the "shock absorbers" between the vertebrae of the
spine. They are cartilage-like cushions that occupy the spaces between
the vertebrae which allow the back to turn and bend normally. If
you've been injured in a car accident, or from a fall, one or more
of your discs may now be bulging out one side of the spine. This
is what is called a "slipped disk," or disc herniation.
Sciatica usually begins as a sharp pain in the
lower back. Eventually, the pain stretches down the back of the
leg, and gets worse when you sit or stand in one position for a
long period of time.
Treatment For Sciatica
Medical doctors normally treat this condition by
prescribing pain killers and telling the patient that the condition
may go away naturally. This seldom happens, and the net result is
that the patient's liver, kidney, or stomach lining, are damaged
by the long-term use of drugs. The better approach is the chiropractic
one.
The doctor will treat your sciatica by finding
the location of nerve irritation, and can relieve the pressure on
the nerve, allowing the body to heal itself naturally, without drugs
or surgery. |