Osteochondrosis of the spine: what is it, treatment of the cervical, thoracic and lumbar regions

This material is intended for people without medical education who want to know more about osteochondrosis than is written in popular publications and on the websites of private clinics. Patients ask doctors of various specialties questions that characterize a complete misunderstanding of the topic of osteochondrosis. Examples of such questions include: "why does my osteochondrosis hurt? ", "congenital osteochondrosis was discovered, what should I do? "Perhaps the apotheosis of such illiteracy can be considered a fairly common question: "Doctor, I have initial signs of chondrosis, how scary is it? "This article is intended to structure the material about osteochondrosis, its causes, manifestations, methods of diagnosis, treatment and prevention, and answer the most frequently asked questions. Since all of us, without exception, are patients with osteochondrosis, this article will be useful to everyone.

osteochondrosis on x-ray

What is osteochondrosis?

The name of the disease is scary when it is not clear. The medical suffix "-oz" means proliferation or enlargement of some tissue: hyalinosis, fibrosis. An example would be cirrhosis of the liver, when the connective tissue grows and the functional tissue, hepatocytes, decreases in volume. There may be an accumulation of pathological protein, or amyloid, which should not normally be present. This storage disease will then be called amyloidosis. There may be a significant enlargement of the liver due to fatty degeneration, which is called fatty hepatosis.

Well, it turns out that with intervertebral osteochondrosis, the cartilage tissue of the intervertebral discs increases in volume, because "chondros, χόνδρο" translated from Greek into Russian means "cartilage"? No, chondrosis, or, more precisely, osteochondrosis is not a storage disease. No true growth of cartilage tissue occurs in this case; we are only talking about a change in the configuration of the intervertebral cartilaginous discs under the influence of many years of physical activity, and we examined above what happens in each individual disc. The term "osteochondrosis" was introduced into the clinical literature by A. Hilderbrandt in 1933.

How does the biomechanics of a dehydrated disc change its shape? As a result of excessive load, their outer edges swell, rupture, and protrusions form, and then intervertebral hernias, or cartilaginous nodes that protrude beyond the normal contour of the disc. That is why chondrosis is called chondrosis, since cartilaginous nodes - hernias - arise where cartilage should not be, behind the outer contour of a healthy disc.

The edges of the vertebrae, which are adjacent to the disc, also hypertrophy, forming coracoids, or osteophytes. Therefore, such a mutual violation of the configuration of cartilage and bone tissue is collectively called osteochondrosis.

Osteochondrosis refers to dystrophic-degenerative processes, and is part of the normal, normal aging of intervertebral discs. None of us are surprised that the face of a 20-year-old girl will be slightly different from her face at the age of 70, but for some reason everyone believes that the spine, its intervertebral discs, do not undergo the same pronounced temporary changes. Dystrophy is a nutritional disorder, and degeneration is a violation of the structure of the intervertebral discs that follows a long period of dystrophy.

Causes of osteochondrosis and its complications

The main cause of uncomplicated, physiological osteochondrosis can be considered the way a person moves: upright walking. Man is the only species on earth that walks on two legs among all mammals, and this is the only way of locomotion. Osteochondrosis became the scourge of humanity, but we freed our hands and created civilization. Thanks to upright walking (and osteochondrosis), we not only created the wheel, the alphabet and mastered fire, but you can also sit at home in the warmth and read this article on your computer screen.

Humans' closest relatives, the higher primates - chimpanzees and gorillas, sometimes rise on two legs, but this method of movement is auxiliary for them, and most often they still move on four legs. In order for osteochondrosis to disappear, like intensive aging of the intervertebral discs, a person needs to change the way they move and remove the constant vertical load from the spinal column. Dolphins, killer whales and whales do not have osteochondrosis, and dogs, cows and tigers do not have it. Their spine does not take on long-term static and shock vertical loads, since it is in a horizontal state. If humanity goes to sea, like Ichthyander, and the natural way of movement is scuba diving, then osteochondrosis will be defeated.

Upright posture forced the human musculoskeletal system to evolve in the direction of protecting the cranium and brain from shock loads. But discs - elastic pads between the vertebrae - are not the only method of protection. A person has a springy arch of the foot, cartilage of the knee joints, physiological curves of the spine: two lordosis and two kyphosis. All this allows you not to "shake off" your brain even while running.

Risk factors

But doctors are interested in those risk factors that can be modified and avoid complications of osteochondrosis, which cause pain, discomfort, limited mobility and reduced quality of life. Let's consider these risk factors, which are so often ignored by doctors, especially in private medical centers. After all, it is much more profitable to constantly treat a person than to point out the cause of the problem, solve it, and lose the patient. Here they are:

  • the presence of longitudinal and transverse flat feet. Flat feet cause the arch of the foot to stop springing, and the shock is transmitted upward to the spinal column without softening. Intervertebral discs experience significant stress and quickly collapse;
  • overweight and obesity - needs no comment;
  • improper lifting and carrying of heavy objects, with uneven pressure on the intervertebral discs. For example, if you lift and carry a bag of potatoes on one shoulder, then the intense load will fall on one edge of the disks, and it can be excessive;
  • physical inactivity and a sedentary lifestyle. It was said above that it is during sitting that the maximum pressure on the discs occurs, since a person never sits straight, but always "slightly" bends;
  • chronic injuries, slipping on ice, intense weightlifting, contact martial arts, heavy hats, hitting your head on low ceilings, heavy clothing, carrying heavy bags in your hands.

The risk factors that can affect every person have been listed above. We deliberately do not list diseases here - connective tissue dysplasia, scoliotic deformation, which changes the biomechanics of movement, Perthes disease, and other conditions that aggravate and worsen the course of physiological osteochondrosis and lead to complications. These patients are treated by an orthopedist. What are the common symptoms of complicated osteochondrosis, for which patients turn to doctors?

General symptoms

The symptoms that will be described below exist outside of localization. These are common symptoms and can exist anywhere. These are pain, movement disorders and sensory disturbances. There are also vegetative-trophic disorders, or specific symptoms, for example, urinary disorders, but much less frequently. Let's take a closer look at these signs.

Pain: muscle and radicular

Pain can be of two types: radicular and muscular. Radicular pain is associated with compression, or pressing of a protrusion or herniation of the intervertebral disc of the corresponding root at this level. Each nerve root consists of two portions: sensitive and motor.  

Depending on where exactly the hernia is directed and what portion of the root has been compressed, there may be either sensory or motor disorders. Sometimes both disorders occur at once, expressed to varying degrees. Pain also belongs to sensory disorders, since pain is a special, specific feeling.  

Radicular pain: compression radiculopathy

Radicular pain is familiar to many; it is called "neuralgia". The swollen nerve root reacts violently to any shock, and the pain is very sharp, similar to an electric shock. She shoots either in the arm (from the neck) or in the leg (from the lower back). Such a sharp, painful impulse is called a lumbago: in the lower back it is lumbago, in the neck it is cervicago, a rarer term. Such radicular pain requires a forced, analgesic, or antalgic posture. Radicular pain immediately occurs when coughing, sneezing, crying, laughing, or straining. Any shock to the swollen nerve root causes increased pain.

Muscle pain: myofascial-tonic

But an intervertebral hernia or disc defect may not compress the nerve root, but when moving, injure nearby ligaments, fascia, and deep back muscles. In this case, the pain will be secondary, aching, permanent, stiffness in the back will occur, and such pain is called myofascial. The source of this pain will no longer be the nervous tissue, but the muscles. A muscle can respond to any stimulus in only one way: contraction. And if the stimulus is prolonged, the muscle contraction will turn into a constant spasm, which will be very painful.

A vicious circle is formed: the spasmodic muscle cannot be well supplied with blood, it becomes oxygen starved, and it poorly removes lactic acid, that is, the product of its own vital activity, into the venous capillaries. And the accumulation of lactic acid again leads to increased pain. It is this kind of muscular, chronic pain that significantly worsens the quality of life and forces the patient to undergo long-term treatment for osteochondrosis, although it does not prevent him from moving and does not force him to lie in bed.

A characteristic symptom of such secondary, myofascial pain will be increased stiffness in the neck, lower back or thoracic spine, the appearance of dense, painful muscle bumps - "rollers" next to the spine, that is, paravertebral. In such patients, back pain intensifies after several hours of "office" work, with prolonged immobility, when the muscles are practically unable to work and are in a state of spasm.  

Diagnosis of osteochondrosis

In typical cases, osteochondrosis of the cervical and cervical-thoracic spine occurs as described above. Therefore, the main stage of diagnosis was and remains the identification of the patient’s complaints, establishing the presence of concomitant muscle spasm using simple palpation of the muscles along the spinal column. Is it possible to confirm the diagnosis of osteochondrosis using x-ray examination?

An "X-ray" of the cervical spine, and even with functional tests for flexion and extension, does not show cartilage, since their tissue transmits X-rays. Despite this, based on the location of the vertebrae, one can draw general conclusions about the height of the intervertebral discs, the general straightening of the physiological curvature of the neck - lordosis, as well as the presence of marginal growths on the vertebrae with prolonged irritation of their surfaces by fragile and dehydrated intervertebral discs. Functional tests can confirm the diagnosis of instability in the cervical spine.

Since the discs themselves can only be seen using CT or MRI, magnetic resonance and x-ray computed tomography are indicated to clarify the internal structure of cartilage and formations such as protrusions and hernias. Thus, with the help of these methods, a diagnosis is accurately made, and the tomography result is an indication, and even a topical guide, for the surgical treatment of a hernia in the neurosurgery department.

It should be added that no other research methods other than imaging, except MRI or CT, can show a hernia. Therefore, if you are given a trendy "computer diagnostic" of the whole body, if a chiropractor diagnosed you with a hernia by running his fingers along your back, if a hernia was detected on the basis of acupuncture, a special extrasensory technique, or a session of honey Thai massage, then you can immediately consider this level of diagnosiscompletely illiterate. Complications of osteochondrosis caused by protrusion or hernia, compression, muscle, neurovascular, can be treated only by seeing the condition of the intervertebral disc at the appropriate level.

Treatment of complications of osteochondrosis

Let us repeat once again that it is impossible to cure osteochondrosis, like planned aging and dehydration of the disc. You can simply not let things get complicated:

  • if there are symptoms of narrowing of the height of the intervertebral discs, then you need to move correctly, not gain weight and avoid the appearance of protrusions and muscle pain;
  • if you already have a protrusion, then you need to be careful not to let it rupture the fibrous ring, that is, not to transform the protrusion into a hernia, and to avoid the appearance of protrusions at several levels;
  • if you have a hernia, then you need to dynamically monitor it, do regular MRIs, avoid increasing its size, or carry out modern minimally invasive surgical treatment, since all conservative methods of treating exacerbation of osteochondrosis, without exception, leave the hernia in place and eliminate only temporary symptoms: inflammation, pain, shooting and muscle spasms.

But with the slightest violation of the regime, with heavy lifting, hypothermia, injury, weight gain (in the case of the lower back), the symptoms return again and again. We will describe how you can cope with unpleasant sensations, pain, and limited mobility in the back against the background of exacerbation of osteochondrosis, and an existing protrusion or hernia, secondary to social tonic syndrome.

What to do during an exacerbation?

Since there has been an attack of acute pain (for example, in the lower back), then you need to follow the following instructions at the pre-medical stage:

  • completely eliminate physical activity;
  • sleep on a hard one (orthopedic mattress or hard sofa), eliminating sagging of the back;
  • it is advisable to wear a semi-rigid corset to prevent sudden movements and "distortions";
  • You should place a massage pillow with plastic needle applicators on your lower back, or use a Lyapko applicator. You need to keep it for 30 - 40 minutes, 2 -3 times a day;
  • after this, ointments containing NSAIDs, ointments with bee or snake venom can be rubbed into the lower back;
  • after rubbing, on the second day you can wrap your lower back in dry heat, for example, a belt made of dog hair.

A common mistake is warming up on the first day. This could be a heating pad, bath procedures. At the same time, the swelling only intensifies, and the pain along with it. You can warm only after the "highest point of pain" has passed. After this, heat will enhance the "resorption" of the swelling. This usually happens on 2–3 days.

The basis of any treatment is etiotropic therapy (elimination of the cause), and pathogenetic treatment (affecting the mechanisms of the disease). It is accompanied by symptomatic therapy. For vertebrogenic pain (caused by problems in the spine), things are like this:

  • In order to reduce swelling of the muscles and spine, a salt-free diet and limiting the amount of fluid consumed are indicated. You can even give a tablet of a mild potassium-sparing diuretic;
  • in the acute phase of lumbar osteochondrosis, short-term treatment can be carried out with intramuscular "injections" of NSAIDs and muscle relaxants: daily, 1. 5 ml intramuscularly for 3 days, 1 ml also intramuscularly for 5 days. This will help relieve swelling of the nervous tissue, eliminate inflammation, and normalize muscle tone;
  • in the subacute period, after overcoming the maximum pain, "injections" should no longer be taken, and attention should be paid to restorative agents, for example, modern drugs of group "B". They effectively restore impaired sensitivity, reduce numbness and paresthesia.

Physiotherapeutic measures continue, the time has come for exercise therapy for osteochondrosis. Its task is to normalize blood circulation and muscle tone, when swelling and inflammation have already subsided, but muscle spasm has not yet fully resolved.

Kinesiotherapy (movement treatment) involves doing therapeutic exercises and swimming. Gymnastics for osteochondrosis of the cervical spine is not aimed at the discs at all, but at the surrounding muscles. Its task is to relieve tonic spasm, improve blood flow, and also normalize venous outflow. This is what leads to a decrease in muscle tone, a decrease in the severity of pain and stiffness in the back.

Along with massage, swimming, and acupuncture sessions, the purchase of an orthopedic mattress and a special pillow is recommended. A pillow for osteochondrosis of the cervical spine should be made of a special material with "shape memory". Its task is to relax the muscles of the neck and suboccipital region, as well as to prevent disruption of blood flow at night in the vertebrobasilar region.

Autumn is an important stage in the prevention and treatment of home physiotherapy products and devices - from infrared and magnetic devices, to the most common needle applicators and ebonite disks, which are a source of weak electric currents during massage that have a beneficial effect on the patient.

Exercises for osteochondrosis must be carried out after a light general warm-up, on "warmed up muscles". The main therapeutic factor is movement, not the degree of muscle contraction. Therefore, in order to avoid relapse, the use of weights is not allowed; a gymnastic mat and a gymnastic stick are used. With their help, you can effectively restore range of motion.

Rubbing in ointments and using the Kuznetsov implicator continue. Swimming, underwater massage, Charcot shower are shown. It is during the stage of fading exacerbation that drugs for home magnetic therapy and physiotherapy are indicated.

Usually treatment takes no more than a week, but in some cases, osteochondrosis can manifest itself with such dangerous symptoms that surgery may be necessary, and urgently.

About Shants' collar

In the early stages, during the acute stage, it is necessary to protect the neck from unnecessary movements. The Shants collar is great for this. Many people make two mistakes when purchasing this collar. They do not choose it according to their size, which is why it simply does not perform its function and causes a feeling of discomfort.

Shants collar

The second common mistake is wearing it for prophylactic purposes for a long time. This leads to weak neck muscles, and only causes more problems. For a collar, there are only two indications under which it can be worn:

  • the appearance of acute pain in the neck, stiffness and pain spreading to the head;
  • if you are going to engage in physical work while in full health, in which there is a risk of "straining" your neck and getting an aggravation. This is, for example, repairing a car, when you lie down under it, or washing windows, when you need to reach out and take awkward positions.

The collar should be worn for no more than 2–3 days, since longer wearing can cause venous congestion in the neck muscles, at a time when it is time to activate the patient. An analogue of the Shants collar for the lower back is a semi-rigid corset purchased at an orthopedic salon.

Surgical treatment or conservative measures?

It is advisable that each patient, after progression of symptoms, in the presence of complications, undergo an MRI and consult a neurosurgeon. Modern minimally invasive operations make it possible to safely remove fairly large hernias, without prolonged hospitalization, without being forced or lying down for several days, without compromising the quality of life, since they are performed using modern video endoscopic, radio frequency, laser technology or using cold plasma. You can evaporate part of the kernel and lower the pressure, reducing the risk of getting a hernia. And you can eliminate the defect radically, that is, by getting rid of it completely.

There is no need to be afraid to operate on hernias; these are no longer the previous types of open operations of the 80-90s of the last century with muscle dissection, blood loss and a subsequent long recovery period. They are more like a small puncture under X-ray control followed by the use of modern technology.

If you prefer a conservative method of treatment, without surgery, then know that not a single method will allow you to reduce the hernia or eliminate it, no matter what they promise you! Neither a hormone injection, nor electrophoresis with papain, nor electrical stimulation, nor massage, nor the use of leeches, nor acupuncture can cope with a hernia. Creams and balms, kinesiotherapy, and even the introduction of platelet-rich plasma will not help either. And even traction therapy, or traction, despite all its benefits, can only reduce symptoms.

Therefore, the motto for the conservative treatment of intervertebral hernias can be the well-known expression "minced meat cannot be turned back. "A hernia can only be eliminated promptly. The prices for modern operations are not so high, because they need to be paid once. But annual treatment in a sanatorium can ultimately cost 10-20 times more than radical removal of a hernia with the disappearance of pain and restoration of quality of life.

Prevention of osteochondrosis and its complications

Osteochondrosis, including complicated ones, the symptoms and treatment of which we discussed above, is for the most part not a disease at all, but simply a manifestation of inevitable aging and premature "shrinkage" of the intervertebral discs. Osteochondrosis needs little to never bother us:

  • avoid hypothermia, especially in autumn and spring, and falls in winter;
  • do not lift weights, and carry loads only with a straight back, in a backpack;
  • drink more clean water;
  • don’t get fat, your weight should correspond to your height;
  • treat flat feet, if any;
  • do physical exercises regularly;
  • engaging in types of exercise that reduce the load on the back (swimming);
  • giving up bad habits;
  • alternating mental stress with physical activity. After every hour and a half of mental work, it is recommended to change the type of activity to physical work;
  • You can regularly do at least an x-ray of the lumbar spine in two projections, or an MRI, to know whether the hernia, if any, is progressing;

By following these simple recommendations, you can keep your back healthy and mobile for life.