Have you been told you have arthritis? What about arthritis in your spine? Have you fooled yourself into believing you are doomed to a life of pain?
If you’ve gotten an “arthritis” diagnosis, you’re going to read three facts below that may give you hope that things aren’t as bad as you may think.
The first step in dealing with arthritis is taking your power back over the very word arthritis itself.
Why you should ban the word arthritis from your vocabulary
If there was one medical word I could ban in English it would be the word arthritis. For three reasons:
- It’s overused by doctors to explain any pain that they can’t explain
- It creates unnecessary fear and loss of hope in people who really do have options for overcoming their joint pain naturally
- And finally, the arthritis as an explanation for all spinal pain isn’t backed by science, which you’re going to see in a minute
Why don’t you dig in with me and get to the bottom of this?
Fact #1: Arthritis means “joint inflammation.” It’s not a real diagnosis.
The word arthritis is not a diagnosis, just a description. As another example, “cephalgia” is the medical term for “head pain.” That’s another description, also not a diagnosis.
So saying you’ve been diagnosed with arthritis is about the same thing as saying you’ve been diagnosed with joint pain. Or someone with a head pain saying “I’ve been diagnosed with a headache.”
Patient: My head hurts.
Doctor: Oh, you’ve acquired cephalgia.
Patient: You’ve told me my symptoms in Latin. Thank you.
Doctor: You’re welcome, that will be $179.
But I know what you’re thinking…”But I thought arthritis was a disease…”
If you’re thinking about Rheumatoid Arthritis (RA) or another disease of the immune system where the body attacks itself, you are right. RA is a real diagnosis based on real tests. RA is a real disease. And so are a few other “inflammatory arthritic” diseases, like psoriatic arthritis. This kind of arthritis isn’t what we’re discussing.
Most “arthritis” that people blame their pain on is “osteo arthritis” or joint pain from “joint inflammation.” In this case, arthritis can be called a “throw away diagnosis.”
Why are the joints inflamed? Now that is the question.
Chronic joint inflammation is probably happening for a several reasons:
- Poor nutrition leading to body wide inflammation
- Trauma
- Poor body and spine mechanics (including not moving enough) causing the body and spine to break down sooner over time – being overweight can contribute to this
At our office we talk about “the body being in lock down” or in a “stressed position.” This stress is one key source and cause of the symptom called arthritis. This stress causes a breakdown over time that doctors identify as “osteoarthritis” on an x-ray. Arthritis is just a symptom of another problem.
Fact #2. You can see the results of joint inflammation on an x-ray. But you can’t see the pain.
Many people get a diagnosis of arthritis after they’ve had an x-ray of their spine. There’s no doubt that you can see the results of long term joint inflammation on an x-ray.
- Those results look like calcium deposits where they shouldn’t be. Think of minerals deposits on the inside of an old pipe (see the picture.)
- You can also have joints where the joint spaces have shrunk and gotten smaller. Everything looks compacted and squashed.
These are the signs that you’ve had arthritis in your spine or other joints. A doctor may look at those changes and say “you have arthritis.”
And all that means is you’ve had some body inflammation, trauma, or some poor body mechanics changing the shape of the joint over time, causing inflammation and breakdown.
But that inflammation is in the past. It may still be happening right this instant. Or it might not be. The x-ray won’t tell you.
Inflammation, though, is a chemical process that happens at the micro level in the body.
You can’t actually see the inflammation happening in real time. Not on an x-ray anyway. Unless you’ve got a microscope implanted into your body.
An x-ray captures what has happened in the past. Just like a telescope can see starlight traveling at us from the past. Not the present. Arthritis on an x-ray may explain pain you had in the past but not necessarily the pain you have now.
Fact #3: Arthritis on an x-ray happens in people who don’t have pain.
Here’s the short version of a long story: give a thousand people an x-ray or an MRI, and many of them will have all kinds of ugly changes in their spine.
But many of them will have no pain. None. And zero knowledge that their spine looks as bad as it does.
Here are just a few more details to help that fact sink in. A recent study was done on arthritis on x-ray and MRI.
This is what they found out…
- In a group of 20 year old persons with zero spine pain, a full 37% will have disc degeneration
- In group of 80 year old persons with zero spine, a full 96% will have disc degeneration
They showed signs of arthritis on an x-ray, but they weren’t in pain!
Now, disc degeneration may not be that bad…So let’s look at another sign that’s supposed to be incredibly painful: a disc protruding near the spine cord.
- In a group of 20 year persons with zero spine pain, a full 29% will have a protruding spinal disc
- In a group of 80 years persons with zero spine pain, a full 43% will have a protruding disc
Again, these are people with serious, serious stuff happening on an x-ray or an MRI. But they have no pain.
So if you are afraid that you are going to be in pain forever because you have arthritis on an x-ray, remember this research. If arthritis on an x-ray caused pain then 96% of the elderly would be in constant pain.
I have worked with plenty of patients who have “arthritis pain” with a lot of damage on their x-rays. Many see great improvements in their pain, sometimes in very short time. And their x-rays? They still have signs of arthritis. In other words, their pain wasn’t permanent because they had arthritis on an x-ray.
Looking for a second opinion on your chronic pain situation in Metro-Detroit, use the contact form or call (248) 598-4002.
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