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Structural Neurological

Neurological: Weakness
Numbness
Weakness
Radiculopathy
Sciatica

Weakness occurs when signals do not travel properly from the brain to the muscles or from problems in the muscles themselves.

If weakness cannot be traced to another systemic condition, such as diabetes, it can come from either a nerve or a muscle problem. Paralysis is the extreme manifestation of weakness.

There are many reasons people experience weakness related to back pain, but the most common cause of overall systemic weakness is inactivity.

Dermatomes

Illustration of the areas where sensory and motor nerves cause
loss of sensation or pain (innervation) as a result of nerve root
compression. The offending nerve root can often be identified
by the distribution (dermatomes) of symptoms.

A person's posture, gait, step size, and degree and amount of arm swing when walking all affect dozens of muscles in the middle and lower back. A minor injury that may have no symptoms can cause a person to compensate in different ways when walking, sometimes without even knowing it. Both large and small adjustments to these everyday activities can have a domino effect sometimes leading to back pain.

As in dermatitis that affects the skin, and neuropathy that affects the nerves, myopathy is a systemic condition that attacks the muscle tissue, most of the time, all over the body.

There are various types of myopathy, including that caused by diabetes and other endocrine abnormalities from infections and from autoimmune diseases and then there are toxic and hereditary causes.

Most myopathies show up in the muscles close to the trunk first, in the pectoral muscles in the upper extremities, and in the muscles in the thigh.

Patients with myopathy will detect a weakness walking up stairs, their knees may involuntarily buckle and they may find it harder to do routine tasks, such as opening jars.

Osteoarthritis and osteoporosis, two types of diseases that come with age and cause joint derangement, sometimes followed by vertebral fractures, can cause nerve damage in response to these conditions, therefore, weakening muscles.

Common neurological causes of weakness include the following:

  • Stroke
  • Spinal Cord Injury
  • Injury or Damage to Peripheral Nerves - Often the result of trauma, surgery or pressure produced by posture or position
  • Myopathy - One or more nerves damaged systemic problems reducing reflexes
  • Osteoporosis/Osteoarthritis - Weakness is sometimes a secondary symptom resulting in complications of these conditions



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