What does a broken bone in your back feel like?
What are the symptoms? Severe pain at the site of the fracture is the main symptom of a broken back injury. If back pain is made worse when you move, that’s also a sign that a vertebra may have been broken. If, however, the broken bone compresses the spinal cord’s other nerves, there may be numbness as well as pain.
How long does it take for a broken back bone to heal?
A spinal fracture takes between six and 12 weeks to heal. During the healing process, spinal bones don’t return to their normal shape. They heal in their new compressed shape. This can lead to height loss and curvature of the spine.
Is a fracture in your back serious?
Spinal fractures can vary widely in severity. Some fractures are very serious injuries that result from high-energy trauma and require emergency treatment. Other fractures can be the result of a lower-impact event, such as a minor fall, in an older person whose bones are weakened by osteoporosis.
Can you still walk with a broken back?
Depending on how severe your injury is, you may experience pain, difficulty walking, or be unable to move your arms or legs (paralysis). Many fractures heal with conservative treatment; however severe fractures may require surgery to realign the bones.
How do you sleep with a broken back?
Invest in a specialized pillow, like a body pillow, for elevation—keeping the broken bone above your heart prevents blood from pooling and causing swelling. Try sleeping on your back first while propped up on a few pillows. If that doesn’t work, slowly adjust yourself to a side position if possible.
What does it mean to have your back broke?
If someone has a broken back, it means that one or more of the bones that make up the spine has broken. Doctors may also refer to a broken back as a spinal fracture. A broken back can happen for several reasons, such as an automobile accident or a weakening of the backbone.
Does breaking your back paralyze you?
A broken back involving the spinal cord can paralyze you for life, cutting off communication between the brain and the body below the level of injury. This can limit or stop the body’s ability to transmit sensory information and motor function information from the brain past the point of the injury.
Does you back hurt with Covid?
“People who have COVID-19 may experience muscle pain and body aches due to the body’s inflammatory response, which can be felt in the upper and lower back,” says Sagar Parikh, M.D., an interventional pain medicine specialist and Director of the Center for Sports and Spine Medicine at JFK Johnson.