Q: Since I have had my last baby I have experienced a burning feeling down through my sacro-iliac joint. Occasionally I feel an ache deep in my bum. And I would appreciate some advice from you. I had this baby, just like my first, by Caesarean section?
Answer: This type of pain is often known as the ‘lumbo-pelvic conundrum'. This is because pain which appears to be coming from the sacro-iliac joint at the back of the pelvis can arise from the joint itself, the joints of the low lumbar vertebra, nerve roots emerging from these vertebra, and from muscles and the tendinous tissue through which they attach into the back of the pelvis.
Then we have the sciatic nerve, which is the largest nerve in the leg and which passes down the back of the thigh, emerges through the back of the pelvis under some muscles which often become tight in runners.
A complication can be the after-effects of pregnancy and childbirth.
In the last three months of pregnancy, the baby grows substantially, filling the relatively small space in the abdomen between the bladder at the front and the spinal column at the back. This can lead to excessive pressure on the structures at the front and sides of the low lumbar spine, leading to persistent problems with discomfort and pain after delivery.
During the latter stages of pregnancy and particularly delivery, the sacro-iliac joints and ligaments are stretched, and it is thought that this can lead to a misfit at the joints after the birth. However, in the case of your Caesarean section, this final stretch is avoided.
From the symptoms that you describe, it seems likely that tension in the sciatic nerve has a role in producing your pain.
A Registered Physical Therapist such as a chartered physiotherapist, osteopath, chiropractic doctor should be able to assess the mobility of the sciatic nerve. It is quite common for impingement of the nerve to occur in the buttock area under a little muscle called the piriformis. Which rotates the hip outwards and can become tight during pregnancy.
Tension in the nerve can be corrected through simple exercise and some manipulation. My advice would be to visit a Registered Physical Therapist who has specialist manipulative training, who will be able to help you with this type of problem.
Originally published on SearchWarp.com for Terry O'Brien Thursday, April 09, 2009
Article Source: Post Partum Pain- Back Pain after Child Birth!
No comments:
Post a Comment