Elevated Spine Injury Group
Elevated Spine Injury Group
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  • About
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  • More
    • Home
    • Conditions
      • Annular Tear
      • Herniated Disc
      • Spinal Foraminal Stenosis
      • Spinal Facet Disease
      • Pinched Nerve
      • Degenerative Disc Disease
      • Failed Back Syndrome
      • Spinal Stenosis
      • SI Joint Dysfunction
      • Spondylolisthesis
      • Sciatica
      • Compression Fracture
    • Procedures
      • Kyphoplasty
      • MIS Laminotomy
      • MIS Foraminotomy
      • MIS Microdiscectomy
      • Cervical Disc Replacement
      • ACDF
      • TLIF
      • Thermal Nerve Ablation
    • About
    • Blog
    • Contact
  • Home
  • Conditions
    • Annular Tear
    • Herniated Disc
    • Spinal Foraminal Stenosis
    • Spinal Facet Disease
    • Pinched Nerve
    • Degenerative Disc Disease
    • Failed Back Syndrome
    • Spinal Stenosis
    • SI Joint Dysfunction
    • Spondylolisthesis
    • Sciatica
    • Compression Fracture
  • Procedures
    • Kyphoplasty
    • MIS Laminotomy
    • MIS Foraminotomy
    • MIS Microdiscectomy
    • Cervical Disc Replacement
    • ACDF
    • TLIF
    • Thermal Nerve Ablation
  • About
  • Blog
  • Contact

Annular Tear

An annular tear is basically a tiny rip in the strong outer wall of one of your spinal discs. Think of the disc like a jelly donut: the tough outer shell (annulus fibrosus) holds in the softer jelly center (nucleus pulposus).


When that outer wall gets a small tear, often from lifting something heavy, twisting wrong, or just from normal aging and wear, it can hurt. Sometimes the “jelly” inside presses out through the tear, and that can irritate nearby nerves, which is when the pain can get sharper, maybe even shooting down a leg.


It often happens in the lower back (lumbar spine), which makes sense since that area carries most of your body’s weight and does a lot of bending and twisting.


Doctors usually spot it on an MRI, and treatment often starts simple:

·  Rest and gentle movement (avoid overdoing it, but don’t stay completely still too long)

·  Anti-inflammatory meds to calm swelling

·  Physical therapy to strengthen your core and take pressure off the disc

·  If it doesn’t improve, there are advanced options like injections or sometimes minimally invasive surgery


So, in plain terms: an annular tear is like a little crack in the “shock absorber” between your back bones. It doesn’t always mean surgery, but it does mean your back is asking for some extra care and attention.

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