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Back Pain in Children

Back pain in children is not like back pain in adults. Compared to an adult, a child with a backache is more likely to have a serious underlying disorder. This is especially true if the child is 4 years old or younger, or if a child of any age has back pain accompanied by:

  • Fever or weight loss
  • Weakness or numbness
  • Trouble walking
  • Pain that radiates down one or both legs
  • Bowel or bladder problems
  • Pain that keeps the child from sleeping

More serious causes of back pain need early identification and treatment or they may become worse. Always see a doctor if your young child's back pain lasts for more than several days or progressively worsens.

Back Pain in Children

Doctor Examination

Your doctor will begin by learning about how the problem developed, and then will conduct a physical examination of your child.

Medical History

Your doctor will ask general questions about your child's overall health and more specific questions about the pain. The questions and physical examination will allow your doctor to determine which of several conditions is responsible for your child's back pain.

Your doctor will want to know when the pain began, if it was associated with injury or demanding activity, and whether it has improved or worsened. He or she will ask whether there is anything that makes it worse, and what your child does to make it less painful. It will be important for your doctor to know exactly where the pain is felt, how severe it is, and how much it interferes with the child's schooling and activities. If the pain shoots into a leg it could mean that there is pressure on a nerve.

Physical Examination

During the physical examination, your doctor carefully examines your child's muscles, bones, and nerves. Your doctor will be checking the following:

  • The spine. Your doctor feels each vertebra and looks for deformities in the alignment and mobility of the spine. Increased roundness of the back (when viewed from the side) or a curve to the side (when viewed from the back) could be important. Your doctor will check posture and walking gait, the ability to bend over to touch the toes, and bending to the right and left. Difficulty with movement may indicate that there is a problem with the joints of the spine.
  • Nerves in the back. Problems with the intervertebral disks can cause pressure on the nerves that exit the spine, so your doctor will perform specific tests for that. With your child lying face up, your doctor will raise the legs (straight leg raising test) and may also raise the legs with your child lying face down (reverse straight leg raising test). Testing reflexes and feeling in the legs will be done for the same reason.
  • The muscles in the back and legs are tested. Tightness of the back muscles or the hamstring muscles at the back of the thigh will show that your child is trying to protect himself or herself from movements and positions that might be painful. Tenderness of the muscles will indicate a muscle injury, such as a strain.
  • Balance, flexibility, coordination, and muscle strength. Other tests may be done to be sure the back pain is not part of a bigger picture.

Imaging Tests

The doctor may use one or several diagnostic imaging tools to see inside the body.

X-rays. X-rays of the spine will show the bones and may show fractures, displacements, or other problems within the bones.

Bone scans. This test involves injecting a substance into a vein and then using a special camera to see where it is picked up. It can pinpoint inflammation, infections, tumours, and fractures. Since the anatomy of the spine is very complicated and since these disease processes are not always visible on x-ray, the bone scan can be very useful.

Computed tomography (CT) scans. This is a special computerized x-ray technique that provides a three-dimensional image and allows your doctor to see things that are not visible on two-dimensional x-rays. It is particularly useful in the spine to understand the complex anatomy.

Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). This technique is very valuable because it shows tissues other than bone. It can be used to see the spinal cord, nerve roots, disks, or other soft tissues than can be very important in back pain.

Positron emission tomography (PET). This test can be a useful adjunct by providing a three-dimensional image of functional processes in the body.

Laboratory Tests

Blood tests, including the complete blood-cell count (CBC), erythrocyte sedimentation rate (ESR), and C-reactive protein (CRP), can be affected by the presence of inflammation or infection.

Common Back Pain Conditions in Children

Muscle Strain and Imbalances

Musculoskeletal strain is most often responsible for back pain in children and adolescents. This type of pain frequently responds to rest, anti-inflammatory medications, and an exercise program.

Many teenagers may have more persistent back pain. This is often related to tight hamstring muscles and weak abdominal muscles. These children seem to improve with a physical therapy program that stresses hamstring stretching and abdominal strengthening.

Rounded Back

In adolescents, increased roundness of the back (when viewed from the side) — also called Scheuermann's kyphosis — is a common cause of pain in the middle of the back (the thoracic spine). Vertebrae become wedged, causing a rounded, or hunched, back. The curved part of the back may ache and pain may get worse with activity.

Rounded Back

An adolescent male presents with excessive roundback localized to the thoracic spine. The severe kyphosis is most obvious when he bends forward. (Courtesy of Texas Scottish Rite Hospital for Children)

Stress Fracture of the Spine

Spondylolysis, or stress fracture, may cause lower back pain in adolescents. Stress fractures may occur during adolescent growth spurts or in sports that repeatedly twist and hyperextend the spine, like gymnastics, diving, and football.

Pain is usually mild and may radiate to the buttocks and legs. The pain feels worse with activity and better with rest. A child with spondylolysis may walk with a stiff legged gait and only be able to take short steps.

To learn more about spinal stress fractures: Spondylolysis and Spondylolisthesis

Slipped Vertebra

Slipped Vertebra

In this drawing of spondylolisthesis, a lower back vertebra has shifted forward.

A slipped vertebra, or spondylolisthesis, occurs when one vertebra shifts forward on the next vertebra directly below. This may sometimes represent progression of a spondylolysis. It usually occurs at the base of the spine (lumbosacral junction). In severe cases, the bone narrows the spinal canal, which presses on the nerves.

Infection

In young children, infection in a disk space (diskitis) can lead to back pain. Diskitis typically affects children between the ages of 1 and 5 years, although older children and teenagers can also be affected.

A child with diskitis may have the following symptoms.

  • Pain in the lower back or abdomen and stiffness of the spine
  • Walking with a limp, or simply refusing to walk
  • Squatting with a straight spine when reaching for something on the floor, rather than bending from the waist

Tumour

On rare occasion, tumours, such as osteoid osteoma, can be responsible for back pain. When they occur, tumours of the spine are most often found in the middle or lower back. Pain is constant and usually becomes worse over time. This pain is progressive; it is unrelated to activity and/or happens at night.

  • Oregon Health & Science University
  • The Royal Orthopaedic Hospital Birmingham
  • The Sunshine Coast Private Hospital
  • The Royal Australasian College of Surgeons
  • UnitingCare Health
  • Australian Medical Association
  • Australian Orthopaedic Association
  • Society for Minimally Invasive Spine Surgery
  • Shriners Hospitals for Children in St. Louis
  • Royal Orthopaedic Hospital
  • The Spine Society of Australia (SSA)