Bone Spurs: Osteophytes - Causes, Symptoms and Treatment

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Bone Spurs: Osteophytes - Causes, Symptoms and Treatment https://zenithdfw.com/


Bone Spur: Osteophytes Are you are experiencing pain or weakness in your back? You may wonder it might be due to overexertion or from osteoarthritis. Sometimes osteoarthritis may also lead to the development of bone spurs in shoulder, neck, and back joints. Bone spurs develop as hard growths on the edges of bones and around joints. Some bone spurs may not cause pain but some of them may lead to back and neck pain. Bone spurs are smooth, bony developments, mostly close to joints. Over the period they develop arthritis, joint pain, or joint damage. The feet, hands, knees, and spine regularly foster bone spurs. Following a healthy lifestyle can postpone signs like pain, solidness, and restricted movement. When these bone spurs develop in your spine they are referred to as osteophytes, degenerative joint disease, degenerative disc disease, osteoarthritis, or spinal decay. Bone spurs or osteophytes develop at the point of bones meeting each other, i.e. in your joints. They can also develop on the bones of your spine. Surgery along with medication and physical therapy helps in recovery.


Why Do Bone Spurs Develop? Bone spurs are most common in people 60 years or older, but younger people can get them, too. Osteophytes indicate the age of the problem, not the age of the person. Assuming that the spinal joint moves twisted and becomes stuck, the clock begins ticking. It might require quite a while before the main pointer, a roughened edge on the vertebra, starts to appear. The spine consists of 33 bones to protect the spinal cord. The discs are filled with gel between the bones serve as shock absorbers. The discs also allow us to bend forward and backward and twist our backs in a variety of directions. There are opening behind each disc and under each joint that allows a part of nerve roots to pass the spinal cord known as the foramen. The spinal cord will go to other parts of the body. Bone spurs can be a problem if they develop in the openings for the nerve roots. They make the space narrower and press on the nerve referred to as foramen stenosis.


Symptoms Of Bone Spurs •Knee: Bone spurs in your knee can make it painful to expand and twist your leg. •Spine: The bone spurs on your vertebrae can narrow the space that contains your spinal cord. These bone spurs can pinch the spinal cord or its nerve roots causing cause weakness or numbness in your arms or legs. •Hip: Bone spurs can make it painful to move your hip, even though you could feel the pain in your knee. The bone spurs can decrease the scope of movement in your hip joint. Some of the other symptoms include: •Pressure on nearby nerves. •Restrict movement. •Rub against other bones or tissues. •Crooked or bumpy areas, especially in the fingers or toes. •Numbness and weakness, especially in the legs if the spine has spurs. •Pain near the affected joint, like heel pain.


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