abdominal pressure thoracic compression

Posted by gently @gently, Dec 13, 2023

Has anyone experienced abdominal pressure with low thoracic and lumbar compression fractures. In this case there is painful forward pressure at the level of the diaphragm. Even though, she is hungry my friend can eat very little. Her doctors say they are scratching their heads to figure out what is causing the pain. Has anyone had or heard of using emg to determine nerves involved, or might there be diaphragmatic involvement. All experience and any outside speculation or advice will be useful Thanks

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I get this once in awhile. I have 7 spinal fractures, half low thoracic and half lumbar. If I lift or reach, my diaphragm goes up and I feel pressure, and it is hard to eat. This situation also can trigger atrial fibrillation for me. I really sympathize. I use Gas-X (simethicone), and sometimes a hot shower can relax things down. I have taken Klonopin, rarely, to try to relax things as well. I eat small amounts at a time. If your friend always feels this pressure, it might be good to see if there is a hiatal hernia, something I need to check on as well. A GI doc would do the testing.

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I have several
Compression fractures in my lower thorasic and lumbar vertebrae. Since the most recent ones, I have a pooch in my belly and a concave indention below my ribs. As the fractures are healing, I am finding lite extension exercises helpful. With the compression, it seems my back has collapsed some, and it is affecting my digestive organs. Gentle swimming, very gentle stretches, inversion board set at a minimal angle are some of the things I am using to create space and lengthening in my spine. Very gentle core strengthening is good too, but only when the bone fractures were not acute. My PT pushed too hard. I had to find my own comfort zone.

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@windyshores

I get this once in awhile. I have 7 spinal fractures, half low thoracic and half lumbar. If I lift or reach, my diaphragm goes up and I feel pressure, and it is hard to eat. This situation also can trigger atrial fibrillation for me. I really sympathize. I use Gas-X (simethicone), and sometimes a hot shower can relax things down. I have taken Klonopin, rarely, to try to relax things as well. I eat small amounts at a time. If your friend always feels this pressure, it might be good to see if there is a hiatal hernia, something I need to check on as well. A GI doc would do the testing.

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Windyshores, once again I really appreciate your help.

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@lalalee

I have several
Compression fractures in my lower thorasic and lumbar vertebrae. Since the most recent ones, I have a pooch in my belly and a concave indention below my ribs. As the fractures are healing, I am finding lite extension exercises helpful. With the compression, it seems my back has collapsed some, and it is affecting my digestive organs. Gentle swimming, very gentle stretches, inversion board set at a minimal angle are some of the things I am using to create space and lengthening in my spine. Very gentle core strengthening is good too, but only when the bone fractures were not acute. My PT pushed too hard. I had to find my own comfort zone.

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lalalee, do you have pain around the lower edge of your ribs and do you feel pressure. Is there a forward pressure. How do you sense the back collapse. Thank you for your help. Your excercises and the idea of lengthing the spine to create space are very helpful. Interesting
and important about your physical therapist.
Bless you,

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@lalalee

I have several
Compression fractures in my lower thorasic and lumbar vertebrae. Since the most recent ones, I have a pooch in my belly and a concave indention below my ribs. As the fractures are healing, I am finding lite extension exercises helpful. With the compression, it seems my back has collapsed some, and it is affecting my digestive organs. Gentle swimming, very gentle stretches, inversion board set at a minimal angle are some of the things I am using to create space and lengthening in my spine. Very gentle core strengthening is good too, but only when the bone fractures were not acute. My PT pushed too hard. I had to find my own comfort zone.

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So helpful, thank you!

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pinetreestate,
do you have a similar experience. My friend talks about unbearable pain and this is after kyphoplasties.

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@gently

lalalee, do you have pain around the lower edge of your ribs and do you feel pressure. Is there a forward pressure. How do you sense the back collapse. Thank you for your help. Your excercises and the idea of lengthing the spine to create space are very helpful. Interesting
and important about your physical therapist.
Bless you,

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The pain I feel is lower. When my spine is misaligned, I feel it in my belly and my back. I think my posture has a lot to do with misalignment. Being hunched over computer and TV postures compound my pain, pinches nerves, inhibits organ function. So my approach is to counteract that hunch: lengthen, strengthen, hydrate. Stretch backward. Counteract gravity and hunching. Water walking is great too because it lifts your body while you exercise, so it creates space between vertebrae while muscles develop. Walking in the lazy river at our local rec center alleviates a lot of pain.

I have lost an inch of height to these fractures. So everything inside has got to be crowding. My mantra is “strong and long”,

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Thank you, again, lalalee,
Its the belly pain that confounded me. "Lengthen, strengthen, hydrate long and strong." Water walking in the lazy river sounds idyllic.

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@gently

Thank you, again, lalalee,
Its the belly pain that confounded me. "Lengthen, strengthen, hydrate long and strong." Water walking in the lazy river sounds idyllic.

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Posture is so important. If I’m hunched over, or leaning on a cane or walker, my spine os not carrying it’s own weight, and weight bearing is how bones get and stay strong.

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