Thank you for your questions. Since you have many different issues going on, I would certainly follow up with your doctor on these questions but let's see if we can assist you.
Your back pain certainly can be assosicted with scoliosis but pain in your back could mean so many other things. For a personal example, I needed ankle surgery last year as I complained about lower back pain but it actually started with my ankle, moved to my knee, then hip then lower back but it was all attributed to my ankle. Your back or spine in your lifeline and any mild issue can attribute to back pain. My suggestion would certainly follow up with your doctor to find the cause.
Now let's move on to stress. Stress can cause your body to react in ways that we cannot diagnose. For example, you can have ankle pain, headaches, and just about anything you can imagine that is caused by stress. Each one of us are different and will have different explanations about stress. So a test may not detect a disease due to the fact that your body is actually reacting to your stress levels rather than having an actual diagnosis. If you are having stress issues, you may need to see a doctor to learn better ways of handling your stressful issues rather than tracking down a test which may not come up positive for an underlying disease. Does this help answer your question? Stress can be so overbearing and simply life altering that controlling the stress levels may be the essential stop to your body shutting down (or the feeling of it).
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Hi Melissa,
Thank you for your questions. Since you have many different issues going on, I would certainly follow up with your doctor on these questions but let's see if we can assist you.
Your back pain certainly can be assosicted with scoliosis but pain in your back could mean so many other things. For a personal example, I needed ankle surgery last year as I complained about lower back pain but it actually started with my ankle, moved to my knee, then hip then lower back but it was all attributed to my ankle. Your back or spine in your lifeline and any mild issue can attribute to back pain. My suggestion would certainly follow up with your doctor to find the cause.
Now let's move on to stress. Stress can cause your body to react in ways that we cannot diagnose. For example, you can have ankle pain, headaches, and just about anything you can imagine that is caused by stress. Each one of us are different and will have different explanations about stress. So a test may not detect a disease due to the fact that your body is actually reacting to your stress levels rather than having an actual diagnosis. If you are having stress issues, you may need to see a doctor to learn better ways of handling your stressful issues rather than tracking down a test which may not come up positive for an underlying disease. Does this help answer your question? Stress can be so overbearing and simply life altering that controlling the stress levels may be the essential stop to your body shutting down (or the feeling of it).
Keep us posted.
Missie
May 12, 2012 - 8:48amThis Comment
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