Get it before it goes chronic, or look at this if you didn't
Chronic pain guy at Stanford - says intensive PT and psychotherapy
https://www.ted.com/talks/elliot_kra...f_chronic_pain
I attended Stanford back pain clinic a few years ago. Main takeaway, from head of the department (Mackey) - we don't know that much about how to treat.
I'm still stuck in hell myself, but believe the path out is PT, posture, and learning to address the small muscles that have become weak. I'd advise against resting too much to try to get better. You need a PT who's a real stickler for form - making the big muscles strong most likely is not enough may even be harmful. They must be hands on, feeling and checking that you're using the correct muscles. I find it's very difficult to get the inner core to engage/do the work, and my specific weaknesses I'm totally blind to without help. Even with help it's tough get the inhibited muscles to do anything, the default patterns using dominant muscles are just that - dominant.
Medicine is lost here b/c there's dozens of bones in the area, with many more tendons, ligaments, muscles, nerves, etc. That, and the extremities can be important too (e.g. how you use your foot) - now you're looking at most of the bones and muscles any one or several can be 'misbehaving.' Also the human is very good at compensating for weakness, meaning that for any objective condition (including severe deformities) there will be individuals all along the scale from no pain and full function* to screaming pain and disabled.
* most doctor think full function means able to eat, watch tv, and walk. vs A dentist's definition might also involve lots of skiing in quite nasty conditions.
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