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What is Neuritis?
What Causes Neuritis?
Factors Affecting Severity
Treatment for Neuritis
Symptomatic Relief
Prevention of Neuritis
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What Causes Neuritis? When someone does a
physical activity to excess they strain the muscle that was overused. This can
happen to a well-trained athlete who is striving to excel or a retired person
who overdoes it working in their garden. This scenario is often seen in the
"weekend warrior" athlete who sits at a desk all week and then plays softball
or tennis all day on the weekend. The resultant muscle strain (mild tear)
creates inflammation and pain. This strain usually occurs near the end of the
muscle where it attaches to a bone or blends into its tendon. This creates a
condition known as acute tendinitis. This condition could also be created if
the muscle is strained from trauma such as a fall. Keep reading, this really is
about neuritis.
The usual treatment for acute tendinitis
is to rest the area, apply ice periodically for the first 24 hours and then to
use moist heat. Rest prevents further muscle injury, the ice reduces the
initial inflammation and swelling and the moist heat circulates blood through
the area to speed the healing process. Now, if you added gentle massage and
stretching to this treatment plan the muscle would probably heal totally back
to normal.
However, this is not what the average
person usually does. They may ice once or twice and rest a bit, but most often
just take an over-the-counter pain medication and continue on with their normal
activities. If the strain was minor, their body may be able to heal the muscle
fibers normally. Unfortunately, this is not the usual result because the
injured muscle is being used instead of rested. Because of the stress on the
muscle, their body heals the injured muscle fibers by binding them together
with fibrotic adhesions or scar tissue. This is done in an attempt to prevent
further damage to the injured area. It is a normal protective response of their
body.
This scar tissue formation results in the
injured muscle becoming shorter and tighter than normal. The increased tension
and stress on the muscle makes it more susceptible to strain during future
physical work, recreational activities or even activities of daily living. If
the muscle is over-stressed or re-injured further, eventually enough scar
tissue will form to shorten the muscle to the degree that it can pull the bone
it is attached to out of normal alignment. The result is a joint misalignment
which causes a chronic condition to develop. If a tendon receives most of the
stress from the joint misalignment then chronic tendinitis develops. If the
bursae around the joint receives excess pressure and stress because of the
misalignment then a chronic bursitis develops. If the cartilage of a joint is
receiving abnormally high pressure on it because of the joint misalignment then
a chronic arthritis condition will develop. Now, last but not least, if a nerve
is stretched or has excess pressure on it from abnormal swelling caused by the
joint misalignment then a chronic neuritis condition will develop. This happens
most often when the spinal vertebrae are pulled out of their normal alignment
(subluxated).
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