T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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145.1 | | CSOA1::ZACK | | Wed Jun 03 1992 14:27 | 10 |
| Charlene,
I had a similiar pain in my tail bone during the first four months of
my second pregnancy. If I would move I would get a shooting pain down
my right leg.
The pain went away however. My doctor told me that the baby was laying
on a nerve.
Angie
|
145.2 | | RICKS::BARR | so many notes, so little time | Wed Jun 03 1992 14:30 | 4 |
| What you're experiencing is Sciatica. The baby is pressing against
your sciatic nerve.
Lori B.
|
145.3 | It hurts! | EMDS::CUNNINGHAM | | Wed Jun 03 1992 15:59 | 23 |
|
I can relate to this one...I had major sciatic pain with my pregnancy.
I couldn't lie on my back on a firm surface (dr's visits were the pits
on that exam table!), when I did lie on my back on the couch (only
place), it would take forever to get up, usually had to go to all
fours, then get up.
I don't know what to say about it, my doctor said as others stated,
that it was the baby pressing on the spine/nerves. Said there wasn't
much to do about it.
Take some comfort in knowing though, that it should be gone once you
deliver.....
It is VERY painful! I feel for you.
Although, I figured with all the back pain during my pregnancy, that it
definatly meant I would have back labor during delivery, but it wasn't
the case at all...didn't notice my back at all during the whole 13
hours.
Chris
Good Luck
|
145.4 | Not the same ?? | ICS::CWILSON | Charlene | Thu Jun 04 1992 10:44 | 8 |
| Well, I am not sure if this is the same thing. I have sciatic nerve
pains already that shoot down my leg, but this is actually in my
tailbone and does not shoot up or down anywhere, my back does not
even hurt, just my whole tailbone and butt!
Very strange.
Charlene
|
145.5 | off you go | SUPER::WTHOMAS | | Thu Jun 04 1992 11:01 | 22 |
|
You should by all means discuss this with your physician. Although
there is not very much diagnostically that can be done now there are
steps which can be taken to make your life easier, heat, gentle
stretching exercises, and if it continues and is severe - pain
medication and rest.
If this is your second child, it is quite possible that you may
have injured your spinal tip during the delivery of your first child (I
know of two women who actually cracked their tailbones during delivery)
the growing weight of this baby may be putting just enough pressure on
the area to irritate it. From the sounds of what you are describing, it
sounds more like inflammatory muscle/nerve pain specific to the coccyx
than sciatica (but remember, I'm not a Doctor, I just play one on TV)
the treatments may be different for these two conditions which is why you
*really* should be off to see your physician.
Good luck, I suffer from intermittent spinal pain and I know how it
can literally paralyze you with pain.
Wendy
|
145.6 | Thanks | ICS::CWILSON | Charlene | Thu Jun 04 1992 15:20 | 3 |
| Thanks for the tip.
Charlene
|
145.7 | Swimming? | MIVC::MTAG | | Fri Jun 05 1992 12:04 | 10 |
| My back also hurt me during pregnancy, and I turned to swimming for
the 2nd trimester. I really felt good in the water.. almost
weightless, and the exercise was good. However, the pain I had was
different (shot down my left cheek into my leg) so I can't say that
swimming would work for you (but feeling "weightless" while pregnant
was wonderful!).
Good luck,
Mary
|
145.8 | | A1VAX::DISMUKE | Say you saw it in NOTES... | Mon Jun 08 1992 10:42 | 16 |
| I had both sciatic pain and concern over the tailbone. I broke my
tailbone many years before pregnancy. My OB said there should be no
problems - there weren't. With my second pregnancy, I had such bad
sciatica my toes would go numb or tingle. I was assured it would go
away once the baby was born and it did. However, labor was another
story. I had no difficulty until the doctor told me to push! I gave
one good push and thought I could see stars. He couldn't imagine what
happened. I told him the leg pain was excruciating. I had to have a
nurse press against the leg the whole time I pushed, otherwise I was
concentrating more on the leg than the pushing. Once the baby was out,
the back pain was gone (no drugs during delivery), the leg felt
wonderful, but my toes tingled for two days. That eventually went away
and I haven't had any problem since (5 years).
-sandy
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145.9 | Thank goodness for heating pads | GLDOA::HUGHESDON | | Tue Oct 20 1992 17:15 | 6 |
| I'm at the being of my sixth month and I've been having lower back
pain. I told my doctor and she said to lay on a heating pad, half hour
on, half hour off and so on. This has helped me a lot.
( Heating pad on low heat )
|
145.10 | Chiropracter's helped me. | AKOCOA::BOLAND | | Tue Dec 08 1992 12:13 | 9 |
|
I don't know if your insurance will cover it or if you OB will go along
with it, but my chiropracter (spelling?) was my best friend during my
pregnancy. They have special techniques and tables for pregnant women
and the baby was never in the way. It was a life saver for me.
Just a thought.
Rose Marie
|