Why Does My Back Pain Keep Coming Back? Causes, Diagnosis & Long-Term Solutions in Singapore

Why Does Your Back Pain Keep Returning?

Many people experience this frustrating cycle:

  • Pain improves… then comes back
  • Temporary relief from treatment… but not lasting
  • Good days and bad days without a clear reason

👉 If this sounds familiar, you’re not alone.

Recurring back pain is very common, and often reflects underlying capacity and load issues—not a single “injury” that never healed.


The Real Reason Back Pain Keeps Coming Back

Most recurring back pain is due to:

🔁 1. Load–Capacity Mismatch

  • Your daily activities or exercise exceed your body’s current capacity
  • Pain returns when load increases

🧱 2. Incomplete Rehabilitation

  • Symptoms improve, but strength and endurance are not fully restored
  • The system remains vulnerable

🧠 3. Pain Sensitisation

  • The nervous system becomes more sensitive over time
  • Pain can recur with relatively minor triggers

⚖️ 4. Lifestyle Factors

  • Prolonged sitting
  • Irregular activity levels
  • Stress, poor sleep, or inconsistent routines

👉 Recurrence usually reflects:
capacity + load + sensitivity—not structural damage alone


🧠 Pain Science Cornerstone (Biopsychosocial Model)

Persistent or recurring pain is influenced by:

  • Biological: tissues, joints, muscle endurance
  • Psychological: fear of movement, attention to pain
  • Lifestyle: activity patterns, sleep, stress

Key takeaways:

  • Pain ≠ damage
  • Flare-ups are common and expected, not failure
  • Recovery requires improving resilience, not just removing pain

1. Diagnosis First: What’s Driving the Recurrence?

At The Pain Relief Clinic:

  • A structured clinical assessment is performed
  • Recurrence patterns and triggers are identified
  • Movement, strength, and endurance are evaluated

Imaging (X-ray or MRI) may be arranged within 1 working day when appropriate if:

  • Symptoms persist or worsen
  • There are nerve-related symptoms
  • Diagnosis is unclear

👉 This helps determine:

  • Structural contributors (disc, facet, etc.)
  • Functional contributors (movement, endurance)
  • Sensitivity factors

2. Progressive Loading & Rehabilitation (Core Foundation)

The most important solution is:

Long-Term Progressive Loading (Not Just Short-Term Relief)

The goal is to:
👉 Build a back that can handle real-life demands consistently

Why This Matters

  • Short-term fixes → temporary relief
  • Avoidance → reduced capacity
  • Structured progression → long-term resilience

Active Rehabilitation May Include:

  • Core strengthening
  • Back extensor endurance training
  • Movement retraining
  • Load management strategies
  • Return-to-activity progression

👉 The aim is to increase your baseline capacity, not just remove pain temporarily.

Rehabilitation continues beyond symptom relief to prevent recurrence.


3. Understanding Flare-Ups

Flare-ups are:

  • A temporary increase in symptoms
  • Often triggered by increased load or stress

They are NOT:

  • Permanent damage
  • A failure of treatment

👉 Learning to manage flare-ups is a key part of recovery.


4. Medication: Supporting Flare-Up Management

Medication may help:

  • Reduce pain during flare-ups
  • Allow continued movement

First-Line Options

  • Paracetamol
  • NSAIDs

Second-Line Options

  • COX-2 inhibitors
  • Short-term oral opioids (used cautiously)

👉 Used to support recovery, not as a long-term solution.


5. Injection Options (When Needed)

If symptoms persist or significantly limit progress:

  • Facet joint injections
  • Epidural steroid injections (if nerve-related)
  • Medial branch blocks / pulsed radiofrequency procedures

👉 These are used to:

  • Reduce pain
  • Enable rehabilitation
  • Break the flare-up cycle

6. Integrated, Team-Based Care

At The Pain Relief Clinic:

  • Care is led by Dr. Terence Tan, a licensed medical doctor (SMC) with over 20 years of experience
  • Working closely with MOH AHPC-licensed physiotherapists

Care includes:

  • Diagnosis
  • Progressive rehabilitation
  • Pain science education
  • Load and lifestyle management
  • Long-term prevention strategies

The focus is not just recovery—but preventing recurrence.


7. When Should You Seek Further Assessment?

You should consider evaluation if:

  • Pain keeps recurring
  • Episodes are becoming more frequent or severe
  • Pain limits daily activities
  • There are nerve symptoms
  • You are unsure how to manage flare-ups

Final Takeaway

Recurring back pain is common—but not inevitable.

A structured approach includes:

  1. Accurate diagnosis
  2. Pain science understanding (biopsychosocial model)
  3. Progressive loading rehabilitation
  4. Building long-term capacity and resilience
  5. Managing flare-ups effectively
  6. Integrated care with doctor + physiotherapist

👉 Modern MSK care focuses on creating a strong, adaptable, resilient back—not just temporary pain relief.


FAQ

Q1: Why does my back pain keep coming back?
Often due to load exceeding your current capacity and incomplete rehabilitation.

Q2: Does this mean my spine is damaged?
Not necessarily—many cases are related to capacity and sensitivity.

Q3: Can this be fixed permanently?
Long-term improvement is possible with the right approach.

Q4: Can physiotherapy prevent recurrence?
Yes, especially when focused on strength, endurance, and load management.