![]() You think your child needs to be seen, but the problem is not urgent.Walks different than normal for more than 3 days.Pain or burning when passing urine, but no fever.You think your child needs to be seen, and the problem is urgent.Pain or burning when passing urine and fever.Tingling or numbness (loss of feeling) in the legs or feet.Pain shoots into the buttock or back of the thigh.You think your child has a life-threatening emergency.Caution: do not move your child until a spine board is put on. Pain starts after major injury (such as a car crash or football).It keeps your child from doing all normal activities. Moderate: The pain keeps your child from doing some normal activities.But, the pain does not keep your child from any normal activities. Mild: Your child feels pain and tells you about it.The muscles near the spine are tender to the touch.The pain is in the middle or lower back.Strained back muscles cause most of these symptoms:.Sciatica is rare in children but common in adults. A ruptured disk causes the pressure on the nerve. Leg weakness, numbness or tingling can also occur. The most intense pain can be in the lower leg and foot. The pain shoots into the back of the leg on that side. Sciatica gives a burning pain in one buttock. Sciatica is pain caused by a pinched nerve in the lower back. Pain is on one side of the mid-back and shoots into the lower belly. Other symptoms are fever and pain when passing urine. Pain is on one side in the middle of the back. Children who have not gone into puberty are at greater risk. They also can cause shoulder and neck pains. In school-age children, heavy backpacks have become a common cause. ![]() New exercises or changes in an exercise routine can cause back pain. Digging in the garden for too long causes overuse of back muscles. Bending too far backward or sideways can cause back pain. Carrying something too heavy or lifting from an awkward position can cause back pain. There are 200 muscles in the back that allow us to stand upright. The pain is mostly in the lower back and near the center. ![]() New backaches in teens are mostly from strained back muscles (muscle overuse). ![]() Minor muscle strain from overuse and back injury are included.Pain or discomfort in the upper, mid or lower back. ![]()
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