Try to recreate your exact upper back pain by slowly twisting left and right and gently arching back. If a movement reproduces your familiar pain, that is reassuring. If nothing touches it, or it is constant and wakes you at night, see a doctor instead of self-treating.
Your upper back is a wall standing directly in front of your heart, lungs and main blood vessels. Pain there can come from the spine, or one of those organs can send a signal through the wall. A good assessment works like an electrician who checks whether the fault is in the wiring before opening the wall.
A good thoracic assessment is graded. The strongest, most defensible parts are not special tests at all. They are the safety screen and the act of reproducing your familiar pain.
A structured history and exam that screens for fracture, cancer, organ-referred pain, inflammatory arthritis, and spinal cord signs, followed by using movement and loading to reproduce your familiar pain and confirm it is mechanical.
Deformity screening with the forward bend test and a Scoliometer, the cervicothoracic differentiation test for deciding whether the neck or upper back is the source, and screening for inflammatory arthritis from the history rather than from a stiffness exam.
Instrumented motion measurement (inclinometer or motion sensor) and remote or telehealth assessment. Good for tracking and access, not for diagnosis.
When the assessment points to ordinary mechanical upper back pain, the plan is movement, not rest. These are the core exercises.
For ordinary mechanical upper back pain you keep training and pull back only the few movements that sharply provoke it. Use these as the checkpoints for returning to full load.
Upper back pain is usually harmless. These patterns are the exceptions. If one fits you, get checked before treating it as a muscle or joint problem.
Where to go: A&E for chest pain, breathlessness, a tearing pain, or new leg or bladder problems. Your GP for cancer or fracture concerns. A doctor can refer on to rheumatology for suspected inflammatory arthritis.
Try to recreate your exact upper back pain: slowly twist your trunk left and right, then gently arch backward.
If a movement reproduces your familiar pain, that is reassuring. It behaves like a mechanical problem, and movement is usually the fix. If nothing you do touches the pain, or it is constant and wakes you at night, see a doctor instead of self-treating it.
Takes less than 2 minutes. No equipment needed.MODERATE
The screen-led approach is well founded, but it rests on a thin, borrowed evidence base. There is no validated cluster of thoracic special tests with published accuracy for mechanical pain, so the assessment is honest about being a reasoning process, not a test protocol.
A large study of everyday upper back pain patients, examined by blinded clinicians against a solid reference standard, that identified a thoracic test cluster strong enough to rule pathology in or out, would shift the assessment from purely screen-led toward partly test-led.
High-quality long-term studies showing that a specific posture reliably predicts who develops thoracic pain, and that changing it changes the pain, would reopen the posture question. Current evidence does not show this.
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