Anatomy of Your Back

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1.Cervical spine: The vertebrae in your neck are labeled C1-C7, meaning that you have seven vertebrae in that region.
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2.Thoracic spine: Most adults have 12 vertebrae in the thoracic spine (T1-T12), which goes from your shoulders to your waist.
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3.Lumbar spine: There are five vertebrae in your low back (L1-L5).
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4.Sacrum: Your sacrum is made up of five vertebrae between the hipbones that are fused into one bone
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5.Coccyx:. The coccyx is small fused bones at the very tail of your spine
Between each of your vertebrae, you have intervertebral discs.


Your spine also has facet joints (also called apophyseal joints), which are on the posterior side (back) of your vertebrae. These joints (like all joints in your body) help facilitate movement and are very important to your flexibility.

The joint is surrounded by the joint capsule, which is lined with synovial membrane, and bathed in synovial fluid. The joint capsule and synovial membrane contain a lot of blood vessels and nerves. Movement of the synovial membrane promotes the production of synovial fluid. Cartilage gets most of its nutrition from the synovial fluid and therefore movement of the joints is essential to the health of the cartilage.
The joint is surrounded by ligaments. Ligaments are the strong, flexible bands of fibrous tissue that link bones together. They contain a lot of nerve endings and so that your body knows what each joint is doing all the time. This is called proprioception.

Muscles are strands of tissues that power your movement and tendons connect muscles to bones. They also contain lots of nerve endings to tell your body how stretched or contracted or tired each muscle is at any time. When we ignore warning signs from these nerve receptors, we risk injury.
Blood vessels provide nourishment to all these structures. The arteries and arterioles (mini arteries) carry oxygen attached to your red blood cells, glucose and salt-rich fluids to provide nutrition, white blood cells and platelets to repair damage. The venules (mini veins) and veins carry away waste products included drained red blood cells, rubbish-laden white blood cells and fluids containing metabolic waste products including lactic acids.
When muscles are tight or tissues are inflamed through injury or disease, the blood vessels can also be damaged or impeded. This reduces their effectiveness to provide nutrition and drainage of waste products form the area and can further exacerbate the problem.
These parts all work together to help you move.




