How Scar Tissue Forms
When the body is injured, scar tissue can form as part of the multi-stage wound-healing process. Scar tissue and other substances help mend injured tissue.
Adhesions are analogous to a scar that forms when you scrape your skin, except that it is found internally in the body.
Internal adhesions aren’t usually visible through the skin and they often are too deep for you to feel. They can cause pain due to inflammation and pressure on nearby structures.
Scar Tissue Following Back Surgery
Scar tissue formation is a normal part of the healing process after back surgery.
People who have had multiple back surgeries tend to have more adhesions. Every time there are incisions, the structures around the spine will heal, and this increases the likelihood of adhesion formation.
Minimally invasive spine surgery is a technique in which a very small incision is made through the skin. Adhesions can form with minimally invasive procedures or with more extensive back surgery.
Treatment
If you have pain due to adhesions, you can get relief with a number of different approaches.
Most of the time, working with a doctor and/or physical therapist to manage the pain with exercises and mild pain medications will help.
Seeing a sports massage therapist who does a technique called cross-fiber friction technique can be helpful, too. Cross-fiber friction massage helps align the collagen fibers in the correct way so that the tissue heals with proper alignment. It also brings more blood to the area for healing.
But a cross-friction fiber massage is not your typical massage. It’s more like work than relaxation. Among other techniques, in a cross-fiber friction massage, the therapist uses a few fingers transversely across the scar tissue. The action is a bit like sawing.
When it’s done properly, this method can help speed healing in the short run and give you back full use of your affected joints in the long term.
Sometimes, however, symptoms from adhesions can be so severe that the adhesions need to be surgically removed.