What’s wrong with a woman’s left posterior back pain?

Women’s left side back pain is considered to be caused by lumbar muscle strain, lumbar disc herniation, left ovarian cysts and other factors.
1. Lumbar muscle strain: due to frequent housework or stooping labor and other factors, it will cause chronic strain on the muscles of the lumbar region, resulting in aseptic inflammation of the lumbar muscles, which will lead to the symptoms of lumbar pain.
2. Lumbar disc herniation: it is the degeneration of lumbar intervertebral disc, and the protruding intervertebral disc can lead to nerve root compression, which can cause lumbar pain, radiating pain and numbness on one side of the buttocks and lower limbs.
3. Left ovarian cysts: Ovarian cysts are cystic structures generated inside or on the surface of the ovary. Most functional ovarian cysts do not have obvious symptoms, but some patients will experience vague pain in the lower abdomen as the ovarian cysts gradually increase in size, and some of them will be manifested as lumbosacral pain.
There may be some other reasons for women’s left posterior back pain, and it is recommended that patients seek timely medical attention to clarify the cause of the disease and then standardize the treatment.