"To catch a chill/cold in one's back"

Barb23

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May 13, 2023
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Polish
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"To catch a chill/cold in one's back."
Can you confirm please if you can use this expression when referring to lower back pain that you can suffer from after you've been sitting in a cold or draughty place?
I'm a Polish speaker and there is an expression like this in Polish ("Przewiało mnie") and I was wondering if there is a similar expression in English.
Thank you!
 
Welcome to the forum, Barb23. :)

To my knowledge, there is no English version of that expression or any medical condition with that name.
 
It's used here: "One of the most common complaints we hear when people come in with undefined low back or neck pain is that they think they may have “caught a chillin the back. The basic idea is that cold draughts or weather will cause a dramatic reduction in temperature of the spine or muscles, and that this somehow stays in the tissues causing ongoing aching and stiffness.". The author is Ben Kewish.
 
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An interesting experiment was conducted a few years ago at either Harvard or MIT, if mrmory serves. Students were divided into two groups and each group was seeded with one member who had a cold. Both groups were kept isolated from other people in a closed room over a weekend. One group was kept damp and cold and the other warm and dry. After the weekend there was no significant difference in the number of colds in each group.
 
I have never heard that expression in AmE either. The provider is located in Australia, so perhaps it's an AuE phrase?
 
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Regrettably we have not heard from our antipodean expert @Raymott since 2021.
 
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