Degenerative disc disease sounds like an age-related inevitability, and for civilians it often is. But for veterans, the timeline is different: years of load-bearing, vibration exposure, and cumulative microtrauma accelerate disc deterioration far ahead of schedule. Understanding that pathway is the foundation of a credible service-connection claim.
The intervertebral discs act as shock absorbers between the vertebral bodies. They have a tough outer ring (the annulus fibrosus) and a gel-like center (the nucleus pulposus). Over time, or under repeated mechanical stress, the discs lose hydration and height, the annulus develops tears, and the spine loses its cushioning capacity.
This process is called degeneration. It is not a disease in the traditional sense. It's the cumulative result of stress applied to biological tissue. That distinction matters for your VA claim because it means the cause is traceable.
The VA often frames degenerative disc disease as a "natural aging process" and uses that framing to deny service connection. Orthopedic and occupational medicine research consistently contradicts that framing for populations with high physical occupational demands.
Repetitive axial loading, specifically the kind produced by ruck marching, parachute landings, military vehicle operations, and prolonged load-bearing, compresses the disc and impairs its ability to rehydrate overnight. The disc depends on a passive imbibition process to draw in fluid while you sleep. When nightly compression cycles exceed what recovery allows, the disc begins a progressive hydration deficit that accelerates degeneration.
Infantry, airborne, armor, and special operations personnel are the most studied populations, but the mechanism applies broadly:
VA raters and C&P examiners sometimes note that disc degeneration is "expected at the veteran's age" and conclude it cannot be service-connected. This reasoning has two problems.
First, if a veteran's imaging shows degeneration significantly in excess of what is typical for their age group, the excess degeneration needs an explanation beyond "aging." Military service is the most logical explanation.
Second, even ordinary degeneration can be service-connected if service aggravated a pre-existing condition beyond its natural progression. Under 38 CFR 3.310, aggravation is its own pathway to benefits, separate from direct service connection.
A well-constructed nexus letter addresses both pathways, not just one.
For direct service connection, you need three things:
Service records, deployment history, MOS duties, and buddy statements can establish the in-service event. A physician-authored nexus letter ties the medical dots together, explaining why your specific military duties are more likely than not the cause of your current diagnosis.
If you entered service with mild pre-existing disc changes (perhaps noted on your entrance exam), you are not automatically barred from benefits. The question becomes whether service permanently worsened the condition beyond its natural course.
This is a harder case to make but a legitimate one. The nexus letter needs to specifically address the pre-existing baseline and argue that service pushed the condition to a more advanced state than would have occurred otherwise.
Degenerative disc disease rarely travels alone. Consider whether you also have:
Each of these can be rated separately, and together they can substantially increase your combined rating.
If you're developing a claim for degenerative disc disease, the nexus letter is the piece most veterans get wrong. Flat Rate Nexus offers physician-signed independent medical opinions built specifically for VA claims, along with free educational tools at flatratenexus.com/back-pain.html.
Thinking about your own claim? Every nexus letter we write goes through a full physician record review, cites peer-reviewed research, and is built around the actual evidence in your case.
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