- Your back is actually swollen in the morning. The discs have extra fluid in them. A careless forward bend or twist first thing in the morning can do substantial damage to your discs or other back structures.
- The other critical time is after you have been sitting. Long car drives or airplane trips are especially challenging. In this case, the culprit is something called "creep." This means that your ligaments and tendons lengthen into the position that you have been in. Ligaments do not provide protection properly when they have been lengthened by creep.
How to minimise risk - The longer you have been sitting, the higher the risk.
- If you have to sit for extended periods, take regular breaks. A short walk, some simple movements, can make a real difference.
- Don't do any heavy lifting immediately after getting out of bed
- Don't bend over immediately after sitting. After a long sit, give yourself at least a few seconds of backward bending and/or moving around to reset your spine. Then you can carefully, using your hips rather than your back, bend over to pick up something.
- Sit up straight, and keep your back in neutral. Neutral means that you keep a bit of a lordosis in your lower back, keep the lumbar spine from slumping forward, stay more upright.
Monday, May 31, 2010
High-Risk Moments for Your Low Back
When it comes to your lower back and injury risk, there are two critical times when you need to be especially careful:
Thursday, May 27, 2010
High Heels – The Chiropractic Perspective
Two publications carried an article based upon a release by the Foundation for Chiropractic Progress. The articles from the January 2, 2008 Hudson Valley Press, and the January 8, 2008 Indiana Star, discuss the perils of high heels from a chiropractic perspective. Dr. Gerard Clum spokesperson for the Foundation for Chiropractic Progress and president of Life Chiropractic College West in Hayward, California starts the article off by stating, "From a health standpoint, there's no good side to heels."
The FCP release notes that wearing high heels changes the biomechanics of walking, therefore affecting the foot, leg and spine. Dr. Clum notes, "Dangers associated with wearing high heels affect the entire body, particularly the knee, hip, and back." He continued, "The abnormal weight-bearing and stressful posture induced by high heels can strain both the low back and the neck, not to mention the foot, ankle, and knee."
The Foundation for Chiropractic Progress made several recommendations for women who wear high heels. These are:
If high heels must be worn, Dr. Clum advises not to wear them for more than two hours a day. He states, "Many high-heeled shoes do not allow for proper space and movement of the toes. Typically, the pointy toe of the shoe causes pain in the front of the foot, which creates pressure on the metatarsals."
Doctors at the Foundation are not suggesting flat shoes but they do suggest wearing heels of two inches or less as a compromise. Dr. Clum summed up the chiropractic perspective by saying, "The vast majority of women who come for chiropractic treatment do not associate the heel height of their shoes with their ailments. It is important for women to realize that their everyday choices, including what shoes to wear, will affect their entire body, not only their feet."
Source: DiMartino Chiropractic Center
Sunday, May 2, 2010
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