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Posts Tagged ‘Pain Relief’

Back Hurts When You Sit?

Thursday, September 16th, 2010 by Karena

As far as I can tell that is the best kind of back pain to have.  Lucky you!

In very broad terms, I see two

All our happy hours at our computers can be the worst thing for back pain

Many happy hours sitting at the computer can make for a very sad spine.

types of back pain clients:  The first has increased pain when they are still, especially sitting, and the second group has increased pain when they are moving.  In both scenarios great improvement can be made to pain levels but, generally, the first responds most quickly to therapeutic exercise or pilates exercise.

If you feel pain when you are sitting but feel relief when you get up and walk around the fix is pretty obvious: Move more.   As a rule, even painful joints have pain-free ranges of motion.  Maybe your back hurts when you do ‘X’ but you can still do ‘Y’ and ‘Z’.  That’s very common, so be sure to continue to do ‘Y’ and ‘Z’. The importance of moving, moving, moving is in this short little note. Take a peek if you haven’t seen it already.

I had a frustrated client today. He said: ‘Exercise isn’t going to change the fact that I have a bone spur or how the bone spur pushes on the nerve and hurts like heck.’  I agree on Part I: Your bone spur will not be affected by exercise except that it may not get larger if your alignment is corrected.  I don’t agree with Part II: That exercise won’t change the pain you feel from the bone spur pressing on a nerve.  When did your pain get bad?  Six months or 2 years ago?  And when did you develop that bone spur? Probably long before that.  If we age inactively then the muscles supporting the area around the injury (the bone spur, in this example) become weak and offer less support in a position of great compression (sitting).

Get exercising. Get stronger. Lose the pain. If you can walk without limping, take short walks that don’t flare up your back muscles and then find a few toning exercises to take care of your weak spine muscles and butt muscles.

Use the navigating tabs to the left to go to find free exercises for back pain: Look up Back Pain Series 1-8.  Also, our DVD for exactly the issue of weak spines can be found under the store tab on this site.  Please let me know if you have any questions!

Should you exercise before having surgery?

Tuesday, August 31st, 2010 by Karena

We have been the #1 studio for helping clients/patients prepare for hip surgery this year.

Pre-surgery exercise: The Key to Quick Recovery

Pre-surgery exercise: The Key to Quick Recovery

We’ve helped three women prep for the surgery and now we have a fourth prepping to go in in a few weeks. I am impressed that so many are thinking about getting fit before surgery.  And I think you will be inspired by their results.

I had a client this morning, our third total hip replacement, who was back at Pilates for the first time today, post-surgery.  Her surgery was 8 weeks ago and the stories she shared with me are almost verbatim what our other clients have told us about their speedy recoveries from a quite invasive surgery.  I have listed quotes from their stories here for you. Be prepared to be amazed.

  • “My doctor said he has never seen anyone recover so quickly from a total hip replacement.”
  • “My physical therapist said she would show me how to get out of bed and I had already been back and forth to the bathroom just hours after surgery.”
  • “My physical therapist asked me to wait so she could tie the belt around my waist to keep me falling.  When she saw me maneuver my way to the walker she threw the belt down, saying: Guess we don’t need that!”
  • “My friends are mad because it took them many more months, if not a full year, to get where I am now.”
  • “I can’t believe what exercising has done for me to prepare me for the surgery.”
  • “The pain from the incision is nothing compared to the pain my hip was in before surgery. And with all the work I did pre-surgery I just feel amazing.”
  • “My doctor wants me to use my cane if only to remind me not to do anything crazy.” (4 weeks post hip surgery)

Great stories, huh?  Thought you’d like those.  These are just notes on hip surgery. If you are looking at going in for any type of surgery, I highly recommend working with someone who is familiar with pre-surgery protocols so that you can get back to living as soon as possible. Surgery is traumatic enough; don’t allow the recovery to be anything but a breeze.  Wishing you great health. K

“So What If I Die Out of Shape?”

Friday, August 27th, 2010 by Karena

This quote-of-the-day comes from a  long-time patient and retired doctor who calls

Our 'Five-Toe' is even Cuter than this Sloth!

Our 'Five-Toe' is even Cuter than this Sloth!

himself ‘The Five-Toed Sloth”.  He retired from doctoring due to back/hip pain and we’ve been working together for about 5 years.  He is definitely a believer in the ability of movement to heal pain and is hugely grateful for that pain relief.

So ‘Five-Toe’ (what we call him for short) came in discouraged and out blurted a variation on the ‘death statement’. You’ve probably heard something along the lines of: “It doesn’t matter what I do; we are all going to die anyway”. Yes, but wouldn’t it be great if we could all live while we are still breathing?

Do you know anyone who has spent years of their lives hindered because of disease or pain? How much of this is preventable? Almost all heart disease, all Type II diabetes and approximately 50% of all cancers are preventable with healthier diet decisions. Colon cancer risk is reduced 30% with daily exercise, depression is reduced, energy is increased, pain is reduced… In fact, I’ve never seen a single study that said: “Just eat Twinkies and for heaven’s sake STOP exercising!”

But let’s get back to good ol’ “Five-Toe”.  I don’t put him through a series of therapeutic exercises twice weekly in order to keep people from sadly shaking their heads at his funeral: “Too bad he died so out-of-shape.”  No, we work together so he can live while he is still breathing.  So that when he does pass away no one will say: “What a relief; he suffered for so long.” No, they’ll remember him for doing just what he wanted and just what he loved every day that he lived.

Back Pain: No Sit-Ups Required

Thursday, August 13th, 2009 by Karena

Are you doing sit-ups and crunches to help support your aching back? Stop. In the name of all that you have already put your spine through, please, stop. I teach therapeutic exercise in a physical therapy clinic and I hear myself repeating the same thing over and over again. Stop doing sit-ups, stop doing crunches, stop, stop, stop, stop, stop….. (In my own head, what I am hearing is the voice of Charlie Brown’s teacher: WAHN, WAHN, WHAN, WHAN, WAHN, WAHN… )

It’s a mistake to think that what we need is increased strength in our abdomen. Did you know that people with a history of disabling back pain, whether they are currently in pain or not, have a better ability to hold a sit-up type position than their pain-free counterparts? (It’s true. I’m not making this up.) The tests were done by Stuart McGill. He’s a doctor of kinesiology at the University of Waterloo in Canada. He has done too many tests to count on how our muscles are firing, or not firing as the case may be, and has produced a wonderful body of work in ‘Low Back Disorders’ that explains why some exercises work and others don’t. The book is a little dense: it’s not meant for the lay person but if you are determined you can get through it.

Picture 4In any case, one of the more remarkable studies he did was to test muscular endurance on thoseTherapeutic Exericse with and without a history of back pain. When holding a sit-up type position, those with a history of back pain were stronger. The exact position is this: Seated with the knees up and the soles of the feet down, the person being tested is asked to lean back against a wedge.

The angle is about 35 degrees off of perpendicular. Next the wedge is removed and the timer starts. On average, the person with a history of disabling back pain was able to hold this flexed position for almost 20 seconds longer than someone with no history of back pain.

Now the position does rely on the stabilization of not only the abdominal musles but also relies heavily on the hip flexors. But so does a crunch and a sit-up. The best exercise for the abdomen (whether you have back pain or not) is to not engage the hip flexors. An example of that type of exercise is below in Part 6 of 8 on back pain.

After several more tests were completed this position is the only one where those with a history of disabling back pain tested stronger. They were weaker in spine extension and right and left side-bending (the obliques). So THAT is where the time should be spent if you are trying to prevent back pain: your spine extension muscles and your obliques. You can strengthen the obliques with the exercise that will be in the next installment of the back pain series and the spine muscles with the final installment.

In the meantime, you can get yourself going with the exercises below. All of these exercises and more are compiled in my DVD: Pilates for Healthy Bodies. You can purchase the DVD on this website. Good luck! –Karena

Pilates Exercises for Back Pain – Part 1 of 8

Wednesday, April 8th, 2009 by Karena

Pilates Exercises are great for back pain. Why? Because they are easy and they are effective. They are effective because they focus on the small muscles that support the spine. During episodes of back pain these small muscles stop working. Pilates wakes them back up again.

You have low back pain. An exercise isn’t going to change that fact a whole lot for today. But an exercise (or quite preferably a series of exercises) may change your pain level for tomorrow and for next week and for next month.

Speaking on my personal experiences, I am in a lot less pain today than I was a year ago.

Overall, my back pain was less in my 30’s than in my 20’s (except for that nasty surgery at 39–icky, icky, icky) and I fully expect as I embark on my 40’s that my 40’s will be even more pain free than my 30’s. Here’s how back pain works. You are in pain. Usually the pain is from a spasm of some large muscles (erector spinae of the spine for example) that are trying to brace you.

That’s right the muscles are actually trying to help you by bracing (read: spasm) you into a position that will prevent further injury. Think of it as a body cast from the inside. Not a bad self-preservation tool that our bodies have, huh?

The not-so-great thing about this self-preservation tool is that it can create further weakness and then further bracing of adjoining muscle areas. Just because a muscles is tight and in spasm doesn’t mean it is strong. It usually means quite the opposite. The large muscle that is spasming becomes weak and the smaller muscles that generally support a joint totally begin to drop out. So big muscles are in spasm and weak and little muscles have gone to sleep. yikes. It’s a combo that leads to a vicious circle of more pain and more weakness. Your job is to stop that cycle.

You’ll need to build up to about 7 -12 exercises that you can do on a regular basis.

Here’s the first one.

I’ll add a new one every week along with my other posts for job security. Does every Pilates instructor love to bake or is it just me? I have this ’self-preserving’ instinct to fill people with calories so they have to exercise. :-)