Be "In The Know"
Where To Find Me
Banner
Banner

Search

Posts Tagged ‘Pilates for Back Pain’

Is Core Strength a Medical Necessity?

Sunday, October 10th, 2010 by Karena

Core strength has been a buzzword in the fitness world for quite a while but now we

We accept your insurance through our partnership with SCV Therapy Services!

We accept your insurance through our partnership with SCV Therapy Services!

are hearing that same buzz from the medical field.  Clients are being referred to a Pilates program by their medical doctors who know that increased core strength can only mean decreased physical pain. So how do you know if core strengthening is for you?

Will Core Strengthening Help YOU?

  1. Have you experienced muscle spasms?
  2. Have you suffered an injury that has affected your ability to do everyday activities?
  3. Do you find it difficult to maintain excellent posture?
  4. Is it difficult to sit for long periods of time or does doing the same prolonged activity exacerbate your symptoms?

These are just some questions that are strong indicators that core strengthening could help you.  Here’s why:

  1. Muscle spasms happen in the large muscles, turning the small, core muscles off.
  2. Injuries tend to make us rely on our largest muscles because they are the strongest, again, turning the small core muscles off.
  3. If you can maintain excellent posture throughout the day then your core strength is intact.  Excellent posture uses your core muscles all day, every day.
  4. If sitting still hurts, that pain indicates that your spine is collapsing while you sit; pushing bony structure onto nerves or other bony structures instead of being lifted and supported. Pain while pursuing activities indicates that you lack core endurance.

Core strengthening, while beneficial to all, is especially beneficial to anyone who has every suffered an injury. As an interesting side note, core strength is not just about the spine and the stomach muscles.  Every joint has core muscles; all the smallest muscles in charge of the balance and control of the joint are the core muscles. So any injury throughout the body benefits from core strength.  Cool, huh?

At Pilates Teck we are able to accept your health insurance through our partnership with Santa Clarita Valley Therapy Services, a physical therapy clinic that offers the most up-to-date and thorough care in traditional therapy as well as occupational and aquatic therapy. Need to know more? Please call us! 661.260.1609.

New Favorite Exercise for Stabilization

Monday, May 10th, 2010 by Karena

Hey, Everyone! Just a quickie today and I don’t even have a pic so we’ll all have to tune into the same Pilates Psychic channel so you can ’see’ what I’m talking about here.  I have been using this exercise for the last three weeks for:

  1. Hip Extensor Strength
  2. Quadricep eccentric contraction
  3. Glut med, min, endurance
  4. Soleus and tibialis anterior endurance
  5. Spine stability
  6. Pelvic stability

Here’s how it goes:

  1. Stand on the side of the reformer facing the footbar with the right leg next to the reformer. The heel of the right foot is about 4″ forward of the shoulder rest (4″ towards the footbar but on the floor).
  2. The left foot goes on the shoulder rest with the toes in extension and the ball and heel of the foot on the actual shoulder pad.
  3. With, of course, perfect alignment, press the left hip into extension.
  4. I give my client a six foot dowel to hold for balance. Watch for hyper-extension of the right knee and accommodations in the low back

Notes: Upon extension, if your client has little hip extension or tight hip flexors the left knee may meet the line of the right knee but may not extend beyond that point.  As the left hip extends be sure that your client is not ‘dumping’ into the low back.

I’ve been giving this exercise to my low back pain clients for increasing pelvic and spine stability. I’ve also used it for a client with a hip replacement to really zero in on the hip extension process without a whole lot of extraneous ’stuff’ going on.  And most recently I’ve used the exercise with a knee pathology.

If you have a variation on this that you love, let me know! I’m always looking for new things.  K

Does it hurt to bend forward?

Saturday, April 10th, 2010 by Karena

Picture 32If it does, then you might be what we call in the biz, ‘flexion intolerant’. Simply means that it hurts to bend the spine forward. It probably also hurts to bend over the sink to brush your teeth, or do the dishes. Sitting for long periods of time either in the car or in front of the tv is probably not your friend either. So what do you do with this information? The short answer is to not bend forward. The long answer is this:

Train your spine to work in neutral.

A neutral spine means that you are neither bending forward or backward. You are in your perfect alignment. Here’s how to find your perfect neutral alignment:

  1. Lie on your back with your knees up and the soles of feet planted on the floor.
  2. Rock your pelvis back and forth between an arch (pulling away from the floor) and a curve (pressing into the floor).
  3. Gradually make the rocking smaller until you rest somewhere in the middle.
  4. That is your neutral position. It’s a little different for everyone. Some will be able to slide their hand under their low back in this position and some may be able to put a small pea under their low back.
  5. Now use this position when you are standing. You can practice the pelvic rocking using a mirror and find your neutral while upright.

Important: In order to hold the position you will have to brace the muscles around your new posture until your spine and abdominal muscles get used to holding it, otherwise the muscles will pull you back to the alignment that you are used to. To get the muscles to hold your new alignment, imagine that a two-year-old is getting ready to punch you in the back. You brace to keep the blow from hurting. Remember, though, this is a two-year-old punch not a twenty-year-old punch. Don’t overdo it.

Now, when you brush your teeth or do the dishes you are no longer going to bend forward from the waist. You are going to brace your neutral spine and if you have to bend forward it will be from the hip joints so that the spine can maintain neutral.

A Tip from the Golfers…

When you watch golfers pick a golf tee up they don’t bend forward at the waist and they also don’t squat down and use their knees. They cantilever over. They put one hand on their thigh and the other leg swings behind them as they reach down to grab the tee. It’s excellent biomechanics. I recommend that you practice that one for all the lightweight things you need to pick up from the floor.

How Long To Heal Back Pain?

Sunday, November 8th, 2009 by Karena

Tough question. If you are talking about getting past an acute episode it could be days. Maybe even a week. If you are talking about chronic pain you could be talking quite a bit longer. Maybe a few months; maybe a few years. It’s not an exact science but there are things that you can do to improve your chances of your sending your back pain packing.

Picture 4So what does it take to heal back pain? What are the mechanisms that need to be addressed and how do we engage them to function properly again?

There are too many factors that contribute to back pain for a brief blog so let’s focus on just one: joint instability. After an injury or a loss of motor control (within the muscles) the affected joint de-stabilizes. For a fraction of a second that joint may have been pushed past its limit, or maybe the muscles lost motor control for, again, just a fraction of a second, or maybe even a long-term repetitive activity has created a strength or structure imbalance that has de-stabilized the joint.

Whichever it may be, our job at that point is to try to restore symmetry and balance back to the supporting musculature. The more balance there is between your front muscles (abs) and your back muscles (spine extensors) and your side muscles (quadratus lumborum and obliques) the easier it will be to kiss the pain good-bye

It’s important to know that these muscles are highly unlikely to balance out on there own if you are just to return to your regular everyday activities. Five years post-spine surgery, individuals who are no longer experiencing back pain are still exhibiting asymmetries in musculature as well as deficits within motor control (McGill et al. 2003).

If you are attempting to restore balance there must be a multi-task approach. One exercise is not gong to cut it. Sit-ups or crunches aren’t going to take care of the multitude of deficits. This is especially true since the spine extensors in a person with a prior history of back pain lack more endurance than any other muscle group that supports the spine. But to focus on spine extensors alone would also be an error.

Your spine is surrounded by supporting muscles. Why would any one muscle be the focus of a rehabilitation program? It shouldn’t be. (But really, HOW in the world did it become such a popular myth that more sit-ups will heal your back pain…crazy mystery!) A well-rounded program that includes anterior (crunches), posterior (spine extension) and lateral (side-bridging) muscles of the spine need to be addressed if stability is to be restored.

Outside of working on these three sets of stabilizers it is helpful to focus on balance exercises. Balancing on one leg or on an unstable surface makes some of the smaller more proprioceptive muscles of the spine fire and return to normal function. Often these smaller muscles stop working when there is any kind of trauma to the spine. The trauma causes the larger muscles to spasm (overwork) and the small muscles to stop working. The proprioceptive aspect of the smaller muscles tells your body where it is in space. They are constant little balance sensors that fire when you turn your head, twist, lean-over, balance on one leg or any other of a multitude of small tasks. If they aren’t working it will be much easier for the joints to be de-stabilized.

How long it will take to heal back pain is highly individual. Once proper bio-mechanics are achieved (for example, lifting with a neutral not flexed spine), then muscular endurance, strength and proprioception can begin to be restored and help bring the spine closer to health, reducing pain.

You can begin looking for exercises in our 8 part series on back pain. The link to the first exercise is below. Also, all of these exercises are a part of our DVD, ‘Pilates for Healthy Bodies.’

Good luck and let me know if you have any questions.

Click here for your first exercise! Back Pain Part I

Your Ageless Life™: Core Strength

Monday, October 26th, 2009 by Karena

Core Strength: No Sit-Ups, Please

 

 

There is nothing quite like having a bad back to make us look and feel a mere 40 years older than we really are. At least 80 million Americans have woken up feeling about 109-years-old as a result of disabling back pain. If you are one of the 80 million then your friends have probably already started dishing out the advice on how to fix your new mis-shapen, ‘Leaning Tower of Pisa-like’ posture.

You have undoubtedly heard this little tidbit: ‘Strengthen your Core!’ Your friends are right. And you dutifully take your gimpy back off to do your sit-ups… and this is where you are wrong.

Sit-ups only really focus (well) on one muscle: the rectus abdominis, and, there’s a heck of a lot more than one muscle making up the core muscles , or stabilizers, of the spine. Sit-ups and crunches when done correctly do strengthen the rectus but they are usually, normally, and most-often done incorrectly. Done incorrectly the only muscles that get stronger are the hip flexors which is too bad. It’s too bad because the hip flexors are generally an unhappy, tight, grouchy muscle in those living with back pain and doesn’t deserve to be traumatized this way. It’s also too bad that the rectus is getting so much attention, the attention needs to be divvied up. Imagine you have 10 children. Not one.

During muscle endurance tests those with a history of back pain prove themselves to have plenty of strength/endurance in their ability to hold a flexed position of the spine. They are even stronger in this flexed position than those who have never had back pain. It is the back extensors that are lacking and need the attention. (McGill, Low Back Disorders, 2002 p. 212) And by the way, in someone who has had a serious episode of back pain, this imbalance continues long after the episode of pain has passed, leaving one (read: YOU) open to another serious episode of back pain if the stabilizing muscles of the spine are not brought into balance and stabilized.

So what are the other muscles or tissues that stabilize the spine? They include the obliques, the transversus (yes, both still abdominal muscles), the quadratus lumborum, the intertransversarii, the rotatores, the thoraco-lumbar fascia, the muscles of the erector spinae and good ol’ multifidus. All of these muscles/tissues have a specific function to support the spine and they all need to be addressed when attempting to restore health to the spine. And as you may have already guessed they are not all activated with a sit-up or crunch. Here’s what activates them and makes them happy, smiling, willing-to-go-salsa-dancing-this-weekend muscles:

Planks are excellent exercises for strengthening the ‘corset’ of muscles around the spine. Side-bridging activates most of the core stabilizers of the spine. Balance exercises turn the propioceptive muscles back on. Your proprioceptive muscles are your intertransversarii and rotatores. It used to be thought they were responsible for movement on a very small scale but now evidence shows that they are really more about keeping you from falling on your nose; my words, not the words of these esteemed scientists who found that these muscles have a very high number of muscles spindles, approximately 4.5-7.3 times richer than multifidus: Nitz and Peck, 1986. When you turn to the right they activate on the left; when you stretch left they activate right; when you are standing on your right big toe trying to reach the last clean glass out of the cupboard they activate to keep you balanced (but don’t try going on the toenail, they aren’t that good).

This has been the hardest blog to write to date because without going on for another 50,000 words I have left a lot of information out. I am sure that you have picked up on the gaps but even I don’t want to hear myself talk anymore. I’ll be writing more about the core strength of the spine and if you have specific questions let me know and I’ll try to address them sooner than later.

Wishing you great health! Karena

Pilates for Back Pain – Part 6 of 8

Wednesday, July 22nd, 2009 by Karena

Pilates for Back Pain: Part 6 of 8

Moving onward and upward to something a little more challenging. This Pilates exercise challenges the flexors of the spine. It challenges them to NOT flex. Instead, the challenge is to stabilize. To hold the spine in a cushion of safety by not allowing errant twisting, tweaking and torsion. A weak spine tends to be a wiggly spine. This exercise will create strength to prevent too much wiggling (some wiggling is good after all).

Before we get started, here’s an interesting fact. When tested, those with a history of back pain have more endurance in their ability to hold a flexed position of the spine than those who have never had back pain. (A flexed position of the spine in this case is holding a sit-up position when you are halfway up in the process of performing a sit-up.)

Isn’t that amazing that someone with back pain had a better ability to hold this position than someone without back pain? And all these years we’ve been told if we have back pain we need to strengthen the stomach muscles. Appears to be false. It appears that those with back pain have too much strength/endurance there. And do you know where the back pain patients were weak? In their spines.

::Okay, is it just me or does these seem like common sense?::

A weak spine does need stabilization help from the oblique muscles and the spine flexors. But those muscles need to learn to stabilize. So that the upper and lower bodies can move without increasing the wiggle-factorof the spine.

The exercise above is an alternate to sit-ups. You will strengthen your abs by bracing them, not be flexing the spine. Flexing the spine is not only an area that doesn’t need strengthening if you have back pain but it also an enormous amount of pressure on a sore spine. Good luck and let me know if you have any questions about this series of exercises for pain relief.

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. :-)