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Regular
exercise is an essential part of having a healthy back. In the treatment of back
pain, almost every healthcare provider agrees that exercise plays an important
role in recovery. Every day we make demands on our bodies that can stress our
backs. It's a well known fact that the more fit you are, and the stronger your
back is, the more easily your body can deal with the stress and strain of every
day activity.
Unfortunately, when most people start to experience back pain, they become less
active. As a result, the muscles that support the spinal column become weaker
and have less endurance. If your back loses enough muscle tone, the muscles can
shrink, contract and tighten. Your back may feel tight much of the time, tire
easily, and start to feel uncomfortable even when you are sitting in a chair.
The feelings associated with chronic back pain and spinal fatigue make most people
feel drained, tired and depressed. It becomes harder and harder to break the cycle
of pain causing inactivity, which causes more pain, which then causes more inactivity.
Eventually, this scenario can lead to other health problems that are the direct
result of inactivity, such as heart attacks, strokes and obesity.
Therefore, exercise is an important part of the "use it or lose it"
theory of overall spine health. Patients with chronic low back pain are particularly
susceptible to suffering from the ill effects of too little exercise. If it
hurts when you move your back, and is less uncomfortable when you don't, then
you have the perfect incentive to become less active with time. Although this
may seem like a logical reaction to pain, it is almost certain that avoiding
physical activity will make the pain become even worse over time. This knowledge
comes from the unhappy experience that doctors have had in the past with prescribing
prolonged bed rest and inactivity for back pain, which over time, only aggravated
the situation and made it more difficult to treat in the long run. We now know
that if you want to relieve the physical pain of many types of back pain while
also making yourself stronger both mentally and physically, you need to get
moving.
A commitment to a physical conditioning program that is approved by your physician
is important to everyone, but it is especially important to those with chronic
back pain. Exercise has many benefits, and has even been called a healthy "non-chemical
tranquilizer," because the process of stretching and strengthening the
muscles of the back produces a feeling of relaxation and well being similar
to that produced by many muscle relaxants and pain relievers. Low back pain
is often described as a "psychobiological" problem, meaning that it
includes both physical and psychological components. Exercise can help treat
both parts of this problem, by providing you with a healthy means of relieving
some of the frustration and sense of helplessness associated with low back pain,
in addition to treating the problem at its very heart. If you are having a hard
time finding an exercise program that works for you, a simple place to start
is with our "Chicken Soup" guide to exercise and low back pain, which
is available by clicking here. Or if what
you're looking for is an exercise program to start with click
here for some step by step instructions.

Have more questions?
Visit our Web sites for answers to all your back and neck problems.
Back.com |
iScoliosis.com |
MatureSpine.com |
NeckSurgery.com

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| Published: March 17, 2005 |
Updated: March 17, 2005 |
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