"KNOWLEDGE-BASED FITNESS"

Friday, February 19, 2010

Morning Stretches

Many of my patients and clients have previously been diagnosed with lower back bulging or herniated discs.  They have become frustrated because they can not function the way they used to due to the back and sometimes radiating leg pain.  When I ask them what their normal daily routine is, they tell me they wake up in the morning and begin a short stretch routine that usually consists of getting out of bed and bending forward to touch their toes.  They say this makes them feel less lower back stiffness.  Unfortunately, I explain to them that bulging or herniated discs may actually worsen with this morning routine.  Most often, a bulging disc is triggered by a flexion or bending maneuver.  If it is a forceful flexion movement, the intervertebral disc may actually bulge posteriorly and laterally.  This may "pinch" a nerve root in your spine.  That is why you feel symptoms in your leg.  During the night, gravity is no longer compressing your spine so the discs reabsorb their fluid.  If you already have a problem with that disc level, flexion of the spine with a disc that has become "swollen" with its own fluid can cause the disc to protrude, exacerbating your back problem.  My advice is to minimize your lower back flexion activities and begin a core strengthening program.  Although flexion type stretches may feel good, it is only temporary and may actually be slowing your progress.