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Recent News and Articles on the Keywords: back pain + pain + back  Related to the article below (Last Update: 8/4/2008)

New type of therapy battles back pain
Arizona Republic, AZ -
This method is a spine-specific form of physical therapy that is used for patients with back or leg pain due to herniated disks. ...
Helton has MRI on troublesome back
MLB.com -
He began hitting off a tee and participating in short toss a few days ago, but he suffered a major setback when his back pain flared shortly afterward. ...
Weightlifter pushed through herniated disk, failed comebacks
USA Today -
She started a comeback after his birth, but had to stop because of her back pain. Tests showed fragments had broken off the disk. ...
Bucs running back Cadillac Williams progressing in comeback bid
The Canadian Press,  Fla. -
I mean severe, severe pain," Williams said. "I heard something pop. I said, 'This is not good."' The Bucs placed the 26-year-old on PUP on the first day of ...
He's not stretching the truth: Linebacker feels better than ever
Chicago Tribune, United States -
What a welcome sight it is for the Bears to see their defensive centerpiece running and hitting without pain. Urlacher's back could stiffen at some point, ...

Ottawa Citizen
It's medal or bust for Willows and Dober Jr.
Ottawa Citizen,  Canada -
The success of both projects depends, though, on the health of his back. "The last four months I've had severe back pain," Willows said in an interview last ...
Keeping the fight lit
Hollister Free Lance, CA -
"I've witnessed too much pain and so have you," said Jordan Johnson, organizer of the Hollister Relay for Life's "Fight Back" event, during Saturday's ...

Joe Gibbs Racing
Pain in Pocono - Hamlin, FedEx Racing Finish 23rd
Joe Gibbs Racing, NC -
On the radio, Hamlin's feedback to the FedEx team was positive - his only complaints that he was tight back on throttle off of turns one and three of the ...
Wooden to play through pain barrier
Daily Advertiser, Australia -
... has courageously declared he will play through the pain barrier in the lead-up to the Group Nine finals. injuring his back against Young on Sunday, ...
Fred Funk falters on back nine, loses chance at championship
The Canadian Press,  Colo. - Aug 3, 2008
WORTH THE PAIN: RW Eaks may have done more damage to his aching knees by playing the final round, but he doesn't regret teeing it up Sunday in his hometown. ...
Source: Google News

Magnetic Resonance Imaging of the Lumbar Spine in People without Back Pain -
MC Jensen, MN Brant-Zawadzki, N Obuchowski, MT … - New England Journal of Medicine, 1994 - content.nejm.org
Magnetic Resonance Imaging of the Lumbar Spine in People without Back Pain. Maureen
C. Jensen, Michael N. Brant-Zawadzki, Nancy Obuchowski, Michael T. Modic ...

… Beliefs Questionnaire (FABQ) and the role of fear-avoidance beliefs in chronic low back pain and … -
G Waddell, M Newton, I Henderson, D Somerville, CJ … - Pain, 1993 - ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
Click here to read A Fear-Avoidance Beliefs Questionnaire (FABQ) and the role of
fear-avoidance beliefs in chronic low back pain and disability. ...

… of Back Pain: Part I: Development of a Reliable and Sensitive Measure of Disability in Low-Back Pain -
M ROLAND, R MORRIS - Spine, 1983 - spinejournal.com
ARTICLE LINKS: PDF (319 K). A Study of the Natural History of Back Pain: Part I:
Development of a Reliable and Sensitive Measure of Disability in Low-Back Pain. ...

The Oswestry low back pain disability questionnaire.
JC Fairbank, J Couper, JB Davies, JP O'Brien - Physiotherapy, 1980 - ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
Physiotherapy. 1980 Aug;66(8):271-3. The Oswestry low back pain disability
questionnaire. Fairbank JC, Couper J, Davies JB, O'Brien JP. ...

The Treatment of Acute Low Back Pain--Bed Rest, Exercises, or Ordinary Activity? -
A Malmivaara, U Hakkinen, T Aro, ML Heinrichs, L … - New England Journal of Medicine, 1995 - content.nejm.org
... Next Next. The Treatment of Acute Low Back Pain ? Bed Rest, Exercises, or Ordinary
Activity? ... Nonsurgical Management of Acute and Chronic Low Back Pain. ...

The use of coping strategies in chronic low back pain patients: relationship to patient … -
AK Rosenstiel, FJ Keefe - Pain, 1983 - ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
The use of coping strategies in chronic low back pain patients: relationship to
patient characteristics and current adjustment. Rosenstiel AK, Keefe FJ. ...

Epidemiological features of chronic low-back pain. -
GB Andersson - Lancet, 1999 - ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
Lancet. 1999 Aug 14;354(9178):581-5. Click here to read Epidemiological
features of chronic low-back pain. Andersson GB. Department ...

… is more disabling than pain itself: evidence on the role of pain-related fear in chronic back pain -
G Crombez, JW Vlaeyen, PH Heuts, R Lysens - Pain, 1999 - ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
Pain. 1999 Mar;80(1-2):329-39. Pain-related fear is more disabling than pain itself:
evidence on the role of pain-related fear in chronic back pain disability. ...

Fear of movement/(re) injury in chronic low back pain and its relation to behavioral performance. -
JW Vlaeyen, AM Kole-Snijders, RG Boeren, H van Eek - Pain, 1995 - ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
Pain. 1995 Sep;62(3):363-72. Click here to read Fear of movement/(re)injury in chronic
low back pain and its relation to behavioral performance. ...

An overview of the incidences and costs of low back pain. -
JW Frymoyer, WL Cats-Baril - Orthop Clin North Am, 1991 - ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
Orthop Clin North Am. 1991 Apr;22(2):263-71. An overview of the incidences
and costs of low back pain. Frymoyer JW, Cats-Baril WL. ...

Source: Google Scholar
 
 

Oh, That Aching Back! Standing up to the pain is a matter for the whole body

Got back trouble? Take solace. You're not alone. Most of us — some experts say 80 percent — have or will have back misery of some kind at some time.

 

The pain can be acute or chronic or both. It can come in tweaks and jolts from well-meaning physical fitness, that new movement or everyday life, like gardening or driving long-distance. I once became bed-ridden for five days (on the first day of a weeklong vacation!) when I bent down to tie my son's shoes.

Some get back pain from traumatic injury, say a car accident, and some acquire lingering back pain that creeps up on them after years of slumping as they sit, walking less than upright and forgetting about the importance of core strength.

Most of us understand the vicious cycle. A bad back stops you from exercising, and while rest is a critical short-term treatment, resting can become habitual and lead to more back problems. You begin moving differently to protect your aching back, only to start more problems.

What kind of pain do you have? How can you rehabilitate? And how do you prevent reoccurrence?

There is no shortage of options: physical therapy, surgery, massage, smart "core training," chiropractic treatment and acupuncture, to name just a few. Many gadgets are designed to stretch, support and massage it.

I decided to look into the gentle, focused arts of yoga and Pilates.

I ran across Dr. Karen Sherman, a researcher for the Center for Health Studies at Group Health Cooperative, who is finishing a study of yoga's effect on back pain. She is tallying data from the study, funded by the National Institutes of Health. Some of the patients participated in a series of gentle, back-focused classes, while some took on other exercise programs. Sherman says early anecdotal information is encouraging.

What surprised her as she prepared her study proposal was that, despite the videos and books espousing the wonders of yoga on back pain, she could find no research-based literature showing the benefits of yoga for back problems.

She teamed up with yoga therapist Robin Rothenberg, who owns the Yoga Barn in Issaquah and Fall City. Rothenberg has been teaching gentle yoga for more than 16 years, and gave a talk about back pain to yoga instructors last year. She was surprised by how many of them had back pain.

At her Fall City studio a few weeks ago, I went through a series of poses with her. I promptly put a disgusted look on her face as I began a leap from my back toward my feet. Gentle, she implored.

We worked a long time on proper breathing, designed to relax, focus and energize. To help me learn how to deepen and focus my exhale, she put a 10-pound bag of rice on my stomach so I'd start from there and squeeze my breath upward. I did several poses while on my back and then on all fours — each designed to stretch, strengthen and then stretch again my back. Each movement was slow and timed to the rhythm of the breath.

That was just lesson No. 1. Participants in the study moved on to hamstrings, flexors, quads and all the other body parts that need to work in sync.

Pilates shares much of the same principles.

I found the book "The Pilates Prescription for Back Pain" especially helpful. The book is chock full of exercises, but I was particularly impressed by one of its early scolds (which I heard in some form from Rothenberg) to stop waiting for people to fix you. "No one can follow you around reminding you to sit up tall! It is time for us to take responsibility for our own bodies."

The book describes in depth how our movements affect the spine and how stabilizing and mobilizing muscles must work in concert. It speaks of posture and how we become "knowing victims" by letting everything from fashion to stress to slouching shape us.

Consider standing. You know how to do that, right? But do you do it right? You should be aligned from heels to head with the pelvis in a natural, neutral position and the spine retaining its natural curve. Yet many of us let our upper or lower back sway or curve backward or walk with our heads leading the way.

A key message of the book, Rothenberg's yoga therapy and many other experts ultimately comes down to this: If you really want to solve and prevent back pain, you have to pay attention. Not just to the back, but to all the mistakes it is carrying.

Richard Seven is a Pacific Northwest magazine staff writer. He can be reached at rseven@seattletimes.com.

Copyright © 2004 The Seattle Times Company

 
 
 
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