MyAchyBack Potential Pain Solution: Fitness
Fitness Feature Article
SURF CITY
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CORE Exercises
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Exercises
specifically designed to strengthen your body's "core" have a
remarkable range of benefits. Balance, strength, flexibility, and
coordination are all improved by these essential exercises. The main
muscle trained is the transversus abdominis, a wide band of muscle
encircling the abdomen and lower back. This muscle has been called the
body's built-in weight belt.
Core training and core strengthening
provide the cornerstones on which all your fitness activities are
based. Yet until about five years ago, core training was a well-kept
secret known only to dances and gymnasts, who were totally unaware the
routines they'd been doing all their lives were about to go mainstream.
Core muscles are just that - the core of
your body. And like a nuclear core reactor, these muscles are the power
plant that drives the activities of everything else your body is doing.
Core muscles - when trained and strong - provide a firm platform, a
solid internal foundation, from which all movements and action can flow
gracefully and purposefully.
Three basic core exercises are torso twists (done lying on your back), the plank, and pelvic bridges. |
Summertime! Fun in the sun! Load up the car and head for the beach!
Summertime is fun time - swimming, surfing, beach volleyball, beach barbecues, and lots of sunshine!
1
We
want to be sure to enjoy ourselves all summer long and not be slowed
down by the speed-bumps of sunburn, muscle aches and pains, and back
strain. There's plenty we can do for prevention and to make sure we
continue to have fun for the whole summer and beyond!
Sunburn first. This is now a real problem for almost
everyone. More harmful ultraviolet radiation is reaching the surface of
the planet, and that means it's reaching us! When we were kids we could
get away without putting on sunscreen. Now we really need protection -
for kids as well as adults.
Everyone needs to use a sunscreen.
2 These
products are rated by the amount of sun protection factor they offer -
the SPF. Generally, sunburn can be avoided by using a product with an
SPF of 15. Infants and children should be protected with an SPF of 30.
Babies younger than six months of age should be kept out of the sun.
Both sweat and water reduce SPF protection. So if
you've been in the ocean or the pool or have worked up a sweat playing
volleyball or Frisbee, reapply your sunscreen right away. If you're
fair-skinned or have a receding hairline, wear a hat. Protecting your
lips is important too - lip balms are available with an SPF of 30.
The right kind of sunglasses is important - not all
sunglasses are created equally. For proper protection, choose
sunglasses that offer ultraviolet (UV) protection - helping to avoid
cataracts and other eye diseases. Protection should block 99% of UVB
and 95% of UVA radiation.
Getting ready for exercise is next on our summer-fun
agenda. Swimming, surfing, and volleyball all require a good amount of
flexibility. It's a bad idea to jump in the ocean after having spent
the last six months sitting on your couch playing "Grand Theft Auto" or
"World of Warcraft". The first big wave may knock you over and sprain
your back!
Getting ready is important. Begin by doing daily gentle
stretches for your major leg muscles - the hamstrings, quads, and
calves. Stretching these big muscle groups reflexively relaxes and
lengthens the muscles of your lower back.
Also, start doing abdominal exercises - leg lifts for
the lower abs and crunches for the middle and upper abs. Strong
abdominal muscles translates into support for your lower back.
Learning how to do a set of core exercises is very valuable.
3
These exercises specifically strengthen the inner wall of your
abdominals and lower back, resulting in more strength, more
flexibility, and better balance. The only equipment required is an
exercise mat.
Your chiropractor will be glad to provide information,
guidance, and recommendations for a range of exercises and stretches
that will help keep you healthy all summer long and beyond!
1Holick MF: Sunlight, UV-radiation, vitamin D and skin cancer. How much sunlight do we need? Adv Exp Med Biol 624:1-15, 2008
2Moehrle M: Outdoor sports and skin cancer. Clin Dermatol 26(1):12-15, 2008
3Urquhart DM, et al: Abdominal muscle recruitment during a range of voluntary exercises. Man Ther 10(2):144-153, 2005
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