Wellness For Life
4 Reasons why you should see a Chiropractor
Do you see your dentist one or two times a year? Do you brush your teeth and floss regularly? Do you get your eyes checked and have an annual physical? Then why don’t you get your spine checked? When your spinal column is not in proper alignment, for any number of reasons, it alters your health due to interference of the nervous system and musculoskeletal dysfunction.
Here are 4 reasons why you must have your spine checked, and treated if necessary, by a primary health care provider such as a Chiropractor:
- Abnormal mechanical stress due to poor posture and faulty spinal mechanics will cause muscle tightness and inflammation. Taking a muscle relaxant or anti-inflammatory drug will reduce the pain, but not the cause. Your problem will persist as long as you maintain the same abnormal mechanical stress. Adjusting the vertebrae and putting it back in place helps correct the cause, like balancing your tires or getting the front end aligned for your car.
- Prolonged abnormal stress from faulty spinal mechanics will cause arthritis and other degenerative joint diseases. You don’t get arthritis because you get old; you get arthritis due to abnormal wear and tear on your joints over many years. It’s the mileage, not the years. When you maintain balance in your body, by having your joints and muscles in alignment, you reduce the uneven pressure imposed by gravity.
- When your spine is misaligned, it creates structural changes that lead to weakness, fatigue and pain. Take a look at your body. It is a history of all your sports, falls, injuries and bad postural habits. It is like a tent that has been buffeted by the wind and the elements, and over time, the poles are not longer straight, the fabric is stretched and the guy lines are either taut or slack. This means you have stiff and sore muscles, which can affect you at anytime.
- Your spine is a chain of joints. When one is not working properly, the other joints will compensate. If one joint is stuck with little or no movement, other joints will become “hyper-mobile”, making them unstable. This creates poor biomechanics and increases your risk of injury, particularly whenever you move.
How do you know your spine is out of alignment? Your symptoms might be headaches, digestive problems, numbness, weakness or tingling in your arms or legs; pain in your leg (sciatica) or pain in your hands and wrists (carpal tunnel syndrome); and pain in your neck, shoulders, back or hips. Getting a full examination by a chiropractor includes identifying the cause of your problem by evaluating your posture, your muscle strength, your nerve function, and your spinal function, unlike any other doctor.
Once you have been evaluated, a treatment plan will begin to realign your vertebrae, stretch and strengthen muscles, change some of your habits, and increase your knowledge of how your body works and what you need to do to keep it healthy. Ultimately, if you know what we know, you’ll do what we do.
How to Work and Play Without Aches or Pains
Cumulative Trauma Disorders (and how to prevent them)
Cumulative trauma disorders (CTDs) are conditions caused by the continuous and repetitive use of muscles, tendons, ligaments, joints and nerves. They can occur in nearly every area of the body, but the most common areas are the wrist, neck and low back. The symptoms of tightness, stiffness, numbness, pain or discomfort, tingling or loss of strength and stability are due to an inflammatory breakdown of that particular body part. CTDs will develop over long periods of time and are chronic in nature. This is why it is necessary to get up and move often throughout the day and to incorporate a regular stretching program which will relax and release accumulated stress and tension.
Common causes can occur from over-activity involving constant repetitiveness, lifting heavy loads or improper body mechanics. How you sit, stand, grip, lift, carry, type, sew, repair, pull, push, assemble, or play a sport has an inherent risk of injury, particularly if there are faulty body mechanics and or the absence of adequate rest. This can result in postural overload or chronic muscular fatigue.
Because stretching affects the muscles, joints, and tendons, the first line of defense against CTDs is to stretch daily to prevent, or at least reduce the risk of creating a CTD somewhere. This stretching should be coupled with adequate rest in order for the body to repair itself and recover from the repetitive activity.
Another line of defense against CTDs is good posture. This comes from an awareness of your body position, how long you stay immobile, and how much excess stress influences your activity. Simple adjustments to your chair or desk height, or repositioning your equipment to a more accessible position, can help in eliminating muscular problems.
While some occupations and certain body types have a greater risk of creating a CTD, all CTDs are preventable at some point in time. If you begin performing a new activity incorrectly, the chance of preventing a problem in the future is diminished. If you work or play so hard and for so long that you never allow yourself time to rest and recover, then the odds of you creating a CTD increase dramatically. Working and playing to the best of your ability requires obeying basic biomechanical principles in order not to injure yourself unnecessarily. Remember, you were not born with back pain or Carpal Tunnel Syndrome, and many people never get a CTD in their life, so why should you?
How Play and Exercise Can Save Your Life
“I really don’t like to jog. It makes the ice jump out of my glass.”
“Now that I’m older, I notice it’s my knees that buckle and my belt doesn’t.”
Why should you bother to exercise? You’re happy with the way things are – a few aches and pains, occasional sleepless nights, and being out of breath after ascending stairs is the most excitement you can handle. This is what you were told to expect about getting old, right? Wrong.
Studies show that exercise has myriad benefits for keeping you healthy and prolonging your life. For one, it reduces your risk of dying prematurely. At the same time, your exercise patterns in midlife and late adulthood will predict your subsequent disability at the end of your life. Not only do people with healthy habits (no smoking, proper weight and regular exercise) live longer, but their end of life disability is shorter and less intense.
Exercising helps reduce the risk of dying from heart disease, from developing diabetes, from developing high blood pressure, and from developing colon cancer. By exercising, you help maintain your appropriate weight, which, with a proper diet, helps prevent diabetes, a chronic metabolic disease which affects your ability to produce or properly use insulin. Insulin, a hormone, is needed to convert sugar into energy. When your blood sugar is unregulated (meaning there isn’t enough insulin to do the job), conditions develop which can lead to damaged blood vessels and tissues, which lead to heart disease, blindness or kidney problems.
When you look at the diseases which kill Americans, 9 of the top 10 are the result of lifestyle. Some of these diseases include heart disease, malignant cancers, strokes, lung disease, diabetes, pneumonia, septicemia and kidney disease. Every one of these diseases has a preventable component to it, and that includes exercise. Heart disease is the number one killer in America, due to poor diet and inactivity. Your heart is a muscle, and muscles are meant to move. The more you (safely) challenge your heart, the stronger it becomes, and the less work it has to do in order to pump your blood around your body. Additionally, with a stronger circulatory system, with stronger arteries and veins, you reduce your risk of stroke and strengthen your immune system. This helps decrease your risk of infections, such as pneumonia and septicemia.
Regular exercise also promotes psychological well-being and decreases feelings of depression and anxiety. This is due to the proper production and regulation of hormones which control your moods and your response to stress. The most obvious result of exercise is that it helps build and maintain healthy bones, muscles and joints. This is known as the training effect.
The training effect is the response of your body, at the cellular level, to physiological demand and (positive) stress. Challenge your cells to do more and eventually they will rise to the challenge. However, it is the consistent, systematic and repetitive activity that causes your cells to grow. It is this training process that allows you to regain some, if not most of what you’ve lost physically. This training effect defines aging not from overuse but from lack of use. When you become tired or fatigued from activity, it usually is not from doing too much, but from doing too little. So how, and what can you choose to do more?
You want to engage in some form of aerobic exercise that will improve your heart, lungs, muscles, and organs. You want to do it consistently, a number of times per week, but you may vary your activities and still get the same results. You want to make sure that your exercising fits in with your needs, interests, and lifestyle, and that it is convenient and enjoyable. It should not be a chore. Moderation is also a key in maintaining good health and preventing disease. For example, gardening for 2 hours will be similar to walking for 30 minutes, which is comparable to jumping rope for 15 minutes. Even doing 10 minutes of an activity three times in a day will bring you benefit. Please note that if you have any history of health problems, it is wise to first get checked out by your primary physician.
Here are some suggestions for picking an activity. If you’re out of shape, consider taking up dancing, bicycling, rowing, skating, swimming, or walking. With each of these sports, you can begin easily with less intensity and take more time. As you become stronger, you can gradually increase the intensity and decrease the time. If you are easily bored, you should consider picking a sport that requires a partner or team, like basketball, racquetball, soccer or tennis, along with the previously mentioned dancing, bicycling and skating. If you hate to sweat, then your only real choice is swimming.
If you have joint problems, consider bicycling (stationary), mini-trampoline, swimming, aqua aerobics or walking. Studies show that people with arthritis who exercise actually experience a relief of symptoms that can last for hours after exercising. If you just want to be alone, add jogging, jumping rope, rowing and skating to the previous list. If you like company, which I recommend you do (to help you stay accountable), then nearly all sports mentioned can be done with a partner or as part of a team, along with volleyball and softball.
Additionally, weight lifting can be employed by persons of all ages and should supplement your aerobic activities. Studies from Tufts University Center on Aging found that even “frail” elderly men and women improved their strength, bone density, balance and energy with weight training twice a week. In every case, people who are consistent and who pay attention to the three variables of frequency (how often), duration (how long) and intensity (how hard) will reap the benefits of good health for many years to come.
Do not think for one minute that you are too old to exercise. Many of the studies I am referring to were done with older folks. These studies found that weight-bearing exercises helped improve bone density, which leads to a decrease in fractures. By age 50, most people are losing bone density at the rate of 1% to 3% a year (women more, men less). A study of women aged 50 to 70 actually increased their bone density 1% after a year of exercising twice a week. Those same exercises can help improve balance and increase energy. Many of the test subjects noted that they slept better and longer.
The benefits are there if you are willing to make the investment to exercise. Become so healthy that you live long enough to spend all of your children’s inheritance.
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