Relieve Your Back Pain With This Easy Guide
It’s hard to find someone in today's world who hasn’t experienced some sort of back pain during their lifetime. In fact, an astounding 80% of all adults suffer from back pain at some point in their lives. While there are copious amounts of information available on the internet with regards to what causes back pain, how to remedy it and how to prevent it, the most important thing to know is what kind of bias you have.
A bias in this context refers to a tendency to keep one's back in a certain position due to that position offering comfort or pain relief. There are three different types of bias, namely flexion, extension and non-weight-bearing. This guide will help you determine how to identify which bias you have, as well as give you methods of rectifying it through simple stretching and exercises:
1. Flexion Bias
If you tend to bend forward because it makes your back feel better and relieves the symptoms, then you have a flexion bias. This is common in people with spinal stenosis, which is the narrowing of spaces in the spine that, in turn, create pressure on the spinal cord and nerves. In this instance, pressure is taken off of the nerves when leaning forward. This is because the spaces that have narrowed due to the stenosis open up again, thus relieving pain. Leaning forward can also relieve the symptoms of spondylosis, which is spinal degeneration (note that the term can also be used to refer to osteoarthritis of the spine), and spondylolisthesis, a condition that arises when a vertebra in your back slides forward over the vertebra beneath it. The common thread between all these spinal conditions is that leaning forward offers pain relief, while leaning backward will likely increase the symptoms.
The video below demonstrates stretches to help with a flexion bias. Not only will they loosen up your back muscles, but they’ll also help open up the spaces in your spine to take pressure off the nerves:
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