Lower Back Pain Exercises: 5 Simple Moves to Eliminate That Pain

How to Reduce back pain by Exercise?

Exercises / October 22, 2016

Lower Back PainWhile it can be hard to exercise through pain, lack of exercise can make your pain worse. See: How Exercise Helps the Back

Movement nourishes and repairs the discs, muscles, ligaments, and joints in your spine. Active exercise also helps incorporate the needed nutrients into and around the disc spaces throughout your spine.

Too much rest will make your pain worse

While pain makes it hard to exercise enough, lack of exercise can worsen the pain by leading to stiffness, weakness, and de-conditioning. In the case of disc-related pain, lack of exercise will deprive the injured disc of the nutrition it needs and this can lead to further degeneration and pain.

Additionally, exercise and activity is needed to help reduce inflammation that naturally occurs in the tissues surrounding an injured disc. This swelling can further irritate nerves that are already affected by the highly inflammatory herniated disc material.

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Regular hamstring stretching are essential for low back pain and sciatica therapy. Watch: Supine Hamstring Stretch (Towel Hamstring Stretch) for Sciatica Relief Video

Stretching, strengthening, and aerobic conditioning
exercises are all important

It may take weeks or months of stretching, but you will find that the increase in your range of motion can lead to sustained pain relief.

Stretching your hamstrings regularly is essential therapy for lower back pain and sciatica. If an episode of low back pain has lasted two weeks or more, a strengthening program helps with long-term recovery. Typical programs may include McKenzie exercises, lumbar stabilization training, and/or other prescribed exercises.

See also Exercise and Back Pain and Click here

Most doctors and physical therapists will tell you that their patients who are aerobically conditioned tend to have less back pain and sciatica.

Low impact aerobic exercise brings nutrients to injured structures in the back and helps them heal. Walking or biking can be effective forms of low impact exercise, as can working out on an elliptical machine. If you are in severe pain, water therapy is an option that can provide multiple therapeutic and conditioning benefits with less stress.

See Water Therapy Exercise Program and Exercise Walking for Better Back Health

Get an individualized exercise program

Depending on your specific diagnosis and level of pain, your rehabilitation program will be very different, so it is important to see a spine specialist who is trained to develop an individualized exercise program and instruct you on correct form and technique.

Source: www.spine-health.com