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Back Mechanic by Stuart McGill
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Back Mechanic by Stuart McGill

Table of Contents

Table of Contents

Introduction:

(01) Mythbusting

(02) Back to Basics: Getting to Know Your Back and Causes of Pain

(03) Is Surgery for You? - The Essentials List

(04) The Code: Rules and Guidelines for Back Health

Introduction: 

We deserve to get down on the floor and play with the kids with ease of movement.  It’s a basic human necessity to sleep through the night without waking up with excruciating pain every time the body rolls over.  Getting the spine in working order takes discipline and commitment.  Breaking old habits and forming new ones.  Step one: make it through the day free of pain and discomfort.

Table of Contents

(01) Mythbusting

  1. Therapy should directly address the cause of pain.
  2. Examine pain triggers and daily activities, then ‘tune’ the aggravating activities to reduce pain.
  3. Slowly expand pain free moments into long lasting relief.
  4. All efforts should be focused on determining and eliminating the cause of pain and enjoying and discovering pain free movements.
  5. Address and alleviate the original cause of pain. Just dealing with the symptoms with pain meds masks the pain but neglects the actual issue.
  6. To remain pain free, learn to manage the way the back is loaded. Analyze daily activity and performance tasks then come up with a system to manage the back problem.
  7. MRI and CT images are only one piece of evidence used in building a case for an optimal recovery plan.
  8. Learn proper movement patterns for daily activities in order to spare the back.
  9. Discs, when left alone, stiffen over time.  Pain will resolve so long as they are not contorted in unnatural positions.
  10. Lying in bed for excessive periods actually causes back pain.  Vertebrae are packed with very concentrated protein chains that love water (hydrophilic.) An hour or two after rising, we have returned to normal height as the excess fluid has seeped out.  This natural ebb and flow is healthy and is what allows the discs to obtain nutrition.  Problems arise when the discs remain horizontal for longer than 8 hours.
  11. Doing the right workouts will preserve the spine.  Doing the wrong workouts, coupled with prolonged sitting and poor movement habits will delaminate the discs.
  12. Components of yoga and pilates will aggravate an individual with back conditions.  Every single exercise should be justified and then modified if necessary to suit each person.  Efforts to disrupt neutral spine, to straighten one of its natural curves is not healthy.  Temporary relief may come from stimulating the stretch receptors in the back muscles but pain typically returns with a vengeance due to the stresses placed on the discs. The real goal is to minimize spinal movement and instead use the hips as the primary centers for motion.  This allows back pain to settle.  Avoid pain triggers and adjust exercises to prevent the worsening of pain.
  13. Each back pain case is different.  Each stretch must be chosen very carefully and tailored to the individual.  Mobilizing (stretching out) the spine is contributing to the pain.  Focus energy on stabilizing and controlling the spine instead.   Avoid any motion that involves pulling the knees to the chest.  Stretches for other parts of the body may aid the journey to being pain free.
  14. There is no one single universal cause or cure for back pain.  Identify our own pain triggers and match the treatment and dosage that is best for us and our current state of recovery.
  15. Developing a disproportionate amount of strength in relation to endurance will cause further injury.  Back injuries are the result of putting the spine under load and then breaking healthy movement form.  Maintaining proper movement patterns requires endurance.  Place endurance as a higher priority to strength when rehabbing a spinal condition.  Only when endurance for sustaining healthy movement patterns has increased, and in turn, stability and mobility, should we move on to more aggressive strength training.
  16. Recovery must be progressive, requiring patience but delivering better long term results.  Nature and biology demand we take into account individualized rates of progress.  Do not load beyond current capacity.
  17. Generating power (velocity and force) in the spine is highly problematic and increases the risk of injury.  If  spine bending or movement occur at a high velocity,  forces (load)  must be low to avoid injury. Alternatively, if forces are high,  then velocity must be kept low.
  18. Hypertrophying muscles will not make them pain free.  Exercise  must enhance control of movement and control of muscles.  Use effective exercises that help rebuild the back (think push ups in place of bench presses) rather than tear it down.
  19. Match the patient with the cure.  Identify the variables that help us, and our unique situation,  to get better.
  20. Do not repeat the pain trigger. This risks setting yourself to go back to step one.  The task is to manage damage of tissues through healthy movement patterns in order to remain pain free as we give them time to heal.

Table of Contents

(02) Back to Basics: Getting to Know Your Back and Causes of Pain 

  1. Neck (cervical) - begins in the cavity in the back of the skull and ends where the neck meets the beginning of the torso.   It curves gently inward towards the front of the body (lordosis.)
  2.  Mid Back (thoracic) - begins at the point at the top of the shoulders and extends to the bottom of the rib cage.   It curves outwardly away from the lungs (kyphosis).
  3. Low Back (lumbar spine) - begins at the base of the rib cage and extends through the base of the pelvis, or tailbone, curves inwards towards the abdominal organs (Lordosis)

 

  1. A bulge in the posterior left side of the disc indicates the spine was repeatedly bent forward and to the right.  This type is often found in those whose occupation involves repeated movements (loading and unloading a truck, digging with a shovel) as well as in athletes and sometimes in individuals with asymmetric hips.  With this particular type of bulge, there are a number of tolerable bends possible before pain or injury strikes.  This number is reduced when movement is performed with more load.  
  2. The cat / camel exercise will not harm a bulge because it is unloaded but anytime the body bends forward to pick something up from a standing position, high spine compression is caused by the large extensor muscles that are activated.   Movement pattern choices will either decrease or increase the bulge, worsening the pain.  By choosing correct movement, the bulge is given the opportunity to shrink back down to size.  Eliminate the risk of a disc bulge by moving about the hips rather than the spine.

  1. Locate and eliminate the cause of pain -- get an appropriate assessment that provides a specific diagnosis.
  2. Increase awareness around movements and postures that cause pain.
  3. Develop replacement postures and movement patterns that enable you to function pain free.
  4. Stabilize the torso, core and spine to remove painful joint micromovements.
  5. Develop a daily exercise plan that involves walking
  6. Mobilize the hips.
  7. Learn to create power at the ball and socket joints (hips and shoulders)
  8. Learn exercises that are based on patterns of movement: push, pull, lift, carry, lunge, squat
  9. Make healthy spine choices when sleeping, sitting or engaging in more demanding activities.

Table of Contents

(03) Is Surgery for You? - The Essentials List

  1. First, always try the ‘virtual surgery’ approach and consider surgery only when it fails.
  2. Surgery should be considered when neurological issues are substantial (such as loss of bowel or bladder control).
  3. Radiating pain symptoms, numbness, muscle atrophy, etc. are all signs of trapped or compromised nerve roots. With these conditions use nerve mobilization approaches together with mechanical based movement therapy. These techniques require proper form.  If performed improperly or too aggressively they will increase symptoms.
  4. Surgery may be considered in cases of trauma.  Broken bone and torn tissue often need stabilizing.
  5. Pain must be unrelenting and severe for a substantial period of time to be considered.
  6. If you have good and bad days in terms of pain, you are not a surgery candidate.  Instead, identify the cause of the changing pain.
  7. Beware of ‘new’ treatments and ‘new’ devices: none have lived up to initial claims and expectations.
  8. Be skeptical of disc replacement.  ‘Success’ is defined as the full resumption of former activities without pain and there are no long term successful disc replacements as of yet.  Most spine pain results from motion and loading.  An artificial disc is designed to restore motion to the joint.  It creates an axis of rotation that rarely mimics the natural axis of the natural disc; placing more stress on the other facet joints.  Over time, they become arthritic  and intolerant to motion.
  9. Always exhaust the conservative option.
  10. If images (CT scan, MRI) are the only focus of assessment used before advising on surgery, beware.  The surgeon must confirm that what shows on the image is the true source of pain.  Avoid a medical service provider who does not conduct an extensive patient exam.

Table of Contents

(04) The Code: Rules and Guidelines for Back Health