Showing posts with label Spinal Health. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Spinal Health. Show all posts

Tuesday, 20 January 2015

AN ANTIDOTE TO SITTING ALL DAY

Sitting all day at work, school and often at home has become the prevalent posture in our society.  Increasingly, all this sitting is being attributed to a host of health problems including back pain, neck pain, headaches, diabetes, obesity, cancer and cardiovascular problems.  Indeed those who sit all day have higher mortality rates than those who don't.

To counter all the sitting we do, exercise is vitally important. Almost any exercise will be beneficial to help counteract sitting.  Walking, swimming, weight training and stretching will help.  Some exercises can be more effective and efficient than others.  Because time is often such a tight commodity, a good anti-sitting exercise should be able to be done in a short period of time.  Then it can easily be done daily or better yet, for people who spend their day sitting, twice a day.

I was reminded this past week of one exercise that is a fabulous antidote to all the sitting we do.  That is a back stretch over an exercise ball.  This short YouTube video demonstrates how easy it is to do.


I would like to add a few additional instructions for safety and maximizing the benefits.  
  • Wear shoes or go with bare feet.  Socks can be too slippery and dangerous if you lose your balance.
  • Only attempt this stretch if you can balance well on the ball while sitting.  If you are new to working on an exercise ball, have someone spot you until you are comfortable using the ball.
  • Always move slowly and maintain complete control.  If you are wobbling on the ball, return to sitting and begin the stretch over again.
  • When going from the sit to laying back on the ball, do a slight pelvic tuck to engage the abdominal muscles.  This will increase stability.
  • Before raising the arms overhead, make sure the head is contacting the ball.  Keep the head against the ball during the entire stretch.  This will minimize the chance of neck injury.
  • Hold the stretch for 5 slow breaths.  Breath into the abdomen rather than the chest.
  • Don't over stretch!  The more often you do this stretch the further you will be able to stretch.  Just be relaxed and let the weight of your arms provide the stretch.
  • When coming back up, again do a pelvic tuck and come up slowly.  Keep the head on the ball until the arms are again along the body.
  • Repeat.
  • Regular chiropractic adjustments and massage therapy will help this stretch to be more effective.
I don't know about you, but it seems that things that are good for me are easily dropped.  This ball stretch use to be a part of my regular routine and I've let it slip for months.  Well I've put it back into practice  this week.  Even though I don't sit all day, working on patients all day still puts me into flexion and this stretch is a great antidote.

If you sit a lot or spend time flexing forward this stretch is a simple and very effective antidote.  It only takes a few minutes to do.  Add it to your daily routine and you will appreciate how much better you will feel. 

Monday, 23 June 2014

Does Everyone Need to See a Chiropractor?

When people first find out I'm a chiropractor, there are two common responses.  First, is that they have been to a chiropractor and want me to "crack" their back or neck for them, often implying I should do it right there in the restaurant or wherever we may be.  Second are people who say, "I don't need to see a chiropractor.  I don't have back pain."  Should people who don't have pain go see a chiropractor?

It wasn't all that long ago that people only saw medical doctors when they were sick.  They only consulted a dentist when they had a tooth ache.  I'm old enough to remember those days.  The idea of consulting a health professional for prevention of problems is a fairly recent phenomenon.  Most of our society now sees the logic in seeing an MD, dentist, or optometrist before problems arise for either prevention or early treatment.  Using the same logic, it also makes sense to see a chiropractor before back pain, neck pain or headaches become problems.

Since every person has a spine, everyone has the potential to develop spinal problems.  Statistically, 80% of Canadians will experience back pain over the course of their lifetime.  For many of those people it will be debilitating; interfering with their ability to work or perform activities of daily living.  But the effects of spinal problems are not limited to pain.  Abnormal function of spinal joints results in irritation to adjacent spinal nerves.  This produces alteration of nerve function through the entire path of that particular spinal nerve.  The result can be health problems distant from the spine itself.  A person can suffer detrimental effects of spinal problems without actually having pain in their spine.

Chiropractors use the term, Vertebral Subluxation, to describe abnormally functioning spinal joints with associated nerve irritation.  It may or may not be accompanied by pain.  Chiropractors are uniquely trained to detect and correct Vertebral Subluxations.  Like most conditions, Vertebral Subluxations can be most effectively treated when they are detected early.  Once abnormal spinal joint function becomes chronic, associated muscles adapt patterns where they are either too tight or too lax.  The ligaments of the joints are weakened.  Blood supply to the joints is altered as well.  It's also significant that chronically irritated spinal nerves heal very slowly.  Consequently detecting and correcting Vertebral Subluxations early, even before there is associated pain, makes a lot of sense.  Seeing a chiropractor when you don't have back pain, neck pain or headaches is as logical as seeing a medical doctor when you aren't sick or a dentist when you don't have a toothache or an optometrist when you can see well.  


If you are the type of person that only consults a health professional when they have an obvious problem, you likely won't grasp the logic of seeing a chiropractor when you don't have pain in your back, neck or head.  But that doesn't mean that you don't have spinal problems.  Waiting until you have pain can result in much more damage to the tissues and prolonged treatment.  As well when treatment is delayed the outcomes are often much less desirable.

As always whether you choose to see a chiropractor when you don't have pain is up to you.  But the logical approach is to get checked and assure your spine is working as well as it can so you don't end up with debilitating or chronic spinal problems.  Regular chiropractic adjustments should be part of your healthy lifestyle.

















Thursday, 26 September 2013

Healthy Lifestyle Really is Anti-Aging

For some time now I've tried to emphasize the importance of living a healthy chiropractic lifestyle.  There are many outward benefits that can be seen in people who live such a lifestyle.  They are able to do the things in life they both need and want to do.  They are resistant to disease and injury.  They feel and look good.  But what is happening on the inside of these people?

True health occurs at the cellular level.  When a person's cells are healthy, they are overall healthy.  A person's age is determined by how well their cells are working.  Recent news reports such as this one from Businessweek, "Veggie-Heavy, Low Stress Regimen Shown to Modify Cell Aging", reveal how a healthy lifestyle improves the health of cells.  Click and read the article.  It explains in a clear, simple manner the complex changes that occur in the telomeres within individual cells when lifestyles are improved.  The improvement is significant enough to be able to label the cells as being younger.  The lead researcher is quoted as saying, “Our studies are showing that simple changes in our lifestyle have powerful impacts in ways that we can measure.” Having younger cells is truly anti-aging at its finest!

The abstract from this study is found at the The Lancet  "Increased telomerase activity and comprehensive lifestyle changes: a pilot study".


Want to live healthier and longer?  Adopt a healthy chiropractic lifestyle.  Eat nutritious food, take nutritional supplements when indicated, get regular exercise, sleep soundly, manage stress, avoid toxins, protect your mental health, and keep your spine and nervous system healthy with regular chiropractic adjustments.  The take-a-way good news is that wherever you are now you can be healthier and younger by improving your lifestyle.

Wednesday, 18 September 2013

You Have Both a Right and a Left

It came as a bit of a surprise to me when I found out that when practicing, pro golfers will hit a bucket of balls right handed and then a bucket left handed, or vice versa.  This should not have surprised me because from a conditioning and biomechanical stand point, it makes perfect sense.  As humans we tend to be very one handed but using one side predominately can result in a host of problems.  By hitting balls both ways the pros are trying to minimize the possibility of these problems happening and at the same time improve their overall performance.  Given that I really can't hit a golf ball decently right handed, I can only imagine the challenge hitting it left handed.

Human balance can be thought of in two ways.  The first is whether or not a person has equilibrium.  That is whether they can remain upright.  If you lose your balance you fall down.  The second type of balance is whether a person has symmetry.  That implies the body having equal strength and mobility from one side to the other or front to back.  Having equilibrium is probably the most important type of balance, but having symmetry is important to having optimal equilibrium.  The two are related and both are important aspects of health.

The type of balance the golfers are working on when hitting balls both right and left handed is symmetry.  By doing this muscles and joints on both sides of the body are utilized.  Most significantly the "core" of the body is developed in a symmetrical manner.  This is particularly important for proper spinal function.  The nervous system also benefits tremendously when activities are done both right and left handed.

As a chiropractor, I see many spinal problems that are the result of people repetitively doing things one handed or one direction only.  When muscles are more developed on one side of the body, or more on the front or back, the joints of the spine move abnormally.  This results in the development of vertebral subluxations where there is not only a loss of joint function but altered nerve conduction as well.  A whole host of health problems can result.

It's not easy to use the body symmetrically.  Most of us are very one handed and it takes real effort to use the body in a balanced way.  It is particularly important to try to be balanced with the activities we do the most.  That means looking at the way we do our work and recreational activities.  For example I had to make a conscious effort to hold my Activator Adjusting Instrument an equal amount with either hand.  I had to train myself to work from both sides of the adjusting table.  By doing this over time my left hand has become almost as strong and coordinated as my right hand.  It certainly wasn't when I started doing this years ago.  I believe that doing this has not only prevented injuries but is a factor in my overall health.

It's important to also try to achieve symmetry when exercising.  This is particularly significant when rehabilitating injuries.  Stretching and strengthening should be done on both the right and the left.  Of equal importance is balancing the front and the back of the body.  Did you know that walking on the ground provides much more symmetry than walking on a treadmill?  When walking on the ground both flexor and extensor muscles of the lower extremity are used as opposed to the treadmill where the machine does most of the extension for you and the flexor muscles develop more than the extensors.

Take a tip from the pros to improve both your performance and your health by using your body in a balanced manner.  You will have fewer injuries, recover faster, have improved coordination, and better equilibrium.  Balance is part of a healthy chiropractic lifestyle.   It's not easy, but you will be better for it.

Wednesday, 20 February 2013

Life is Like Riding A Bike

"Life is like riding a bicycle.  To keep your balance you must keep moving."  Albert Einstein



Albert Einstein was a pretty smart fellow and not just in math and science.  When reading quotes from him, I have to conclude that he had a great grasp of what life is all about.  The quote above is certainly in line with a healthy chiropractic lifestyle.

Balance is a key to both physical and mental health.  I don't know whether Albert Einstein was referring to one or both of these areas of life when he made this statement.  Motion is crucial for health in both areas.

In physical health it's easy to see how motion is a critical element.  Motion tones our nerves and muscles and it keeps our circulatory system functioning.  As we move our body systems become coordinated so everything works together.  That is the prerequisite to having physical balance.

As a chiropractor, I am very focused on the how well my patients move.  The motion of the joints of the spine is particularly important.  Spinal joints that move either too much or too little will affect the nerves that exit the spine and go to all parts of the body.  This can lead to an imbalance in the nerves that control not only muscle activity but sensations such as pain and feelings as well as organ function.  When spinal joints loose their proper motion and the nervous system loses its balance, that is termed a vertebral subluxation.  Correcting vertebral subluxations with specific adjustments is what chiropractors specialize in.

Physical balance requires motion in more areas than just the spinal joints.  All the joints of the body must move properly and all the body's systems must be working together in a coordinated fashion.  Its the nervous system that assures the coordination of the entire body..

Being balanced mentally also requires motion.  Physical motion provides proper blood flow to the brain.  Through the blood the brain receives the oxygen, nutrients, and hormones necessary for it to work properly.  Also through physical motion the brain obtains stimulation from every part of the body.   Keeping mentally active is also necessary for to have mental balance.  Keep the mental "gears" turning through constant learning and stimulation to keep the mind healthy. 

A chiropractic lifestyle involves keeping the spine functioning properly as well as adopting healthy diet, exercise, nutrition, and sleep habit,   It's about managing physical, chemical, and emotional stresses so the body and mind can function the way they were designed to.  To be healthy we need to be balanced, physically and mentally.. Sitting in front of the TV in no way promotes balance.  Balance requires movement.  Take it from Albert Einstein, to be balanced we need to keep moving.  He was a wise man.

Tuesday, 16 October 2012

3 Day Diet

Loss 20 pounds of fat!  Boost your metabolism!  Gain more energy!  Fast, efficient, effective!  Minimum work for maximum results. There is nothing like the 3 Day Diet!  Read on.

Sound too good to be true?  It is!  The scale may show a loss of a few pounds after a couple of days.  But no one really believes that being on a diet for 3 days can be effective.  There is simply no way that years of poor eating and lifestyle habits can be overcome in such a short period of time.  A person gains weight and loses their health over a long period of time and a takes time to both take weight off and restore health.

So why is it that people think that 3 chiropractic adjustments will remove the pain and restore the health of their spine?  That makes no more sense that a 3 day diet.  In most cases spinal problems are months, years and even decades developing.  Although, chiropractic adjustments can be very effective in relieving pain, to truly restore the proper functioning of the spine takes time.  Often a considerable length of time.

Changing your lifestyle to eat better and exercise more to loose weight and become healthier takes effort.  It also takes commitment to sustain the changes over a long period of time.  It is an established fact that crash dieting doesn't work and unless there are permanent changes in a person's life the weight and health problems return, only worse than they were before.  Correcting spinal problems, known as vertebral subluxations, is just the same.  Simply getting rid of the pain, with chiropractic or drugs, is just a short term fix.  The problem inevitably comes back ... only worse.

To successfully correct vertebral subluxations, and restore spinal health, repeated chiropractic adjustments are need.  As well exercise, nutrition and lifestyle changes are usually required.  A healthy spine is needed to have a healthy body and a healthy body is needed to have a healthy spine.  This takes time and effort.

Forget about 3 day diets.  There is no way they can work.  Forget about trying to get a healthy spine in 3 visits.  It simply can't happen.

Wednesday, 29 August 2012

A Time for Resolutions

Around New Year's there is usually a lot of talk about resolutions for improving oneself.  September is perhaps a better time to be looking at making changes in one's life.

Here in Southern Alberta, summer is fast and furious.  We try to do as much as we possibly can in the weekends of July and August as well as during the long summer evenings.  It's the time when everyone goes on holidays to see and do something new.  While we endevour to experience so much of what the world around us has to offer, we often neglect the things that are really important to our health.   Routines for healthy eating, exercise, and rest are often cast to the side.  Frequently people neglect their spinal care as well.

Then September arrives.  Back to school; back to routines; back to reality.  The lazy (or not) days of summer have come to an end and it's time to return to normal activities.  It's also time to return to healthy routines.  Because September is a time when we are changing from summer mode, this may be a more logical time to make healthy lifestyle changes than the beginning of January.  So many of the routines people are returning to are healthier than what they have been doing over the summer.  (Think about that old song about "sodas, and pretzels and beer" during "those lazy, hazy days of summer".  That's a description of many people's summer.)  While people are already making changes, perhaps they should take it a step further and make some real significant lifestyle changes.

September is a great time to make healthy diet changes.  There is an abundance of fresh fruit and vegetables, many of them locally grown.  A commitment to ditching the simple carbohydrate foods and drinks for good would be a wonderful step to take.  Eat enough of the good stuff and you'll want less and less of the bad stuff.  Fortunately quality fruits and vegetables are now available year round, so a habit started now can continue through the winter.

Because the weather is still warm, but no longer swelteringly hot, September is a great time to get outdoors to exercise.  Exercising in the fresh air is good for body and spirit.  Get in the habit of exercising now when it's easy to do and you'll be more likely to continue even when the weather becomes less than cooperative.  It takes much more effort to start an exercise routine in January.

As you get back to routines, it's important to once again commit to getting regular chiropractic checkups.  Or if you haven't done so in the past this is the time to start.  Vertebral subluxations can creep up silently and have a profoundly negative impact on a person's health.  The best time to have them corrected is before they become symptomatic.  Regular visits to a chiropractor will assure that your spine is working as well as it can be.

This fall don't just get back to the same routines of spring but add some new, better ones.  Improve your sleep routines. Commit to taking high quality supplements on a regular basis. Embrace techniques to reduce stress. This may be the ideal time to start a new hobby. Rather than watching more TV this fall, look for more active ways to spend your time that will benefit you both physically and mentally. This time of year many organizations are looking for volunteers and committing some time and effort to helping others is very rewarding.

Take advantage of the season and make some resolutions to be a better you.

Wednesday, 27 June 2012

Consistent & Reliable Adjustments

A couple of months ago I had the privilege of attending a couple of presentations on recent chiropractic research.  Dr. Walter Herzog of the University of Calgary and Dr. Greg Kawchuk from the the University of Alberta outlined the various investigations they are conducting to demonstrate both the effectiveness and the safety of chiropractic.  As they outlined each project and the methodology they were using I was stuck by the fact that both researchers were using the Activator Adjusting Instrument.  This is the same instrument we use in our office.

Both Dr. Herzog and Dr. Kawchuk stated matter-of-factly that they used the Activiator Adjusting Instrument because of it's consistency.  The could rely upon this instrument to produce the exact same thrust each and every time.  The force is consistent, the depth is consistent, and the line of drive is consistent.  The instrument has been validated by several previous research studies.  By using this instrument they reduce variables which makes their research more valid. 

As a clinician I have to constantly ask my self how does any given research apply to how I can better serve my patients.  While it's nice that the Activator Instrument is so valuable for research purposes, how does that translate to clinical practice?  The answer to that is pretty straight forward.  An instrument that produces a consistent and reliable adjustment in the lab will also produce a consistent and reliable adjustment in clinical practice.  As a matter of fact the instrument was developed for a clinical setting and was later proven to be reliable enough to be used for research purposes.

The benefit for patients is that every chiropractic adjustment with an Activator Instrument is the same as every other adjustment.  It is consistent from visit to visit.  It is consistent from doctor to doctor.  It is consistent whether the doctor is having a good day or a bad day.  (Can you believe that I occasionally have a bad day?)  That is not to say that the application of the instrument does not vary, but the instrument itself is consistent and reliable.  It is one variable in the care process that has been eliminated.  That is good news from a therapeutic standpoint.  That is good for patient care.  Patients can depend upon the Activator Instrument to provide the necessary force to create proper motion in joints.  Nerve function is restored and the healing process can proceed.

Researchers depend on the consistency and reliability of the Activator Instrument to produce the best research results.  Patients also can trust this instrument to provide consistent and effective chiropractic adjustments.

Tuesday, 15 May 2012

Fighting Gravity

One of my sons has a t-shirt that says, "Obey gravity - It's the law".  Gravity is a force that is constantly pulling on our bodies.  In order to walk up right we are literally fighting gravity.  To be successful we need to have both good balance and good posture.  If we don't we will be prone to muscle and joint problems, falls, nervous system problems and stress on all our body systems.  Balance and posture play a big role in our health.


Fortunately there are a couple of simple exercises that can help improve a person's balance and posture.  These exercises can be performed by anyone regardless of age.

The most basic balance exercise is the One Leg Stand.


The One Leg Stand should be done three times every day.  Note that if you are very unbalanced or have vertigo, have someone with you to make sure you don't fall.  If you have hip or joint problems, only bend the joint as far as you comfortably can.
 
Posture problems are the first things to happen when gravity starts to get the best of us.  The basic posture exercise is the Wall Pelvic Tilt. 


Wall Pelvic Tilts should be performed twice daily.

When doing either of these exercises it's important to get your form as perfect as you can.  To get the most benefit focus and concentrate on the muscles and movements.  Most people notice very rapid improvements in their balance and posture when they do these two simple exercises regularly.  They are a great way to counteract the negative effects gravity has on the human body.

Thursday, 20 October 2011

Safety Pin Cycle

The simplest explanations are often the ones that really make an impact on people.  This was brought home to me at a recent seminar attended by our staff.  Although they work in a chiropractic office and understand what we do as chiropractors, how chiropractic works really clicked with them when one of the speakers discribed the "Safety Pin Cycle".  Perhaps this analogy will also help you understand chiropractic better.

When the body is functioning properly the brain is communicating with every cell, tissue and organ in the body.  Every cell, tissue and organ is also in direct communication with the brain.  Both paths are uninterupted; just like a closed safety pin.

Problems arise when there is a disruption of either of the paths of communication.  The safety pin is open.  The body enters a a state of dis-ease where it no longer functions optimally.  Over time dis-ease produces disease and ill health. 


The most common place for nerve interference to occur is where nerves exit the spine to go to all areas of the body.  This happens when the spinal bones lose their normal motion and position.  The term for this occurrence is a vertebral subluxation.  Correcting vertebral subluxations to restore normal nerve function is what chiropractors do.   We are closing the open safety pin.

Tuesday, 6 September 2011

Dr. Yoon Han

Dr. Yoon Han has just joined our team of chiropractors.  We are excited to have him on board!  Although Dr. Han has just recently completed his license requirements for Canada, he has 10 years practice experience in Asia.  During that time he was able to develop the chiropractic skills he learned at Palmer College of Chiropractic in Davenport, IA.  This is the same school both Dr. Powers and Dr. Ruzycki attended.

Practicing in his home country of South Korea was certainly much more of a challenge than North American chiropractors face in the 21st century.  There is no licensing of chiropractors in that country, as a result many misconceptions of our profession persist.  This is not unlike what chiropractors in North America experienced 50 years and more ago.  Dynamic Chiropractic published an article recently on prosecutions of Korean chiropractors.  It is very difficult for Korean chiropractors to effectively help their patients.  They face so much opposition.  These circumstances forced Dr. Han to look beyond his homeland for practice opportunities.

Because of the persecution of chiropractors in Korea, Dr. Han and his family moved to Malaysia for four years where he practiced while waiting for Canadian Immigration to approve their move to Canada.  Canada is the country of their dreams!  We are happy they have chosen to make Medicine Hat their home.  As well as joining our office, Dr. Han and his wife own and operate the Esso convenience store and gas bar at the corner of 11th St. S.E. and Division Ave. 

Dr. Han is excited about helping people in Medicine Hat with their spinal health.  Although he is just learning the Activator Methods technique, he is already quite proficient with instrument adjusting.  He knows the body and the power of the chiropractic adjustment.  His experience helping patients is very transferable to his new technique.  You can schedule an appointment to see Dr. Han by calling our office at 403-529-9069.  

Welcome to Powers & Jans Centre Dr. Han!

Wednesday, 1 June 2011

When the Pain's Gone

Everyone's excited when pain they've been experiencing goes away.  That's because pain is such a powerful force in our lives.  But the reality is that pain is not a very good indicator of how healthy or unhealthy we are.  When we have a problem pain is usually the last symptom to appear.  It can also be the first thing to disappear when correcting a problem.

Vertebral subluxations in the spine involve muscles, ligaments and nerves.  The inflammatory response to these tissues being injured is usually what produces pain in the spine.  Although irritation on the nerves can also produce pain.  With specific spinal adjustments, the inflammation associated with spinal injuries often subsides very quickly.  The pain goes away.  At this point however the job of rehabilitating the spine is only partly done. 

Muscles, ligaments and nerves take time to heal; often a very long time.  They must also be retrained to do their jobs properly.  Only through the re-establishment of normal joint motion, by spinal adjustments, can the tissues begin to work properly.  Exercise and nutrition are also vital to successful healing.  Until the muscles, ligaments and nerves are fully healed and retrained, they are susceptible to re-injury.

I'm exited for my patients when their pain goes away, because that is usually their goal when they first come to see me.  However, I also know that the job of correcting their spine is only just beginning.  The patient is always in charge of deciding how far they want to take their care.

Tuesday, 17 May 2011

Chiropractic vs Medicine for Low Back Pain

Many people consult chiropractors for their back pain only after they have tried everything else.  Researchers are now telling us this is the backwards approach to looking after acute low back pain.  A December 2010 research paper published in The Spine Journal compared medical care and chiropractic care for acute low back pain.  


You can read the abstract of the research paper by clicking the link above, but I will summarize the findings for you.  Acute low back patients where divided into two groups.  The first received "usual" medical care which consisted of a variety of treatments including medications, massage therapy, and physiotherapy.  The second group received chiropractic care for a period of 4 weeks.  The participants were evaluated for both pain and function in their lower backs at 8, 16, and 24 weeks after starting care.  Significantly, after 16 weeks 78% of the people in the medical care group were still taking narcotic analgesic medications.  They also had much poorer scores on the function of the low back.  That is the ability to perform normal daily activities.  At the 24 week mark, both groups had improved pain scores but the medical group showed no improvement whatsoever in back function.  The chiropractic group had significant function improvement.  Please note that chiropractic care was discontinued after 4 weeks while medical care was carried on throughout the study.


The authors of this study also specifically noted that "spinal manipulative therapy" (I prefer the term adjustment; see my 23/04/2011 post) is only effective when performed by chiropractors.  It is not effective when given by osteopaths, physicians, physiotherapists or other practitioners.


The data in this study shows that chiropractic care is astoundingly superior to medical care in improving the ability of people with acute low back pain to return to normal activities.  Although not specifically mentioned in the study, we can extrapolate that by delaying chiropractic care people under medical care will have a much more difficult time to returning to normal function.  They will suffer unnecessarily and the direct and indirect costs will be much higher.  The wise thing for people with low back pain is to consult a chiropractor first not last.



Tuesday, 19 April 2011

Outdoor Sports for Kids

You can tell I'm excited about spring finally arriving.  Following up on my gardening post from last week, I want to talk about kids starting outdoor sports.  The focus for injury prevention in youngsters is a little different than in adults.  The Alberta College and Association of Chiropractors has posted an information sheet on their website for preparing children for outdoor sports.  Navigating to it may be a trick so here is the Dr. J. synopsis of what to do.

Warm up before running:. A good warm up routine prevents injury to muscles and joints.  The child should do a slow jog followed by a stretching routine that focuses on the muscle groups most used in the sport the child is participating in.

Keep hydrated: It's important that children consume plenty of fluids before, during and after their sporting activity.  Despite all the product promotions, water is still the best thing for kids to drink.


Eat proper foods: Calcium and magnesium are necessary for healthy bones and to reduce injury risk to both joints and muscles.  The child needs to eat a good breakfast and a healthy meal at least 1 hr before the activity.  After the event they should have a healthy snack to replenish nutrients that were burned up.


Suitable clothing: Clothing designed to allow mobility along with proper equipment that fits the child correctly are essential for both injury prevention and performance.


Plenty of rest. Children need 8 - 10 hours of sleep every night. This is particularly important before a sporting event.  Lack of sleep decreases performance and increases chance of injury.

Before starting any sport, a child should have a chiropractic check up to ensure they have no vertebral subluxations which could be aggravated by the new activity.  If children are subluxation free they will also perform better.  At the first sign of injury be sure to have the child check by a chiropractor to ensure proper healing.

Thursday, 31 March 2011

Invincibility

To say I played rough when I was growing up would be an understatement.  Everything was a body contact sport, including board games.  If my friends and I were not throwing each other to the ground, we were slapping each other around.  There was often blood; often crying.  As we got older crying became tabu, but the physical nature of our play only intensified.  We were physically invincible.  As I moved on to high school and college I still gravitated to contact activities.

In my seeming invincibility, little did I realize that each tumble, each hit, each over-exertion was producing small injuries to my body.  In particular my spine was receiving repeated trauma.  Some injuries, like falls out of trees, were more significant than others.  For the most part they were pretty minor, but there were certainly a lot of them.  I don't think a day went by that I didn't do something to overstress or injure my body.

Everyone of these small injuries resulted in a slight weakening of the tissues.  That tissue was then more susceptible to injury by the next trauma.  Over time all these little injuries added up until the area was weakened to the point of becaming symptomatic.  This is the common scenario with spinal problems.  Repeated micro traumas weaken the spine to the point that the spinal joints lose their proper function and the spinal nerves become irritated.  This is how most vertebral subluxations come into being.  They are developing long before symptoms are ever present.  The good news is that as chiropractors, we are specifically trained to detect vertebral subluxations before they become symptomatic.  Even though the problems have been developing for years, with proper assistance, the amazing human body can still heal these injuries.

I don't think I was necessarily harder on my body than most young boys.  Though girls may not be as physically abusive as boys, they can be hard on their bodies in different ways.  We all suffer from accumulated spinal injuries.  I can tell you from personal experience that with regular chiropractic care vertebral subluxations can be corrected and spinal health restored.  My spine is in much better condition than it was 20 years ago.  I rarely have any spinal symptoms any more.  Given all the abuse I gave my back, that says a lot about chiropractic care.  I'm certainly not physically invincible any more (and I never really was).  Those times of rough housing were fun, but there is always a price to pay.  I'm thankful that because of the chiropractic care I've received I can still have vibrant health.