Chiropractic
In Oakville Articles
Core Exercises
Dr. Carole Smith, B.A., DC
Your body's core is the area around your
trunk and pelvis. When you have good core stability, the muscles
in your pelvis, lower back, hips and abdomen work in harmony
and help to protect your spine. Core exercises are those that
strengthen your core muscles, including abdominal muscles,
back and pelvis.
Why bother with
core exercises?
Strong core muscles make it easier to do most physical activities,
such as swinging a golf club to getting a glass off a top
shelf or bending down to tie your shoes. Weak core muscles
leave you susceptible to poor posture, lower back pain and
muscle injuries.
It doesn't take specialized equipment or
an expensive gym membership to strengthen your core. Many
of them you can even do in your living room watching your
favourite TV show. Any exercise that uses the trunk of your
body without support counts. Think squats, push-ups and abdominal
crunches.
Some Important
tips
• Don’t perform bending exercises in the first
2 hours of rising in the morning, as the discs are under their
maximum stress
• Low back exercises are most beneficial when performed
daily
• “No pain-no gain” does not apply to low
back exercises, even when doing weight training; these exercises
should not cause you any pain
• Higher repetitions with less stress and weight on
the spine are more effective for back rehabilitation (endurance
over strength)
• Don’t forget to breathe
Some Examples
of Core Exercises
• Bridge: Lie on your back with your knees bent. Keep
your back in a neutral position, not arched and not pressed
into the floor. Tighten your abdominal muscles. Raise your
hips off the floor until your hips are aligned with your knees
and shoulders. Hold for three deep breaths. Return to the
start position and repeat.
• Quadruped: Start on your hands and knees. Place your
hands directly below your shoulders, and align your head and
neck with your back. Tighten your abdominal muscles. Raise
your right arm off the floor and reach ahead. Hold for three
deep breaths. Lower your right arm and repeat with your left
arm. Raise your right leg off the floor. Tighten your trunk
muscles for balance. Hold for three deep breaths. Lower your
right leg and repeat with your left leg.
• As a fun alternative, try core exercises with a fitness
ball. Simply sitting on a fitness ball and gently bouncing
works your abdominal, back and thigh muscles. Or try abdominal
crunches on a fitness ball. Sit on the fitness ball with your
feet resting on the floor, about hip-width apart. Keep your
back straight. Cross your arms on your chest. Tighten your
abdominal muscles. Lean back until your abdominal muscles
kick in. Hold for three deep breaths. Return to the start
position and repeat.
Final Thoughts
To decrease pain and increase health, a balanced program
of fitness needs to be achieved. Flexibility, strength, endurance,
hobbies, sleeping and eating habits are all part of achieving
your goals. Attention to postural changes and the control
of daily stress is a good start. Remember, if you keep doing
what you are doing your body is going to keep responding the
way it is responding.
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