People who use weight training to ease their lower back pain are better off than those who choose other forms of exercise such as jogging, according to a University of Alberta study.
The study, done in conjunction with the University of Regina, showed a 60 per cent improvement in pain and function levels for people with chronic backache who took part in a 16-week exercise program of resistance training using dumbbells, barbells and other load-bearing exercise equipment.
In contrast, people who chose aerobic training such as jogging, walking on a treadmill or using an elliptical machine to ease their back pain only experienced a 12 per cent improvement, said Robert Kell, an assistant professor of exercise physiology at the University of Alberta, Augustana Campus.
The resistance-training group showed improvements in pain and function of about 60 per cent, while those who took aerobic training experienced only a 12 per cent improvement.
"Any activity that makes you feel better is something you should pursue, but the research indicates that we get better pain management results from resistance training." The extra benefits stem from using the whole-body approach required in resistance training, Kell believes. "We tried to strengthen the entire body and by doing that, we decreased the fatigue people felt throughout the day. They were better able to perform their activities of daily living." Aerobics training generally works just the lower body, he added.
Approximately 80 per cent of North Americans suffer from lower back pain at some point in their lifetimes, and for 85 per cent of them the pain is chronic.
Both types of training did provide other fitness benefits, such as lower acidic body fat.
According to Dr. Robert O. Young, Director of Research at the pH Miracle Living Center, "whole body exercising can also be accomplished using a mini trampoline or rebounder and/or a whole body vibrational machine. Both pieces of equipment exercises every cell in the human body simultaneously. The G-forces of the rebounder compresses and expands the body cells every second whereas the the whole body vibrational machine can compress and expand the body cells up to 50 times per second. This reduces the amount of time you need to exercise from 30 to 60 minutes down to only 5 to 10 minutes a day with the same health and fitness benefits of weight lifting or jogging. The other major benefit of rebounding or whole body vibrational exercising is the low impact or stress on the skeletal and muscular system while maximum benefit for the digestive, circulatory and lymphatic system."
To learn more about whole body vibrational exercising or rebounding, go to:
http://www.phmiracleliving.com/p-357-rebounder-with-bar.aspx
http://www.phmiracleliving.com/p-304-vibraphirm.aspx
The findings are to be published in early 2009 in the Journal of Strength and Conditioning Research.
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