Exercise
May Not Help Back Pain
Excerpt
By Ira Dreyfuss, Associated Press
WASHINGTON (AP) - A study to test the conventional wisdom that
low back pain can be limited by strengthening muscles around the
hip has found that the training didn't help.
The study doesn't establish that what's called core conditioning
is worthless for fighting low back pain, but researchers say it
casts doubt on the value of the exercises they examined.
``Did we prove a change in muscle strength? We did,'' said researcher
Scott F. Nadler. ``The thing we didn't show was that the strengthening
reduced the incidence of pain.''
Nadler, of the University of Medicine and Dentistry of New Jersey
in Newark, was lead author of a report in the American College
of Sports Medicine journal, Medicine and Science in Sports and
Exercise.
The article examined the value of exercises to strengthen primarily
muscles of the abdomen, lower back and buttocks. These exercises,
including sit-ups, pelvic tilts, squats and lunges, constitute
traditional forms of core conditioning.
The added strength is supposed to ease strain on the back by
improving posture and by giving the back more support as it bends
and twists in sports or activities of daily living. However, the
theory has never been tested rigorously in an experiment, Nadler
said.
Nadler and his colleagues looked at NCAA Division I male and
female athletes at a college in New Jersey. In the 1998-99 season,
164 athletes did their normal training but were given no special
core conditioning program and served as the comparison group for
the study. In the 1999-2000 season, 236 athletes were given additional
core conditioning training, and served as the experimental group.
Researchers compared the incidence of low back pain complaints
in the two groups, and found no statistically meaningful differences.
Complaints were less common in men who did core conditioning,
but the difference was too slight to let researchers statistically
rule out the possibility that the apparent benefit was simply
the result of chance.
However, there were relatively few complaints of lower back
pain - 14 in each year - so it is possible that a significant
difference could have turned up if there had been more cases,
Nadler said. Also, different exercises than the ones studied might
provide protection, he said.
Athletes in his study did exercises in which movement is tightly
controlled, and protection against low back pain might require
exercises based on more fluid movements, in which the back is
in varied positions, Nadler said.
``I wouldn't say my results are saying don't do it,'' Nadler
said. ``It just tells us we might not be right on the money right
now with what we are doing.''
Leaders in exercise science are not giving up on core conditioning
as a way to avert low back pain, despite the new study's findings.
Their clinical experience indicates to them that the exercises
work.
``Get a strong stomach and a strong back and stand up straight,
and you are likely to keep your back in its best position,'' said
Dr. Angela D. Smith, an orthopedic surgeon at Children's Hospital
of Philadelphia, and president of the American College of Sports
Medicine. The Nadler study is a good start, but more rigorous
research is needed, she said.
The other experts have varying ideas on how core conditioning
should be done. Smith, for instance, calls for strength building
exercises followed by movement exercises.
At Georgia State University, professor Walt Thompson believes
the problem is that shortened muscles in the back of the leg pull
the pelvis out of alignment. ``I would suggest they should concentrate
on hamstring flexibility,'' he said.
Reebok's approach is to develop the ability to respond to being
off-balance. Reebok Core Training centers on its Core Board, which
twists and tilts. The exercises let muscles get stronger as they
react instinctively to changes in posture, said Gray Cook, a Reebok
trainer and a physical therapist in Danville, Va.
However, Reebok's program also has yet to be proved against
low back pain, said Cook and researcher Reed Humphrey of the Medical
College of Virginia, who is a consultant for the corporation.
More research is needed into the causes of low back pain, and
then a program can be based on those results, Cook said.
``The idea of training the core is empirically sound,'' Humphrey
said. ``It makes sense. But the truth is, we don't know that.
It's been this assumption.''
On the Net:
Abstract of journal article, Medicine and Science in Sports
and Exercise: http://www.ms-se.com;
search for Nadler.
Reebok Core Training: http://www.reebok.com/US/CoreTraining/default.htm
Reference
Source 102
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