Call us to set up an appointment! 225-618-8016

Exercise is Good for Back Pain Relief

Back pain slows life. Back pain disables. Back pain eases with exercise and care. 50% relief is a good outcome in the world of back pain relief be it with exercise or surgery or non-surgical care like chiropractic. In the non-surgical realm, combining non-surgical, chiropractic care at New Roads Chiropractic Center with Cox Technic and exercise even improves the odds for even more back pain relief. In this article, New Roads Chiropractic Center is sharing how exercise can really be of value to our New Roads chiropractic patients. Exercise is something our New Roads back pain patients can control; you can choose to exercise or not. Choosing to exercise just boosts your chance of short term and long term relief. 

One research team states in their report that “The most effective intervention [for back pain] is exercise, with higher benefits in terms of pain and function.” (1) That's a bold statement though hopeful for New Roads back pain sufferers. Experience of your New Roads chiropractor allows confidence that back pain relief is possible with a multi-prong approach to care. New Roads Chiropractic Center offers chiropractic care’s multi-prong approach of spinal manipulation,exercisenutrition, physiological therapeutics and more. New Roads Chiropractic Center helps New Roads back pain sufferers regain some control over their back pain by exercising.

New Roads Chiropractic Center will hear our New Roads patients say “Exercise takes so much time.” Some exercises take very little time. Some exercises have multiple benefits. Learn those, and take less time to exercise. Take for example running in place – any time, any place. It strengthens the abdominal muscles which support the spine. (2) The erector spinae muscles in the spine are important in supporting the spine, too. Ironically, though, the specific-targeting back extension exercises don’t activate the upper lumbar erector spinae or the lumbosacral erector spinae as well as simple running. (3) New Roads back pain patients are in luck then. A little running is effective in multiple ways.

Now, New Roads Chiropractic Center knows that chronic non-specific low back pain influences trunk and lower limb movement (like the knee joint). (4) New Roads Chiropractic Center therefore reminds our New Roads low back pain patients to be careful when walking and/or running but to keep moving.

If you doubt the good of exercise, consider that exercise improves pain and function and relieves depression and anxiety related to back pain. (1) Depression is a real issue when you have back pain. Due to pain or the fear of pain, New Roads Chiropractic Center finds that our New Roads back pain patients will sometimes avoid doing what they usually do like playing with the grandkids or gardening or taking the dog for a walk. Researchers report that exercise done properly helps heal the body and ease the mind!

One last note, especially if you are not an exercise buff, is that even elite athletes like marathon runners get back pain. As a matter of fact, half of runners in a half marathon reported back pain. These same runners, though, report that running the marathon despite their pain improved their pain (49%) rather than worsened it (27%). (5) Isn’t that inspiring?

Contact New Roads Chiropractic Center. Your New Roads chiropractor isn’t going to insist that you become a marathon runner. Promise! But New Roads Chiropractic Center will be encouraged to exercise: just walk or run (in place or a distance). Whatever exercise is recommended for you will be for you and no one else! Exercise is one of the prongs in New Roads Chiropractic Center’s New Roads chiropractic care treatment plan for you.

« View All Featured Exercises
"This information and website content is not intended to diagnose, guarantee results, or recommend specific treatment or activity. It is designed to educate and inform only. Please consult your physician for a thorough examination leading to a diagnosis and well-planned treatment strategy. See more details on the DISCLAIMER page. Content is reviewed by Dr. James M. Cox I."