
When I give my patients the green light to resume their regular exercise routine, we proceed with caution. Before any running, jumping, or lifting, the person must have a perfect air squat. Their pelvis must not shift to one side. Their knees must track out while feet stay firmly on the ground about hip-width apart. The axial skeleton must stay upright, active, and with no collapse of the lumbar spine (“butt-winking”). Ten perfect squats a day along with core activations and individual specific mobility are the only things I allow during the first week of recovery from a low back injury.
When the first week of activity has been completed and there is no discomfort, then we move on. During the second phase, I allow running, rowing, swimming, air squats, strict pullups, hollow holds, and perfect pushups. Yes, there will be muscle soreness from the de-conditioning that has occurred due to the injury, but if any of those things, aggravate the low back, then I encourage my patients to seek coaching for specialties such as running or gymnastics to learn the correct biomechanics.

As you can see, there are a number of movements the athlete (you) can now do: running, rowing, front squats, hollow holds, pushups, and pullups. This is a great foundation to get back into your regular exercise program. If all is progressing nicely, start to add things back in. Do one thing a day and wait to see how your body responds the next day. Only introduce one new movement at a time.
There are a few movements that you need to approach with extreme caution when recovering from a back injury:
- Putting any weight overhead requires an extremely stable and active midline. This means having a solid hollow position. Dusty Hyland teaches this position very well. Do not take this movement too lightly.
- Deadlifts are great for strengthening your posterior chain, but these have to be done correctly. Use light weights and focus on the biomechanics of the movement.
- Back squats put a lot of stress on the posterior chain. For people who have had a disc issue, I advise waiting nine to twelve months of pain free exercise before going heavy on back squats.
Injuries can be a blessing in disguise. Continue to work with your chiropractor or physical therapist as your progress. Set the intention for correct biomechanics and you will be a stronger, more efficient athlete in the long run.
https://breakingmuscle.com/mobility-recovery/how-to-return-to-training-after-a-low-back-injury
No comments:
Post a Comment