Back pain after exercise, stretching ideas anyone?
abijones75
Posts: 116 Member
My back is killing me, did a brutal circuits class this morning plus 40 mins on cross trainer and my lower back started to really hurt shortly afterwards. Can anyone advise on some good stretches to do? I've done laying on back with knees to chest, both together and singly. Really don't want to cancel gym tomorrow
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Replies
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Use a foam roller and roll it out? And some heat.
It is hard to stretch a touchy back very well, and I have found it can be counter productive. Maybe because the muscles involved are large ones?
Wait! Your back is killing you and you want to go back to the gym tomorrow? Be careful with that.0 -
Well I'm hoping I can sort it by then! I have an abs class tomorrow but I'll tell the trainer about my back, if he doesn't think I should do it then I won't. I haven't got a foam roller, will have to get one. The pain is an inch or so above my tail bone, it's bloody sore!0
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I think you need to cancel the class until your lower back starts feeling better. I am guessing you need stronger abs before you do such an aggressive circuit again. Kind of ironic, isn't it? Cancelling the abs class you need.
This is a minor setback. But you want to take care of that back. So that you can keep going for years to come.0 -
abijones75 wrote: »My back is killing me, did a brutal circuits class this morning plus 40 mins on cross trainer and my lower back started to really hurt shortly afterwards. Can anyone advise on some good stretches to do? I've done laying on back with knees to chest, both together and singly. Really don't want to cancel gym tomorrow
Do you stretch before your class or working out? I have low back problems too, so I always stretch out my body before and after working out. A good stretch for my lower back that seems to help me is. Open my legs wide and bend my upper body as low as I can, with my hands I try to reach as far back behind my legs to stretch the back out a lil more. I hold the stretch for around 10 seconds or so, I repeat it a few times. Also like the other person mentioned, get a foam roller to roll out before and after your session if you like. Hope this helps and your back feels better.0 -
abijones75 wrote: »My back is killing me, did a brutal circuits class this morning plus 40 mins on cross trainer and my lower back started to really hurt shortly afterwards. Can anyone advise on some good stretches to do? I've done laying on back with knees to chest, both together and singly. Really don't want to cancel gym tomorrow
Have somebody who knows what they are doing check your posture. Often back pain comes from bad posture. If that isn't the issue, you need to start slower and work up to your current workout. You may be doing too much too soon. You really don't want to fool around with the back.0 -
Definitely get someone to check your posture and form. It's not uncommon to be sore from lifting.0
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Yoga - child, downward dog, forward bend, triangle are the ones that help me loosen a tight lower back!0
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Thanks everyone, I've ordered a foam roller and I'll try out those stretches, and I'll have a chat with my pt about it tomorrow.0
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I'd get a trainer to check your form. Once you get into heavier weights it's easy to hurt yourself. If you're talking about muscle stiffness rather than pain, then there are multiple yoga routines to stretch back muscles and improve muscle strength.0
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I have intermittent back pain issues that I have tried to learn how to manage. I spend every workout, whether its exercising or just running (I hurt my back on the treadmill last time, go figure) by stretching before and after each workout. It's amazing how much of my back pain is related to my legs and how tight they get.
There are specific exercises my doctor gave me after I really hurt it 5-6 years ago. Cat/Cow (get on all 4's, arch your back up, then lower it down and stick your butt out), back extensions (lay on your tummy propped up on your elbows, and raise your torso up by pushing down on your elbows), alternating hand/leg extensions (on all 4's again, stick out your right hand and your left foot at the same time, hold for 5-10 secs, then switch to alternate leg/hand), pelvic tilt (lay on your back, knees up, feet on floor, tighten your core and push your lower back into the floor, hold for 10-15 sec, repeat), side planks (30 secs or so each side). There's a few more but I'll spare you!
Foam rollers do nothing for my back pain. Good advice above, a lot of back issues are related to core strength, but don't forget to work all of your core: front, sides and back!
Best advice: if your back hurts today, do not push it. I had to take a week off last time. 7 days of rest is nothing compared to trashing your back for months on end. Let it heal up and enjoy a few days of rest!0 -
Stretch your legs! A lot of Low Back pain is the result of the tightening in your upper leg muscles.0
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Be smart about pain. It is a signal from your body. I had back surgery, not fun!0
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davidcliff wrote: »Stretch your legs! A lot of Low Back pain is the result of the tightening in your upper leg muscles.
same with your glutes!!
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Thanks everyone, pain is nowhere near as bad today thankfully. I did lots of yoga stretches last night before bed, and slept with a hot water bottle against the sore part of my back plus took ibuprofen. I have an abs class today which is a lot of core exercises, and it starts and finishes with stretches so I'm going to go to that, but I will discuss my back pain with the trainer first. The pain is around the sacroiliac joint area and I've had problems there before, just hope this isn't going to be an ongoing thing cos I've really got into the gym lately and would hate to have to give it up for any length of time. But I will be sensible about it.0
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It could be a variety of things, but don't let it discourage you. Take a break if needed.
Back pain could just be the muscles sore from working out, improper form (I see this a lot with people doing squats), improper posture, weak back muscles, or another health condition or prior incident that may make your back more sensitive to certain activities.
I found that my back would hurt a lot when I first started getting into weight lifting and training. My trainer advised me to start trying to focus on keeping proper posture in regular day-to-day life, and doing more back exercises to build the muscles up for more support. After a few weeks I never really noticed the pain again, well, unless I have an extreme back workout day, but its definitely a sore muscle feeling =P0 -
I'm a crossfit athlete and my best stretch afterwards is using a roller- you can buy them online or in certain shops and they're brilliant for loosening your muscles and keeping them well afterIintense workouts.0
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tcunbeliever wrote: »Yoga - child, downward dog, forward bend, triangle are the ones that help me loosen a tight lower back!
I second this, doing yoga has been wonderful for my back (I'm tall and have alot of back). I also do planking for a minute and a half almost everyday. I seldom have back pain anymore.0 -
Might be worth your time to visit a chiropractor. I had chronic upper back and neck pain for years and migraines that just kept getting worse...a chiro made all the difference for me because all my problems were related to each other. Yoga also seems to help...I notice I have to adjust my rearview mirror in my car after yoga. This past weekend I couldn't get to a class, so I got a yoga DVD from the library...it was called Yoga for Stress Relief or something like that. It was really easy yoga (seemed geared toward an older crowd) but all focused on releasing tension from back and neck.0
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Do you see a chiropractor? If you don't you might want to start and get your back adjusted. Have you tried Epsom salt baths yet? If you haven't your missing out. If will relax your muscles after a tough workout.
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Work on strengthening your core and do a thorough dynamic warmup before the main part of the workout.0
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Usually back pain is from improper form with too heavy of weights. Vid yourself and post and some of the more experience people here can help you. I0
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If you have pain then rest your back, it will be a shorter recovery time than I hiring yourself further and when you do Introduce some stretches take it really steady.
If your lower back is pulling chances are you have tight hip flexors and hamstrings so I would gentry stretch those out 3 times a day for a few days.0 -
Here's a good lower body warm up video. Make sure to warm up/stretch before and after workout
https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=eoSqYMaOOAI0
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