Specific sports injuries:
body building, weight lifting and back pain
How weight lifting and body building cause
back pain
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Extending or flexing the back muscles against
resistance (the weight) can result in stress
fractures (such as spondylolysis), muscle strain
and ligament injury during weight lifting and
body building
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Exercises performed during weight lifting
and body building such as clean-and-jerk, dead-lift,
snatch, and squat can be particularly stressful
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Older persons who do weight lifting may already
have some disc degeneration which can make
them more susceptible to the strains of weights
Preventing back pain and sports injuries
from weight lifting
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Know the condition of your back and keep
weight amounts within your personal limits
before you begin weight lifting
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Use less weight but do more repetitions when
lifting weights or body building
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Use a training machine rather than free weights
for certain weight lifting exercises.
Discuss this with both your spine specialist and trainer, understanding there
is a trade-off. A machine may reduce stress on the back (for example, quadriceps
done sitting at a machine versus squats holding weights) and can generally
be used by someone with little or no supervision. But free weights add proprioception
(self-regulation of posture and movement in response to the free weights)
that a machine does not.
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Use a spotter when working with free weights
to protect your back while weight lifting
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Consider wearing a belt for weight lifting
(first ask the recommendation of your trainer
or spine specialist, as there are conflicting
studies on the merits of belts)
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Do not perform exercises such as the clean-and-jerk,
dead-lift, snatch or squat without proper supervision,
as they pose greater risk for back injury and
back pain
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