Red Flags

The good news about red flags is that a question and answer format is generally agreed by emergency room experts as enough to tell if you need additional testing, or if they should send you home with a Motrin prescription and the usual advice to stretch and to “rest but stay active,” whatever that’s supposed to mean.

The bad news is that none of the questions are definitive, there is no exact consensus as to what questions should be asked and how many of them need to be answered yes before you need an x-ray, CT-scan, MRI, blood, or other types of tests. So while there is no definitive list of questions, there is reasonable agreement, and below I’m doing my best to blend questions from multiple sources together, make them understandable for laymen, and describe what positive “yes” answers could mean. 

A few, or even one, yes answers SHOULD worry you. If you have them, I would think an emergency room physician or family practitioner would be the best trained professional to get you additional tests or referrals. Or to verify that all’s well and you can safely proceed with SpineFITyoga.

Though rare, cancer can affect the bones and discs of the spine causing pain. Usually when it does so, it has spread from another spot in the body that was affected first. By far the best predictor of current or future cancer is a past cancer. Thus, a yes to this question substantially raises the odds that current spine pain is from cancer as opposed to, or in addition to, basic spine pain caused poor posture, coordination, and fitness.

Weight loss, for no apparent reason, is a known symptom of cancer, increasing the odds that spine pain is not basic.

While bed rest is generally considered a poor treatment for basic spine pain, if the pain is mechanical or postural, there are usually some positions that feel better than others, at least in the short term. Pain that is progressively worsening over weeks, is unchanging or unrelenting, regardless of rest and postural positions increases the odds that it could result from cancer or infection.

Basic spine pain does not cause a fever. A fever could indicate an infection of spine, which while again is rare, can and does happen.

A significant trauma increases the risk that the resulting pain is from a vertebral fracture.

Osteoporosis (reduced bone mineral density) increases the risk of vertebral fractures resulting from moderate, and even mild traumas (small falls, slower car accidents, even a cough or sneeze). If osteoporosis is advanced, compression fractures, common in the thoracic (middle) spine can happen even without trauma, often resulting in the noticeable rounded or hunchback postures in frailer elderly, often considered part of the normal aging process. Having osteoporosis or a compression fracture does not mean you can’t do SpineFitYoga, but you almost certainly want it to have recent fractures healed first. After which point SpineFitYoga, initiated cautiously with P5 perhaps before F5, and progressed with the USER RULES rigorously adhered to, should help slow and even reverse osteoporotic changes, lessening the risk of future fractures.

Being over 50 years of age increases the likelihood of osteoporosis, diagnosed or not, and likewise increases risk of fractures from milder trauma. Over 70 years of age raises the risk yet again, as osteoporosis may be more advanced.

Prolonged use of corticosteroids weakens bones, increasing risk of fractures from otherwise milder stresses.

Loss of urinary or bowel control could indicate cauda equina syndrome. This is when nerves affecting each function, and more, are being pinched off in the low back, sometimes indicating a significant obstruction in the lumbar region requiring immediate surgery to decompress the nerves and prevent permanent disability. Cauda equina syndrome is a medical emergency!

Numbness or tingling in the saddle region is also indicative of cauda equina syndrome, described above.

Basic back pain almost always hurts in the back, likewise basic neck pain almost always hurts in the back of the neck or shoulder blades. If back pain is going to refer pain anywhere it is usually down the leg. If neck pain is going to refer pain anywhere it is usually to the shoulder blades, or down one of the arms. If pain is in your side, or abdominal region it could be from any number of causes, and spine strain or degeneration is unlikely to be one. If you can feel the throbbing pulse of your heart beat in your abdomen it could be an abdominal aortic aneurysm; a rare but serious emergency condition for which you should go to an emergency room immediately. Pain in the front of the neck or throat region is unlikely to result from basic neck pain, and would also warrant consulting a physician.

Progressive worsening muscle weakness of the arms and legs is indicative of something growing in the spine, especially serious if both right and left sides are affected.

Rheumatoid Arthritis (RA) weakens bone, cartilage, and ligaments throughout the body. This can be especially dangerous in relation to SpineFitYoga and the neck if the RA has weakened and destabilized the upper cervical spine, specifically C1-C2, in what is known as atlantoaxial subluxation. This can cause severe neck pain, headaches, numbness and weakness in the arms. What makes it especially dangerous is a portion of the C2 vertebra can press up into the brain causing sudden death. As with the rest of the red flags, this is a rare but very serious condition. The exercises of SpineFitYoga teach a neutral spine posture lessening stress on the passive structures of the neck, and strengthen the neck muscles increasing the bodies ability to stabilize the neck as well as the rest of the body. Thus SpineFitYoga should help many with RA, but if you have RA, having a rheumatologist or neurologist clear you for atlantoaxial subluxation before attempting the higher stress neck specific exercises like NeBrids, LoBrids, and FloRos in particular seems prudent.

Basic neck and back pain can be very painful and can be inflammatory. However, that inflammation is usually deep in the spine and DOES NOT show up on the outside body as redness, heat, or swelling. Such signs could be indicative of a cyst or skin infection. If it’s the latter you are probably going to want to see a physician for antibiotic treatment, and not expect SpineFitYoga to be the fix.

This one you don’t really know until after the fact, and could be the result of a few factors. Depending how bad your original condition is, it can take just a few days or many weeks and sometimes months for pain to fully resolve. If you are too far down the degenerative cascade, pain may never fully resolve and you are doing your best to keep it manageable. In such case SpineFitYoga can almost surely still help, however, pain should at least lessen within a few weeks with SpineFitYoga. Especially if you are incorporating the lessons learned in P5 throughout your day and thus no longer continuing the same behavior that damaged your spine in the first place. It could be that you are being too inconsistent with SpineFitYoga, or not doing the exercises properly. Regardless, if you have given SpineFitYoga, or any spine treatment a shot for 4 or so weeks without any benefit, and especially if your symptoms are getting worse, that’s a red flag that something out of the ordinary is wrong and needs to be corrected.

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group subtitle goes here, AND CAPS

An OVERUSE INJURY often USED MORE when you try and rest it. [subtitle text?]

Is low back pain seriously as mysterious as the origin of the universe? Is curing it really that difficult? Is it impossible? Is back pain just a normal part of life that we should learn to accept? One would almost think so, but no. Unfortunately, clarity on the cause and treatment of back pain has yet to trickle over from biomechanics journals to medical schools. Such clarity might even be hindered by the considerable vested interests of conventional and alternative medicine alike. So, what happens is that people with back pain get shuffled from practitioner to practitioner, alternative and conventional, never finding long-term relief and often ending up with a diagnosis of fibromyalgia, a failed back surgery, a referral to pain management, and an opioid addiction, er… prescription. 

DON’T LOOK DOWN! 

Worldwide, neck pain is less of an issue than back pain, but still is still a huge problem, ranking 4th in causes of years lived with disability. 

How much should you stretch a hypermobile joint? Is “NOT AT ALL” too obvious?

Exercise taking you from rehab to advanced, EFFICIENT, TOTAL BODY FITNESS , ALL AT HOME.  If you can max Level-3, film it, cause YOU’RE THE FIRST.


Basic Details Group Header

details subtitle goes here

Low Back Pain [this is a text item]

An OVERUSE INJURY often USED MORE when you try and rest it. 

Is low back pain seriously as mysterious as the origin of the universe? Is curing it really that difficult? Is it impossible? Is back pain just a normal part of life that we should learn to accept? One would almost think so, but no. Unfortunately, clarity on the cause and treatment of back pain has yet to trickle over from biomechanics journals to medical schools. Such clarity might even be hindered by the considerable vested interests of conventional and alternative medicine alike. So, what happens is that people with back pain get shuffled from practitioner to practitioner, alternative and conventional, never finding long-term relief and often ending up with a diagnosis of fibromyalgia, a failed back surgery, a referral to pain management, and an opioid addiction, er… prescription. 

Is low back pain seriously as mysterious as the origin of the universe? Is curing it really that difficult? Is it impossible? Is back pain just a normal part of life that we should learn to accept? One would almost think so, but no. Unfortunately, clarity on the cause and treatment of back pain has yet to trickle over from biomechanics journals to medical schools. Such clarity might even be hindered by the considerable vested interests of conventional and alternative medicine alike. So, what happens is that people with back pain get shuffled from practitioner to practitioner, alternative and conventional, never finding long-term relief and often ending up with a diagnosis of fibromyalgia, a failed back surgery, a referral to pain management, and an opioid addiction, er… prescription. 

Neck Pain

DON’T LOOK DOWN! 

Worldwide, neck pain is less of an issue than back pain, but still is still a huge problem, ranking 4th in causes of years lived with disability. 

Progressive Fitness

How much should you stretch a hypermobile joint? Is “NOT AT ALL” too obvious?

Exercise taking you from rehab to advanced, EFFICIENT, TOTAL BODY FITNESS , ALL AT HOME.  If you can max Level-3, film it, cause YOU’RE THE FIRST.



Focus

Eliminating SPINE PAIN is the primary focus, but with that, a LOT comes free

Low Back Pain

Is low back pain seriously as mysterious as the origin of the universe? Is curing it really that difficult? Is it impossible? Is back pain just a normal part of life that we should learn to accept? One would almost think so, but no. Unfortunately, clarity on the cause and treatment of back pain has yet to trickle over from biomechanics journals to medical schools. Such clarity might even be hindered by the considerable vested interests of conventional and alternative medicine alike. So, what happens is that people with back pain get shuffled from practitioner to practitioner, alternative and conventional, never finding long-term relief and often ending up with a diagnosis of fibromyalgia, a failed back surgery, a referral to pain management, and an opioid addiction, er… prescription. 

Neck Pain

Worldwide, neck pain is less of an issue than back pain, but still is still a huge problem, ranking 4th in causes of years lived with disability. 

Hypermobility Syndrome

Technically, this is too wordy for an introduction, but all of it needs to be said. And when I brought up the topic in an anatomy class in India, every head turned, particularly when I talked about the connection with anxiety. 

To be semantically correct, since 2017, the correct term is “Ehlers Danlos Syndrome Hypermobility Type (H-EDS). However, let’s stick with Hypermobility Syndrome (HS). HS is a genetic condition where the connective tissue of your body is more stretchy than most, and it affects many a good famous yogi. Once you know what to look for, you can just spot it. Unfortunately, it’s more of a medical condition than a quality, which in a way I can see it as being mindful to “own” but stretching hypermobile joints is certainly not a way to liberation outlined Yoga Sutras. Rather, stretching joints that are already unstable is, in a way, doubling down on the source of the problem, much as if an asthmatic took to smoking cigarettes. Which is too bad because yoga otherwise has so much to offer. Hypermobility syndrome turns out to be WAY more common than people think. It’s strongly linked to chronic pain, to include both neck and back pain, and surprisingly anxiety, particularly panic attacks.

Do you have it? If you are female (it’s about 3x more common in females) and you like yoga, odds are that you do. Learn for sure in about 1 minute by doing these self tests. 

So what’s the connect with anxiety? That’s actually fascinating and knowing it leads to solutions your psychologist probably doesn’t know about. FYI, I have a love hate relationship with psychology. I love the RESEARCH, it truly is insightful, but much like physical therapy, what the average CLINICAL doctor knows is so far removed from the best of research findings average it hardly does any good at all. So would I tell a loved one with depression and anxiety to see a psychologist or psychiatrist? Unless I knew the persons work ahead of time, no I would not. Otherwise research tends to suggest that little has changed since Timothy Leary found in the 60s that with any given treatment or method a third get better, a third get worse, and a third stay the same. 

Digression aside, the link between hypermobility and anxiety is a little complicated but can be summed up as such. Tendons and ligaments are made of collagen which extra stretchy in those with hypermobility. Blood vessels walls are also made of collagen and are extra stretchy too. Such that when a person with hypermobility stands up, like anyone blood wants to rush out of the head and into the abdomen and legs. This happens extra in people with hypermobility owing to the looser blood vessels, and as such there is a tendency to get light headed and pass out. The heart attempts to compensate for this by beating harder and faster to return blood to the head. If successful you won’t pass out, but the elevated heart rate simulates a panic attack. The brain gets the heart to pump faster by secreting the “fight or flight” (which also feels like a panic attack) hormone adrenaline. But this perpetual secretion of adrenaline and racing heart rate for no apparent reason makes you feel crazy, yet it’s a physical problem. Worse the increased adrenaline is thought to be one of the reasons why people with anxiety don’t sleep well, combined with lying in worrying (RUMINATION) about why you can’t sleep in spite of the fact that you feel fatigued. The combination of sleep loss and rumination then appears to be the primary link between anxiety and depression. The increased pain secondary to unstable joints isn’t doing you any favors when you try and go to bed at night either. 

The plot thickens in relation to muscles and anxiety. Those with postural tachycardia (rapid heart rate upon standing) literally have smaller hearts, so when they try and beat to keep blood in the head their stroke volume (the amount of blood pumped per heart beat) is measurably less. This is thought to be because hypermobility makes the joints less stable running and jumping in proportionally more difficult. So they are often less athletic as children, often preferring arts and science to sports and recess. It’s not that their heart size is genetically smaller, but that the lesser physical activity does not make the heart grow to it’s normal size. Worse is that often when they do try and be more active their heart, because of it’s smaller size, races more, again simulating/causing a panic attack, which can be very discouraging. The fantastic news here, however, is that recent research has shown that a combination of cardiovascular and strength training, started gradually and increased over time has been shown to be highly effective at increasing heart size, stroke volume, lessening heart rates in patients suffering orthostatic tachycardia.

Another thing about that blood pooling in the legs and abdomen? Interestingly only about 30% goes in the legs while 70% pools in the abdomen. Stretching/loosening your abdominal wall with back bends? It’s hard for me to think of something worse. On the contrary strength training increases muscle tone or tightness, and you get a lot more core strength and muscle with a tight push-up than with an floppy upward dog. A tone that better supports the blood vessels helping with venous return. 

Oh, and that “emotional release” you sometimes see in yoga? Wherein after doing core stretch/squish exercises, someone will, for no apparent reason, break out into tears? And the instructor runs over to comfort them, talking about “repressed memories” brought to the surface or “emotions stored in the connective tissue?” NO! That’s a tachycardia, a panic attack, or blood rushing from your brain into your abdomen, and you needed strength, not stretch. The supportive environment, the “collective energy” of the group, is truly awesome, and part of what’s great about modern yoga. But it needs to be connected to better exercise. #SpineFITyoga 

And finally, yes, I understand that if you have hypermobility, your muscles feel tight. That’s because they are trying their hardest to hold your joints together. Muscle spasms are your body’s attempt to make you hold still. Stretching only makes their job harder. Make it easier for them by strengthening and contrary to your expectations you’ll feel loser and more relaxed.

Two more tangential factors: A lot of yogis are vegetarian or vegan. I’m pescatarian myself so I very much approve. However, there is research that found that vegetarians, and more so vegans have diets low in salt. Low salt diets can lower blood pressure, which for most people is a good thing. However, for those with orthostatic hypotension/tachycardia the lesser blood pressure is in part related to a lesser blood volume. So not only are the muscles often weaker and looser, but because salt makes the blood hold more water, a low salt diet, lessen blood volume, so there is literally less fluid hold pressure in the brain. That’s worth taking into account with salting your vegetables, or taking some salt tablets. I have not yet scienced up the ideal dose, but 4 grams per day (5 grams is a teaspoon) is the recommended daily allowance. Maybe mention that to your doctor if you have “postural anxiety.” Last (for now) low levels of creatine, generally found in meat has been associated with higher levels of depression. Creatine Monohydrate has been used for decades as a safe and natural supplement for weightlifters to increase muscle strength, and more recent research shows it helps with depression. The good news is that it seems to work particularly well for vegans and vegetarians because their normal diets are low in creatine and better still the supplement does not come from animal sources. 5 grams per day is what I take and is a fairly evidence based dosage. It’s also very inexpensive these days, with a years supply often costing less than $50. 

Progressive Fitness

Kicker, small but all caps, I think.

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As a physical therapist, who liked to stay abreast of the best research and methods, and I was blogging, amongst other things, about spine pain, including the pros and cons of different treatments, as well as my method, at the time, of total body strengthening done with a neutral spine

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As a physical therapist, who liked to stay abreast of the best research and methods, and I was blogging, amongst other things, about spine pain, including the pros and cons of different treatments, as well as my method, at the time, of total body strengthening done with a neutral spine

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As a physical therapist, who liked to stay abreast of the best research and methods, and I was blogging, amongst other things, about spine pain, including the pros and cons of different treatments, as well as my method, at the time, of total body strengthening done with a neutral spine

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