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| Push ups and back pain (Read 874 times) |
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posted: 7/19/2008 at 12:36 PM |
Hi all,
It seems that every time I start doing push-ups or do the plank for my abs, after a week or so, I develop lower back pain. So I stop doing them or any core exercises. I do focus on keeping my back straight while doing the exercise. Has anyone experienced this? Any tips on how to avoid this?
Thanks,
- Ronald |
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posted: 7/19/2008 at 1:46 PM |
| Are you using teh stability ball for any of your core exercises. I found it worked great. |
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posted: 7/19/2008 at 4:17 PM |
| You may want to concentrate on just doing abs/core workouts for a while and skip the push-ups. Alternately, you could do knee push-ups, which although easier on the arms are also easier on the back. Good luck in getting it sorted out! |
| Working my way down from 174 to 159 pounds. Currently back at 174. Darn T-day & stress... >:( |
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posted: 7/19/2008 at 9:13 PM |
| I started the push-up challenge 4 weeks ago and I had some bad back pains during the first week or so, and then they just went away. Maybe it's a matter of your body adjusting? |
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posted: 7/20/2008 at 9:16 PM |
Thanks for the advice.
I think I'm going to focus on abs for a bit as Wingz suggested and try push-ups again after a while. I don't think it's going to get better with time if I keep doing them, they actually appeared after a few weeks and were just getting worse. As for the stability ball, I use them whenever I'm at the gym but I don't have one at home. Those things are just too big for our small place. I was also contemplating getting one to use as a chair at work. But I think I'm going to wait 'til my back is better first.
- R |
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| view log Future RX-7.5 owner |
posted: 7/21/2008 at 3:10 AM |
As people always say with running, just do less of them. It sounds like your lower back is the weak link, so do half or a third of the amount of core work you were doing, and build up.
It works with any physical conditioning workouts, not just running. I was talking to a guy I know who does powerlifting a few years ago and was amazed at how similar the training periodization cycles were. |
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posted: 7/22/2008 at 9:03 PM |
I learned to do a modified push-up, legs bent feet over lap and resting on my knees. I find this much more comfortable on my back.
Quote from Viich on 7/21/2008 at 3:10 AM:As people always say with running, just do less of them. It sounds like your lower back is the weak link, so do half or a third of the amount of core work you were doing, and build up.
It works with any physical conditioning workouts, not just running. I was talking to a guy I know who does powerlifting a few years ago and was amazed at how similar the training periodization cycles were.
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| LPH |
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posted: 7/23/2008 at 1:06 PM |
I'm glad you posted this. I've been doing the pushup challenge and made it through 4 weeks fine. Now that I hit week five though I've had excruciating back pain. On Sunday after the week 5 exhaution test my back got sore at night but was fine but Monday morning. Then Monday afternoon I did workout 1 (which kicked my butt). I woke up Tueday and couldn't even get out of bed. Even today it is still really painful, though I can move around a bit if I' careful.
I didn't know what would cause such sudden and intense back pain like this, but maybe it's the pushups. I guess I need to cut back on the challenge a bit if I want to be able to live my normal life. |
Shaunna
Working my way down from 167 lbs to 147 pounds.
Currently 164 lbs.
All I want for Christmas is my two good knees . . . |
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posted: 7/26/2008 at 5:11 PM |
| I always do about 30 minutes of yoga sit ups on my yoga mat with feet up on a wall which really isolates the abs and is easy on the back, then move to my stability ball and move around doing crunches at different angles to get loose, so in other words I warm up my abs, then I flip over and do pushups and they are so easy, in the army you need to do about 50 push ups in a two minute time, so my goal starts there. |
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posted: 7/26/2008 at 5:25 PM |
Back pain. I dropped the yoga and went with pilates with KARON KARTER. It really has made a difference
with the lower back pain. |
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posted: 7/26/2008 at 6:01 PM |
| If you're having back pain, how's your posture while doing the pushups? If someone lays a yardstick lengthwise on you, it should touch in 3 places: back of your head, between your shoulder blades and on your butt. |
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posted: 7/27/2008 at 12:27 AM |
| Quote from Wingz on 7/19/2008 at 4:17 PM: Alternately, you could do knee push-ups, which although easier on the arms are also easier on the back.
This works well for me. I use push up handles to elevate up a bit - I don't think this eases up that much on the arms - you will still get strong/toned and you save your back.
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posted: 8/3/2008 at 10:47 AM |
| I would get back pain (more discomfort than actual pain) in the same way after plank, push ups and long runs. Adding back extensions to my core routine took care of it pretty quickly. I either do them on a stability ball on or the back extension thing-y at the gym. |
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