Can individuals incorporate proper posture in their workouts to provide effective results and reduce muscle pain in their bodies?
Table of Contents
Many people have started participating in various physical activities to improve their health and wellness. Additionally, engaging in different physical activities can provide numerous beneficial properties for the body as it can help strengthen the various muscles, bones, and ligaments that have succumbed to multiple injuries, strains, or conditions that cause many individuals to be in pain. When many people with musculoskeletal conditions start incorporating exercises as part of their treatment, maintaining proper posture while doing each set of stretches or exercises for each muscle can help reduce any unwanted strain or pulls that can cause more harm than good. Today’s post focuses on how maintaining proper posture can help make any workouts more efficient, how adequate posture can provide stability and strength to weak muscles, and how incorporating proper posture in a customized treatment plan can prevent numerous injuries from reoccurring. We discuss with certified associated medical providers who consolidate our patients’ information to assess many individuals to understand the importance of proper posture. We also inform and guide patients while asking their associated medical provider intricate questions to integrate non-surgical treatments to reduce the overlapping symptoms correlating with poor posture and help create a customized treatment plan that utilizes proper posture during exercises. Dr. Jimenez, D.C., includes this information as an academic service. Disclaimer.
How often do you feel muscle strain on your shoulders, neck, and lower back after a strenuous long day? Do you notice that you feel more hunched over that you feel muscle aches and discomfort? Or do you feel discomfort when stretching your muscles that it causes temporary relief? More often than not, when the world has been on its entire feet or sitting down all day from working, school, or commuting to different locations, many individuals will often slip into an unhealthy habit of slouching when relaxing after a hard day. This, in turn, can cause many individuals to develop neck and back issues that often correlate with an increased stress load in the neck and lower back area. (Hansraj, 2014) Hence, postural correction and its beneficial effects on the back and neck are limited. However, when manual and physical therapists incorporate a PSB (postural-structural-biomechanical) model, it can help ascertain the various causes of musculoskeletal conditions and play an important role in clinical assessment and managing multiple muscle pains. (Lederman, 2011)
So why is it important to exercise to maintain proper posture? Well, when many individuals are in a hunched position from looking at their phones or leaning a lot more while being on the computer or driving, it can cause the muscles in the neck, shoulders, and upper back to be in a static position, causing the muscles to be overused. (Abd El-Azeim et al., 2022) Additionally, say a person is working out to relieve stress, they would have to maintain a proper posture to prevent injuries and use the equipment to achieve muscular activity. When doing an effective workout, many individuals can improve their posture through muscle stretching exercises that can help improve postural alignment, which plays a role in preventing and treating musculoskeletal pain disorders. (Matsutani et al., 2023) At the same time, maintaining proper posture while working out can provide effective, good-quality movement and neutral spinal alignment.(Katzman et al., 2021)
At the same time, having proper posture can help stabilize weak muscles in the upper and lower body quadrants. This is because environmental factors like obesity, repetitive movements, and excessive sitting or standing can cause the muscles to be overused and weak over time when a person is not taking a break. This causes strength imbalances between the muscle groups, causing the accessory muscles to take over the main muscle’s job function and causing the spine to compensate and exaggerate the body’s natural curve. Hence why, exercises, especially core exercises, can help distribute the weight of the overbearing load and can help many individuals reduce the forward lean motion while decreasing muscle strain and fatigue on the upper and lower quadrants. Core exercises can help induce muscular contractions while influencing neuromuscular potentiation. (Lyons et al., 2021) This can help strengthen the weak muscles and stabilize the other muscles so the body can be realigned to invoke proper posture. Also, poor posture can correlate with lumbar spine and pelvis instability as the muscles can become weak. (Kim & Yim, 2020) Incorporating stability exercises into the weak muscles can help many individuals improve their posture when performing exercises.
When it comes to musculoskeletal pain conditions, many individuals can seek out pain specialists like chiropractors, acupuncturists, massage therapists to ease the pain in the muscles from an initial visit. Visiting a chiropractic care office or going to a gym and being assigned to a personal trainer can help practice healthy habits in maintaining and incorporating proper posture in a customized treatment plan. A chiropractic team can help mitigate the pain through spinal adjustments that can help the body realign itself and can work with other associated medical professionals to come up with a customer treatment plan that can help relieve muscle pain, improve the body’s flexibility and mobility, resolve musculoskeletal issues and prevent future pain symptoms from reoccurring. Additionally, a physical therapist can work together with a chiropractor to incorporate targeted exercises to help improve posture while stretching and strengthening the targeted muscles. This, in turn, helps with improving neuromuscular improvement to maintain correct posture. When many individuals develop improper posture over time, it can lead to dire consequences, as muscle pain can cause overlapping risk profiles in the body. Making small adjustments to how people sit or stand can help maintain proper posture. That way, the body can realign itself over time, and many can have a pain-free, healthy lifestyle.
Abd El-Azeim, A. S., Mahmoud, A. G., Mohamed, M. T., & El-Khateeb, Y. S. (2022). Impact of adding scapular stabilization to postural correctional exercises on symptomatic forward head posture: a randomized controlled trial. Eur J Phys Rehabil Med, 58(5), 757-766. doi.org/10.23736/S1973-9087.22.07361-0
Hansraj, K. K. (2014). Assessment of stresses in the cervical spine caused by posture and position of the head. Surg Technol Int, 25, 277-279. www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25393825
Katzman, W. B., Parimi, N., Gladin, A., Wong, S., & Lane, N. E. (2021). Long-Term Efficacy of Treatment Effects After a Kyphosis Exercise and Posture Training Intervention in Older Community-Dwelling Adults: A Cohort Study. J Geriatr Phys Ther, 44(3), 127-138. doi.org/10.1519/JPT.0000000000000262
Kim, B., & Yim, J. (2020). Core Stability and Hip Exercises Improve Physical Function and Activity in Patients with Non-Specific Low Back Pain: A Randomized Controlled Trial. Tohoku J Exp Med, 251(3), 193-206. doi.org/10.1620/tjem.251.193
Lederman, E. (2011). The fall of the postural-structural-biomechanical model in manual and physical therapies: exemplified by lower back pain. J Bodyw Mov Ther, 15(2), 131-138. doi.org/10.1016/j.jbmt.2011.01.011
Lyons, K. D., Parks, A. G., Dadematthews, O., Zandieh, N., McHenry, P., Games, K. E., Goodlett, M. D., Murrah, W., Roper, J., & Sefton, J. M. (2021). Core and Whole Body Vibration Exercise Influences Muscle Sensitivity and Posture during a Military Foot March. Int J Environ Res Public Health, 18(9). doi.org/10.3390/ijerph18094966
Matsutani, L. A., Sousa do Espirito Santo, A., Ciscato, M., Yuan, S. L. K., & Marques, A. P. (2023). Global posture reeducation compared with segmental muscle stretching exercises in the treatment of fibromyalgia: a randomized controlled trial. Trials, 24(1), 384. doi.org/10.1186/s13063-023-07422-w
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The information herein on "Proper Posture: The Key to Effective and Safe Workouts" is not intended to replace a one-on-one relationship with a qualified health care professional or licensed physician and is not medical advice. We encourage you to make healthcare decisions based on your research and partnership with a qualified healthcare professional.
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