Monday, May 5, 2014

The End of Back Pain. Access Your Hidden Core To Heal Your Body by Patrick Roth, MD-Book Review

I was given this book a month or so ago for blog review. My husband and I have been reading it since we both occasionally suffer from back pain-him more than me.

The first couple of chapters talk about the back, the spine, changing your mind set before you can make your back stronger. The book also talks about how important it is to educate yourself so that you can understand how your body and back and brain all intertwine together. Talks about different kinds of pain-acute or chronic.

In chapter 4 it talks about core workouts which will strengthen your back. One thing I didn't agree with, is that he states he thinks running is more beneficial than walking. For me, its the opposite. In fact my chiropractor recommended I walk more than run because of my lower right back area being out of alignment and my right knee issues.

The chapter gives you stretches that you can do each week to strengthen your core and back. I like that they describe each stretch, the purpose and action for it. In further weeks they incorporate a stability ball and kettle bell into the exercises/stretches.

We haven't finished the book yet, but so far its been very information. Read below to find out more about this book.








How I Discovered the Hidden Core
By Patrick Roth,
Excerpted from The End of Back Pain: Access Your Hidden Core to Heal Your Body

When I was just starting to practice neurosurgery, I experienced a month-long episode of severe back pain. A magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) test of my lumbar spine revealed a herniated L5–S1 disc, as well as a chronic condition called spondylolisthesis—the result of a stress fracture that had occurred while I was playing football years before (and that undoubtedly had been the cause of my adolescent back pain). I showed my MRI to my neurosurgical peers, who uniformly recommended surgery. I was just starting my career, however, and couldn’t bear the idea of spending several weeks in recovery. 

Although I had always preached the importance of exercise to my patients, I was too frightened to undertake any exertion myself. My pain had improved enough for me to function, but the fear that exercise would bring it back prevented me from following my own advice. Slowly, though, my hypocrisy ate away at me, until I finally got up and, despite the pain, started to exercise. I started slowly, with a few reps, then steadily increased the intensity of my workouts. I felt an immediate difference. My back began to feel a comforting sense of tone and strength. As my back pain slowly receded, I became convinced that I was on the right track. 

I didn’t quite know it yet, but I had just backed my way into discovering the importance of strengthening the back muscles and the correlation between these muscles and back pain, both as a cause and as a solution. I also realized that this kind of exercise could be initiated earlier than is traditionally accepted in the course of a patient’s treatment. My search of the literature revealed similar explorations into exercise strategies, but the strategies described had only sporadic success and thus had never become mainstream. That research convinced me that pain-plagued back muscles could be exercised safely, however, and so I began to treat my more ambitious patients with intense back-strengthening. The patients who committed to the program were rewarded with terrific results. 

Core Considerations 

The muscles of the back—particularly the multifidus muscles—are an integral part of our “core,” but they have too often been overlooked. I like to think of these muscles as the body’s “hidden core.” Our culture has experienced a rich history of strengthening the core to alleviate back pain, a history that peaked in the 1990s when the transversalis muscle (the deep muscle located in the front of your abdomen) was singled out as the essence of the core. This faulty and incomplete definition of “core” suggested that an isolated group of muscles could be developed and used to stabilize the spine and, in turn, reduce back pain. The discipline of Pilates, for example, promotes the strengthening of the transversalis muscle as a means to stabilize the trunk of the body during movement, which limits stress on the spine. 

While this movement has met with some success, it hasn’t turned out to be the panacea that was hoped for in its initial stages. Isolating the front of the core is only half the story, and studies have shown that it can cause an asymmetry that may even weaken the back, an outcome that I will explain later in the book. By contrast, the approach outlined in this book focuses on continuing the strengthening program around the entire back—the front, the sides, and the back—like a brace, or the body’s natural weight-lifting belt. 

Most of us design our exercise programs after a perusal of our appearance in the mirror. We want better abdominal muscles, better pectorals, and better biceps. Strengthening the abdominal muscles may be the brass ring if you want to be the newest cast member of a reality TV showThe key to back health, however, is to focus on muscles that can’t be seen in the mirror. Through this new paradoxical and effective approach to strengthening your core, the exercises of the Hidden Core Workout will help you treat your back pain once and for all. Oh, and you might even look great in the process! 

Over the past twenty-five years, I have seen patients who feel hopeless and helpless because of debilitating, depressing, and disruptive chronic or acute back pain. Perhaps your back pain, too, has led you down a proverbial rabbit hole of inconsistent or contradicting diagnoses, alternative therapies, pain medications, unnecessary surgeries, and even desperation. I understand the physical and emotional effects this particular type of pain can have on a person, especially when the source of the pain is unknown. Back pain is not the problem. How we deal with back pain is. While a sobering 80 percent of us will suffer from back pain at some point—and nearly 50 percent of us have experienced back pain in the past year!—treatment for back pain has been found largely ineffective when scrutinized by modern, evidence-based medicine. 

The “Antifragile” Back 

This book is about changing your back. Before your back can be changed, however, your mind must be changed. The very activities that you imagine will make your back hurt can make your back stronger—and fundamentally different. The transformation of both your back and your mind can be accomplished by leveraging the almost magical synergy that exists between the brain and the body. That transformation also takes advantage of our (and many other creatures’) innate capacity to change in response to stress or any other factor that disrupts our equilibrium. As an example of that capacity, when groups of rats are placed in two different environments, the brains of those in the more varied and challenging environment flourish more. Conventional wisdom views stress (and resulting inflammation) as the foundation of disease and aging. Rather than viewing stress as eroding or weakening, however, we can and should welcome it as a source of growth and health. Stress has a “sweet spot,” however. Too much, and we will be weakened; too little, and we will fail to grow and attain health. Stress also needs to be coupled with adequate “recovery” periods to allow the body to adapt and flourish as a result of that stress. 

The Brain-Body Connection 

Mens sana in corpore sano is Latin for “A healthy mind in a healthy body.” For the purposes of this book we should perhaps modify this to Mens sana in spina sana, or “A healthy mind in a healthy spine.” The brain and the spine are intertwined—not only developmentally, but functionally. One of the themes of this book is that we can leverage this relationship by applying a biological “bait-and-switch.” If we rewire the brain with regard to the spine, for instance, the spine will follow suit and change. Likewise, by equipping the spine with strength, posture, and technique through exercise, we can effectively rewire the brain. 

The above is an excerpt from the book The End of Back Pain: Access Your Hidden Core to Heal Your Body by Patrick Roth M.D. The above excerpt is a digitally scanned reproduction of text from print. Although this excerpt has been proofread, occasional errors may appear due to the scanning process. Please refer to the finished book for accuracy.
© 2014 Patrick Roth, M.D., author of The End of Back Pain: Access Your Hidden Core to Heal Your Body

Author Bio
Dr. Patrick Roth
, author of The End of Back Pain: Access Your Hidden Core to Heal Your Body, is a board-certified neurosurgeon in New Jersey and the chairman of neurosurgery at Hackensack University Medical Center. He is the director of the neurosurgical residency program and is dedicated to the teaching and training of future neurosurgeons. He is a founding member of the North Jersey Brain & Spine Center.

For more information please visit http://www.patrickrothmd.com and follow the author on Facebook and Twitter


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The Power of Exercise, Yes, and The Power of YOU 
By Patrick Roth,
Author of The End of Back Pain: Access Your Hidden Core to Heal Your Body
Perhaps, the most significant hurdle we need to cross in our battle with back pain is in accepting the realization that the solution lies in the hands of the sufferer and not the provider. This is a realization must be accepted by both providers and sufferers, moreover.
A recent NPR special featured a back pain "boot camp" in the Boston area. In this camp, patients with back pain have the opportunity to unlearn their pain. This boot camp is the product of a physiatrist named James Rainville M.D. I recently had the opportunity to speak with Dr. Rainville. During our conversation, he kept saying "we don't help the back pain, our patients do".
I couldn't agree more.
In the boot camp, exercise is the medium through which back pain is mitigated (notice I didn't say "cured").
I thought that this would be an opportunity to mention three effects of exercise that you wouldn't necessarily think of.
Most of us understand exercise as potentiating a classic adaptive response from the body. If our muscles are stressed by exercise, the small damages inflicted will result in repairs that leave our muscles slightly bigger, more energy-filled, and stronger.
Exercise does much more, however.
Exercise can help us unlearn pain. In my book, "The End of Back Pain", I address this through a psychological concept called embodied cognition. This concept reminds us of how our body and brain are inexorably interwoven. It is true that we smile when we are happy, but we are also happy because we smile. Try it yourself, Simply smile and you will feel slightly happier. Likewise, exercising our back will alter our brain's concept of what our backs are capable of. It can convince us that we can use our back without pain or with less pain. It is the old "bait and switch". Bend your back without pain during exercise and you will soon be with less pain in life.
Exercise can help us learn new things. Exercise is now known to cause our brain cells to produce more dendrites and connections to other nerves. It even causes our brain cells to regenerate -- something that we thought couldn't happen. Exercise can even potentiate our children's learning in school.
Exercise can affect our actual genes. If you subscribe to the calorie in- calorie out philosophy of diet, you believe that weight loss comes from either eating less or exercising more. But exercise can bring about actual changes in our genes that have an influence on fat metabolism. One of the way that is mediated is through gene methylation, which is the addition or removal of a cluster of carbon-hydrogen molecules onto the gene. This structural change will change the way the gene operates. A recent study looked at the fat of subjects before and after a six month exercise block. The genes that controlled the fat metabolism were different after six months. This suggests that exercise contributes more than just logging "calories out".
The idea here is not simply that exercise can help your pain -- although it can -- or that exercise can do more than make our muscles stronger -- although it can -- the idea here is that you can control your pain with exercise.
© 2014 Patrick Roth, M.D., author of The End of Back Pain: Access Your Hidden Core to Heal Your Body
Author Bio
Dr. Patrick Roth
, author of The End of Back Pain: Access Your Hidden Core to Heal Your Body, is a board-certified neurosurgeon in New Jersey and the chairman of neurosurgery at Hackensack University Medical Center. He is the director of the neurosurgical residency program and is dedicated to the teaching and training of future neurosurgeons. He is a founding member of the North Jersey Brain & Spine Center.
For more information please visit http://www.patrickrothmd.com and follow the author on Facebook and Twitter





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