ROANOKE TIMES

                         Roanoke Times
                 Copyright (c) 1995, Landmark Communications, Inc.

DATE: MONDAY, February 25, 1991                   TAG: 9102230339
SECTION: EXTRA                    PAGE: E6   EDITION: METRO 
SOURCE: HANK HERMAN THE NEW YORK TIMES
DATELINE:                                 LENGTH: Medium


NOT ALL SPORTS ARE A PAIN IN THE BACK

For the runner who can't get out on the road or the tennis player who can't serve because of an aching back, hearing from sports medicine experts that no sport is intrinsically bad for your back, or that sports don't cause injury, they just bring out an existing precondition, is not terribly comforting.

All the weekend athlete really wants to know is which sports are pain free and which ones might be accompanied by some back pain.

Sports that qualify as pain free are swimming, walking, and cross-country skiing, because for the most part they can all be done without sharp, sudden movements, hyperextension (severe arching) of the back, twisting or rotating the trunk, heavy impact, and unexpected, awkward falls - actions that a person with an iffy back should stay away from.

As far as most other popular sports are concerned, you're not going to get a blanket yea or nay from the experts: the safety of the sport depends on what type of back problem you have, your level of conditioning, and your technique.

Still, with all the hedging of bets, some areas of consensus emerge. Here's a sport-by-sport rundown, with one overall common-sense caveat: If it hurts, don't do it!

\ Running. Look around enough and you'll find a practitioner who'll tell you running is no problem for a bad back, but most experts agree that back problems can come from the impact of the foot strike, abnormal foot mechanics, making imbalanced muscles work harder, and running out of your aerobic range (running too fast). Dr. Lyle Micheli, who finds running and people with ruptured disks particularly incompatible, will try to get the nonfanatic fitness jogger to switch over to swimming or cycling. For the patient who loves running and can't live without it, he'll have him cut back to every other day, run on soft surfaces, and get the most impact-absorbent shoes he can find.

\ Bicycling. With its low-impact properties, cycling could almost be classified as pain free. About the only area of dispute concerns which type of biking posture is most congenial to back health, with support being fairly evenly split between the body-over-handlebars style preferred by racers and the midway position used on a mountain bike. Least conducive to back health is the completely upright position.

\ Tennis. With its combination of vigorous torsion, flexion and extension movements, tennis is considered challenging for people with any kind of back pain, especially if they're out of shape or not fully warmed up. The same is true of other racquet sports. Micheli counsels the avid but back-plagued tennis player to flatten out his serve (eliminating excessive arching and twisting), and to wear an elastic back brace with plastic inserts to protect against ill-advised motions.

\ Aerobics. Dowd calls aerobic dancing terrible for all kinds of low-back pain, and adds that if you have back problems, "your chances of doing well in an open aerobics class are very low."

\ Basketball. A high-skill sport that's dangerous for the desk jockey who does no other conditioning, then goes out and plays a hard game once a week. You should have a decent level of muscular strength and fitness to do this safely. Basketball is an especially poor idea for the player with a herniated disk.

\ Golf. Beware the severe torsional movement involved in the golf swing. Ferentz says that for the golf-cart-driving weekender with a bit of a paunch and no abdominal muscle tone, a back injury is more than a remote possibility.



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