Archive for September, 2010

Creating your pain-free home: Part 3- your closet.

Monday, September 27th, 2010

I’ve been doing a series of posts on the Martha Stewart Whole Living Daily blog about ways to make your home more ‘back friendly.’ Sometimes by simply rearranging a few things you can go a long way from preventing your home from causing or exacerbating back pain. The first two posts were on addressing the ergonomics of your kitchen and desk. This week’s post deals with your closet.

Do you have any thoughts or experiences with ‘anatomic bombs’ in your home? Please share them here.

Thanks for stopping by,

Andy

Sciatic Pain- Viewer question via video.

Wednesday, September 22nd, 2010

rosaquestion

Thank you so much for your question Rosa.

Sciatic injury is sort of an open ended definition. To best answer your question, I should first give you two definitions. First, the sciatic nerve is a thick nerve which runs down the back of your leg, and exits the spine between your 5th lumbar vertebra and your sacrum. Sciatic pain, or sciatica is a global term which relates to any pain associated with that nerve. Some people mistakenly call any pain radiating into the leg sciatica- it is really only pain going down the back of the thigh (The front and sides of your thigh are actually a different nerve.)

There are lots of ways in which a nerve can be injured, but sciatic pain is less often the result of nerve injury than it is due to irritation of the nerve by one of its adjacent structures. There are three common causes of sciatic pain. One is L5S1 disc herniation, where the disc has extended beyond its’ normal location, and encroached upon the space where the nerve travels. The second is stenosis, where arthritis, disc degeneration, or other anomaly has caused the hole through which the nerve travels to become reduced in diameter. The third, and in my practice the most common is when a short thick triangular muscle called the piriformis goes into spasm, causing it to thicken in its center and compress the pathway through which the nerve travels through the buttocks.

An actual injury to the nerve can be caused by a trauma, and prolonged compression from any one of the three sources above can cause damage as well resulting in pain, altered sensation, and in really bad cases loss of muscle strength associated with that nerve.

I hope that answers your question. There are some great posts here on how to reduce sciatic pain including this one which describes an effective piriformis stretch. Check back periodically for new tips & suggestions.

Again, thanks for your question.

-Andy

Stay tuned for a new "One Thing" tomorrow featuring an expert from the Ayengar Institute.

Making your desk a pain free zone- My most recent post on Martha Stewart’s Whole Living Daily.

Tuesday, September 21st, 2010

Everyone’s home has hidden ‘anatomic bombs’ or places where the ergonomics of their living space are compromised and may contribute to back pain. On Whole Living Daily, I am presenting a series of ways to make your home a more back friendly space. This post gives simple suggestions for making your desk safer for your back.

Stop back throughout the week for more posts from Martha Stewart’s Health & Wellness Expo in New York.

Be well,

Andy

Returning to London in 8 weeks to tell them a little about back pain…

Interview with Nicole Smith, Nuad Boran (Thai massage) practitioner.

Monday, September 20th, 2010

NicoleSmith

Thursday I was a guest at the Martha Stewart Health Expo for MSLO employees, and had the good fortune to meet Nicole Smith, a practitioner of Nuad Boran, Thai Yoga. I have had a real interest in this modality for a long time, as it combines many components of movement and massage therapy into one series of techniques. I regret not having shot video of an actual treatment session, but here is a brief sample of some techniques I found on YouTube. Ms. Smith’s approach had more of a flow to it. I will try to get some video of her approach in the near future.
As a big advocate of stretching, I really enjoyed watching her approach to fitness.
Look for some more updates from Martha Headquarters in New York this week. Thanks for joining me.
Be well!
-Andy

Mosaic wall, Old City, Jerusalem

The Back Friendly Kitchen: My most recent post on Martha Stewart’s Whole Living Daily blog

Sunday, September 12th, 2010

This weeks post is the first in a series of ways to make your home more ‘back friendly.’ In this first post, I identify ways to reorganize things in your kitchen in order to minimize the likelihood of hurting your back. Look for tips for other rooms in your home over the following weeks.

This Thursday, I will be doing demonstrations at Martha headquarters in New York, as well as explaining other ways to make your home more back friendly. Wouldn’t that be a cool segment for ‘Martha’?

Enjoy!

-Andy

The marketplace area at Covent Garden

Viewer Question from Austrailia re: Surgery

Wednesday, September 8th, 2010

karen

Ordinarily, I wouldn’t go into such detail in an MRI report when responding to a viewer question, but in this instance, it actually served a purpose: The issues discussed in the MRI sounded really complicated, but in fact they were only describing 2 simple issues- There was a disc bulge pressing on the spinal cord, and there was a reduction in the size of the hole through which a nerve exits the spine. SOOOOO….all that complicated medical jargon provides us physicians with good specificity so we know exactly what we are looking for, and where it is- but the problem the report is describing is actually pretty straight forward.

Karen, I hope some of this information is helpful. Please let us know how you move forward with this.

All my best wishes for your speedy recovery, however you proceed.

-Andy