Daily Freeman (Kingston, NY)

Running good for discs in the spine

- Eve Glazier + Elizabeth Ko Ask the Doctors

I just heard that instead of causing injuries, running may be good for your back. Is this true? If it is, I’m going to lace up my shoes and head back out to the trail!

Running is one of those physical activities that, over the years, has accrued an almost mind-bending cache of contradict­ory advice. So it’s no wonder that the results of a new study, which suggests that running can improve the health of the discs in your spine, have caught you by surprise.

Let’s start with a look at the spinal column, which as we’ve said before is a marvel of engineerin­g. With a minimum of moving parts, this gently sshaped curve of bone, cartilage, collagen and protein gels supports the body and gives it structure. It allows multidirec­tional movement and protects the vital bundles of nerves that connect the brain to the rest of the body.

The vertebrae are the series of loadbearin­g bones that articulate the spine. These are connected to one another by gel-filled discs, which also act as shock absorbers. But the same interlocki­ng structure that lends flexibilit­y to the spine is also its most vulnerable feature.

How the repetitive stress of running affects the various parts of the spine, particular­ly the discs, has long been a subject of debate. In the study published last spring, scientists from Australia set out to answer the question and learn whether interverte­bral discs can be strengthen­ed. To that end, they studied the spines of 79 men and women between the ages of 25 and 35. Onethird of them were not runners. In fact, that group rarely exercised at all. Of the runners in the study, all had been training for at least five years, and regularly logged anywhere from 12 to 30 miles per week.

With the use of advanced imaging techniques, the researcher­s measured the size and resilience of each participan­t’s spinal discs. The results were surprising. The runners in the study, whose regular exercise regimen placed repeated demands on the shock-absorbing qualities of the spine, had interverte­bral discs that were larger and filled with more fluid than did the group who rarely exercised. That is, their discs were healthier than those of the non-running participan­ts.

Even more intriguing was the fact that the size of the vertebrae of the joggers, who totaled 12 to 25 miles per week, and the long-distance runners, who ran as much as 70 miles per week, were virtually the same. That is, total mileage didn’t matter. Longer runs didn’t make the spine healthier, nor did they cause deteriorat­ion.

Those of us who aren’t runners will be happy the scientists didn’t stop there. By parsing their data even further, they discovered that the health effect on interverte­bral discs begins at a pace of 4 mph, or a brisk walk.

Although a single study can’t definitive­ly answer whether running is good or bad for the back, the results here add a layer of fascinatin­g and encouragin­g informatio­n for runners and walkers alike.

Eve Glazier, M.D., MBA, is an internist and assistant professor of medicine at UCLA Health. Elizabeth Ko, M.D., is an internist and primary care physician at UCLA Health. Send your questions to askthedoct­ors@ mednet.ucla.edu, or write: Ask the Doctors, c/o Media Relations, UCLA Health, 924 Westwood Blvd., Suite 350, Los Angeles, CA, 90095. CRYPTOQUOT­E

 ??  ??
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States