I bought one of your models and its very interesting . When the disc gets thinner , the two vertebral bodies come closer or they fall in love with each other . So , thats why you cant extend the spine , because remember " in love there is no going back , otherweis it pains" .Flamur Bedrolli
When they reference students stretching hamstrings and it’s actually a bulging disc, I wanted to die inside (although at least I am not alone, it seems). Such a beneficial conversation to be able to access; Stuart McGill is indeed a beast.
In 2010 as a bodybuilder who never used deadlifts,I started doing them. I emphasized expanding my abs so much it was hard to grasp the bar,I shortened my range. I never got back pain. But fast forward to to 2015 when I started practicing the Snatch, when I tried to make my back hypermobile, I started to feel back pain.I started many mobility drills , which made it easier to be more mobile without pain . Surprisingly when I returned to deadlifting I found that it was much harder to reach the bar. I thought it was lack of flexibility,but little did I know it was my discs wearing out preventing them from bending. My lesson is that never flex and extend the spine under load,it is better to hold the spine statically when it is under load. Actually as a bodybuilder I always trained that way,and had pain free back, untill I started Olympic lifting and falsely thinking that lifting through a greater range of motion was better,a d made your muscles stronger. It does not,it only wears out the spinal discs.
I have been watching, applying and using Stuart’s knowledge since 1998 when Prof Sahrmann mentioned him. The McGill methods works with elegant simplicity. Back mechanic methodology makes things simple but not simpler: the rationale and research that underpins the method demands focused learning.
On back mechanic it says if the nerve is underhooked to see a clinician. On the sit test extension of the next causes symptoms. That mean the nerve is underhooked. What is a person to do in that situation.
I know im asking randomly but does anybody know a method to get back into an instagram account?? I stupidly lost my login password. I appreciate any assistance you can offer me
@Zion Mayson i really appreciate your reply. I found the site through google and Im in the hacking process atm. Looks like it's gonna take quite some time so I will reply here later when my account password hopefully is recovered.
I have had herniated discs for 8 years now, although they are more bulges now, l4 l5 has resorpted, but I still have pain and I don’t know what to do, I have much less pain but I don’t know if I can actually lift weights anymore that is what a love to do, truly depressing
How are you getting on now? I had L5 surgery 6 months ago.. pain is pretty much gone but iv some symptoms still in my hamstring but things are much better than they were
21:45 .... i would like to see solution for that (instead of Piriformis stretching ) .... thanks for the hint .... i did the same unfortunately . And i feel stinging pain right side spine L5 /S1 .
The thing that helps with pinched nerve is to maintain neutral posture throughout the day as much as you can, use bracing when you are bending( learn proper lifting mechanics), brushing teeth, going out of the car... Do interval daily walks etc In short, buy Back Mechanic video enhanced version and you will get the idea
This is such a great talk. I had a spinal fusion for scoliosis, rods fused to L3. Below my fusion are my L4-5 disc herniations. I have battled sciatica and low back pain and the BEST thing that helped was getting lean and working out with weights. However, if I sit in a particular position for two long I have suffered with very tense low back and extreme pain in my left leg. I do sports photography sometimes and suffer for days after. Do you have any advice as to why some positions can trigger intense pain? Thanks.
Thanks all. Much better now. I think it was the inflammation from certain foods possibly. I’m also now taking BPC 157 and this helps a lot with healing and recovery.
@@MrGflanI am glad you feel better. May I ask how long ago did you have the fusion done, and how many years after did the pain start? Also, may I ask how long have you been taking the BPC 157, and at what dose daily? Thank you, and hope you continue to be pain free. -- My Daughter had spinal fusion for scoliosis when she was 12 and now she is 37. Some pain in upper back. She keeps her weight low, hikes, and does Pilates regularly but she is a producer in the film industry so is on her feet many times for 14 hours.
@@camillemousse sorry for the late response. I had the fusion in 1998. Since then there are much more flexible rods available I’ve been told. I was fused to L3 so below it got herniated but seems a lot better now from stretching, losing a lot of weight (I’m a lean bodybuilder now) and gaining muscle helped. The surgery is necessary in some cases and it sounds like your daughter is close to my age of 41, and I wonder if she had Harrington rods put in also? Yes hiking helps a lot and exercise, just taking it easy as well. BPC is amazing. I take one 500mcg pill near bed at night and it helps with sleep, with my tendonits from weights, also serves as mild antidepressant, just all around a great thing and very safe. Look up dr Timmermans videos on it. I spoke to him many times and he is a real doctor also on Instagram and he knows a lot about BPC. I also take powdered Kratom for the pain and it works very well. It’s a plant from Indonesia and it’s been used for energy and healing. I love it, but it can be habit forming so you have to be careful. Although it’s in the coffee family it has pain killing effects (well so does caffeine too). Interesting, I have a masters in film and I tried to live out in LA in the film business as well, but chose a different path. If you are on Instagram feel free to look me up for my bird photography at Gary michael flanagan wildlife. That’s a huge passion of mine. Nice chatting!!
Having spent a fortune on PTs and killing myself in the gym, ( with the idea of making myself as strong as possible for long term fitness and strength), I now realize, too late that I was given poor, even dangerous advice and I am suffering the consequences
Stuart's voice and Canadian accent are so soothing for some reason and its mesmerizing when he uses those models... maybe its just me but its almost hypnotic.... I love how he says "paaah-terns"
IMHO: fixation on the site of the pain (a symptom that the skeleton is out of alignment) diverts attention away from the underlying source (cause) of the pain.
Buy Back Mechanic and read it. Implement 3 daily walks and big 3. Start from there. It's a long process and it takes a lot of effort. You have to aquire soldier like discipline to get rid of it
@@abdrnasr i have the same thing but in my upper back and also in the lower back both happened in 2019 by making a lot of mistakes every started for me when i bought a super soft mattress that weak my back and i was very active with gym and warehouse job the pain has reduced over a year
Amazing interview. But I cannot understand what's a point for Mr. McGill to demonstrate anything on the spine models, if the operator anyways would try to switch to Mr. Morgan's head top instead of focusing on the demonstration model during very important details Mr. McGill accented on? And even when the cameras did point towards the models in the hands of Mr. McGill, the models either were not clearly visible, being partially covered by the hands, or the scale was too little to see the exact places Mr. McGill pointed on, but was enough to confirm the both men were sitting in the very same room. Could be very rich and useful information for those, who are trying to figure out what probably happens with their spines, but I do find it to be very limited in terms of the ways of visualization. Although, I am more glad to find the interview than disappointed by its presentation.
14:35 OH THAT'S Why my back murders me in the morning! And I have to walk around for an hour for the back pain to subside! I'm slowly "Deflating" my lumbar disks!
So deadlifts are a bit of a danger zone. It seems like it’s possible to do it safely, but it’s risky. But what about back extensions, weighted or not weighted. Do those pose the same risk?
I wanna know what i need to get better i have a heirnated disc spinal stenosis and extrusion and ur right i havent got thr right treatment im still waiting on physical therapy for now im Trying to get better shoes a better bed topper and mattress and lose a good 30 pounds for starters also taking turmeric gelatin etc im gonna look into swimming but i been like this over a year and just when i was gettinh better i had back spasms come back hard
In back mechanic it says if the nerve is underhooked to see a clinician. On the sit test extension of the neck causes symptoms. That means the nerve is underhooked. What is a person to do in that situation.
You literally just said: "It says in back mechanic that if X is the case, you need to see a clinician." Then you go on to say: "X is the case...what do I do?" Is it clear what you need to do based on what you yourself have said?
Does someone know what he graduated from? Very curious to know, but I can only find info that he is a researcher, scientist, professor emeritus... want to know where he started from!
Have a look at the interview he did with Chris Duffin, I think he mentions it on there. I can't remember myself, but he got into his specialty by chance while there.
I have a question - but perhaps given that's 12 months since the video was uploaded it won't be answered. Anyway, I sit at a desk all day and have just started doing some weight-training in the evening's, including the Deadlift exercise. I'm a 51 year old who's pretty athletic and in good shape, though a little weak. Should I be avoiding the Deadlift given my sedentary job and selecting exercises that are less of a risk to my back?
Unless you’re planning to compete, there are probably better options. Spending all day in flexion and then going to the gym and doing a technical lift that involves (potentially) flexion under load isn’t ideal. Trap bar deadlifts might be an ok alternative.
Marcus, there is no reason why you can't deadlift. Just be sure to program your workouts appropriately using load management www.physio-pedia.com/Load_Management
One thing i gleaned out of this *1of 5 videos* is that on na table for MRI the spine is static. Then a teck looks at it and interprets. I feel my unstable neck. I did PT and felt my unstable L/S. The demo showed in flexing how disk may get the blue gel part pushing and leaking out, which can hit a nerve at that time. So MRI a start or not? Interpreting a static spine mimics bed, not real world movement. Thank you!! Gonna watch again. Plus other 4 presentations. I call this functional treatment. Functional Medicine. PT damaging 4 me by that PT.ist.
Stu McGill puts this schlep Bill Morgan to shame. I'm sorry but Dr. McGill sounds wayyyy more knowledgeable.. idk maybe he can articulate it better than Billy boy or maybe Bill was just in complete awe that he has the honor of talking with such a respected doctor. Anyway great discussion
Stu McGill puts EVERYONE else to shame, lol. Doesn't make Bill Morgan a schlep--he's one of the few that can keep up with the science Dr. McGill covers, and, like any good interviewer, he's listening, not expounding.
When the disc gets thinner , the two vertebral bodies come closer or they fall in love with each other . So , thats why you cant extend the spine , because remember " in love there is no going back , otherwise it pains" .Flamur ⁸