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EXERCISE AND REHABILITATION
Movement Leads
to Increased Physical Performance and Mental Sharpness
Have
you noticed that highly successful people start their day
with exercise? From elliptical trainers to cycling to yoga
their exercise invigorates and inspires them to meet the
challenges and opportunities of the day ahead.
Exercise is broadly known to improve cardio-vascular
function (reduced blood pressure, lowered heart rate, reduced
artery plaque) and oxygen-carbon dioxide exchange (promoting
healthier lungs, skin, digestion, and a lowered systemic
acid pH). Medical studies demonstrate that routine exercise
not only promotes physical health; exercise is used extensively
for recovery from surgery, as well as chronic illness.
What is less known is that exercise also improves
one’s mental status. It helps reduce symptoms such
as depression and anxiety, promotes quicker and clearer
mental functions, and provides more overall ‘pep’.
Every time you wiggle your fingers and toes, swing your
arms and legs, bend, twist, and stretch your spine, neurological
signals are sent to the brain and stimulate the mental functions
that actually make you feel better. This is essential to
achieving optimal health.
For those who are not maxed out
on their treadmills or bar bells, exercise rehabilitation
is a critical element of your optimal health program, along
with diet and nutrition. Exercise rehab is a component of
guided recovery from the stresses we experience throughout
our lives, including repetitive stress, sports injuries,
trauma, and surgery.
For the ‘couch potato’
corrective balance and coordination along with breathing
exercises may be a safe first step. This may lead to mat
pilates, calesthenics and eventually free-weight workouts
and endurance sports such as swimming and biking.
For athletes, evaluation
of sports mechanics is essential, not only regarding the
use of the equipment involved in the sport (bikes, balls,
bats, etc) but most importantly, biomechanics of the individual
(evaluation of heel strike, and the mechanics of the lower
extremity joints: ankle, knee, hip, through to the spine
and up to the upper limbs: shoulder, elbow, wrist and hands).
Professional athletes constantly fine-tune their bodies,
and often utilize chiropractic care to ensure their bodies
are in prime condition.
Everyone in between benefits
from fine tuning the body in order to help perform the tasks
of daily living, enhance performance, minimize injury and
sustain a long life. The most common tasks that should be
evaluated include:
- Workplace ergonomics (chair, desk, computer positions)
- Lifting and carrying (children, groceries, bar-bells,
backpacks)
- Sleeping (beds, pillows, sleep positions)
Not everyone wants to hike the Appalachian
Trail. But everyone wants to feel great and enjoy their
lives more fully. Why not move away from the couch and try
a stroll in the fresh air and sunshine?
Dr. Thomas can help most patients develop an exercise
plan to help improve their endurance with fewer aches and
injuries along the way.
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