Improve Your Spine Health by Improving Your Posture
Improve Your Spine Health by Improving Your Posture

Improve Your Spine Health by Improving Your Posture

Improve Your Spine Health by Improving Your Posture

Do you find your back and neck getting stiff and sore at the end of the day? Do you notice your mood feels worse after sitting slumped over your computer? If so, your posture may be to blame. 

At Anders and Associates Physical Therapy, our physical therapists can help determine if your posture is the problem and how to restore it for a healthy spine!

Your body was made to move, especially your spine. It is typical for areas of your spine to tighten up, placing too much strain on other areas. When this happens, those areas can become irritated and painful.

Too often, we spend our time staring at a computer screen, hunched over our desks, or looking down at our phones. These postures create a lot of stress on our spine. The worse your posture is, the more intense your back and neck pain, the harder it is to breathe, and the worse your mood becomes.

Fortunately, Anders and Associates Physical Therapy can help ease some of these stressors. Specialized hands-on techniques and targeted exercises can help restore mobility and strength in your spine and improve your posture. 

Our dedicated physical therapists can teach you how to correct your posture and bring you relief before it becomes a significant problem! Call today to make an appointment.

What Exactly Is Good Posture?

When people think of posture, they usually imagine someone sitting tall or perhaps slumped. Or they imagine someone standing tall at attention (like in the military). Posture is the position(s) of a person’s body in space. This includes how we move, like our lifting postures or reaching postures. 

When the spine is in its natural position, the vertebrae stack up over one another. This is what people call “good posture” (also referred to as a neutral spine). This neutral spine posture allows the body to absorb and distribute stresses from everyday activities such as sitting, standing, walking or more intense activities such as running and jumping.

Our spine is designed to move, which means our posture should also move. The spine does not like to remain in any one position for extended times. Our therapists can help teach you to find your neutral spine posture to counteract the slouching to alleviate your pain and improve your overall health!

What You Can Do To Improve Your Posture

Prolonged slumping while standing or sitting can cause your back, hip/pelvis, and abdominal muscles to become strained and painful. Poor postural habits also impact your overall health by reducing your cardiovascular function, inhibiting your breathing, impacting your balance and gait, and harming your overall mood. 

Our highly trained therapists can educate you about your posture’s impact on your body and teach you simple skills to find and maintain a neutral spine. For example, when you’re standing, imagine your breast bone is lifted towards the sky. This will naturally cause your spine to straighten out — lifting you up — keeping your hips, spine, shoulders, and neck aligned.

Prolonged sitting is the position that puts significant pressure on the lower back. It is essential to break up your sitting time throughout the day and take frequent breaks. Schedule standing or walking activities at various times throughout the day to ensure you limit your sitting to about 45-60 minutes at a time.

How Can Physical Therapy Help My Posture?

Physical therapy is the right solution to improving your posture and spinal health. Our physical therapists are experts in evaluating posture and movement. By pinpointing the source of your aches and pains, we can develop a plan for you that will return you to an ideal posture and quickly relieve your pain.

It is normal for people to lose a sense of how their postural muscles work and contribute to the health of their spine. These muscles become weak and uncoordinated with prolonged sitting, before/after pregnancy, and after surgeries or injuries. 

Strength training exercises have been shown to help improve our overall posture. It is vital to make sure your core muscles (i.e., hip/pelvis, back, and abdominal muscles) are strong and integral to practicing proper posture. 

Your therapist will teach you strategies like:

  • Stand tall whenever you are standing or walking. 
  • Use support when you sit to keep your posture correct. 
  • Maintain a straight spine when you lift heavy objects.

We can help you mobilize your spine and strengthen the surrounding muscles to alleviate the pain associated with your poor postural habits.

Improve Your Posture With Anders and Associates Physical Therapy Today!

Get back to your optimum health by consulting with a licensed physical therapist. We’ll help you achieve the strong spine health you need. Contact our office today to get started on the path toward better posture and decreased pain!

Discover Healthy Plate Pleasures

Hearty Tomato Soup with Beans & Greens

Ingredients

• 2 (14 oz) cans low-sodium hearty-style tomato soup

• 1 tbsp olive oil

• 3 cups chopped kale

• 1 tsp minced garlic

• ⅛ tsp crushed red pepper (Optional)

• 1 (14 oz) can no-salt-added cannellini beans, rinsed

• ¼ cup grated Parmesan cheese

Directions

Heat soup in a medium saucepan according to package directions; simmer over low heat as you prepare kale. Heat oil in a large skillet over medium heat. Add kale and cook, stirring, until wilted, 1 to 2 minutes. Stir in garlic and crushed red pepper (if using) and cook for 30 seconds. Stir the greens and beans into the soup and simmer until the beans are heated through, 2 to 3 minutes. Divide the soup among 4 bowls. Serve topped with Parmesan.

New Location Alert!

We’ve expanded and opened up a new location!

6620 Sky Pointe Drive Suite 130 Las Vegas, NV 89131

Staff Spotlight

Kyra Moore, PT Technician

My name is Kyra and I’m a physical therapy technician at Anders and Associates Physical Therapy. I received my Bachelor of Science Degree in Biology with a minor in Chemistry from the University of Nevada, Reno. Throughout high school and college I played basketball, flag football, and pole vaulted. I enjoy being active and being involved with the rehabilitation of patients. I find it rewarding working with patients in their treatment plans and helping them regain their strength and functioning through physical therapy. In my spare time, I like to hike, watch a good movie, and try new and exciting things, like hole-in-the wall restaurants and sky-diving!

Exercise of the Month

Lumbar Extension

Start by standing up straight. Place both hands on your lower back and press forward gently as you lean back to extend your back. Pause briefly. Repeat 3 sets, 10 reps each.

Go to the Pain, Not Through the Pain

The days of “no pain, no gain” are hopefully in the past. The idea of emphasizing pushing through discomfort to achieve results is not an effective solution for most people dealing with a painful condition, injury, or chronic condition. In fact, recent research suggests that a more holistic approach is effective and, indeed, safer for patients.

Pain is our body’s way of letting us know that something is happening in the body. When a nerve ending is triggered, an impulse travels to the brain, alerting us that something is happening. It is a warning sign or an alarm. How this impulse is interpreted varies from person to person and is influenced by a multitude of factors. 

Aggressively pushing through pain can worsen the underlying issues and potentially result in long-term damage. The key is getting help from people who work with painful conditions every day, like our therapists at Anders and Associates Physical Therapy!

How Physical Therapy Can Help You Find Relief

In cases of musculoskeletal disorders and injuries, applying excessive stress on already agitated tissues can prolong the healing process and even cause further injury. In comparison, going to the pain but not through it means cautiously approaching the edge of discomfort without crossing it, which can help your body progress without delaying your recovery. 

Our objective is to work within a “therapeutic window”: a range of activities that stimulates the body’s natural healing mechanisms without triggering negative responses.

At Anders and Associates Physical Therapy, we educate our patients about pain to help them understand their conditions better and actively participate in treatment. Our therapist can help you learn “pacing,” where activities are broken down into manageable parts, helping you to avoid extreme ups and downs of feeling good one day and an increase in pain and inactivity the next.

By respecting the body’s pain signals and working within a therapeutic window, our approach aims to achieve long-term functional gains without the risks associated with pushing through pain.

Meet Our Team