Crosswords1 min ago
Spasms In Back (Spine)
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I have had an extremely tight spine for the last couple of days. Done some exercises yesterday morning when I got up to try to relieve it and stretch out....got in the shower and all of a sudden I had a terrible spasm from my neck all the way down my spine which scared the heck out of me, made my arms and legs go shaky for about 5 minutes. Not painful just went really tight. Had to hold onto the sink to get out of the shower. Historically osteopath has diagnosed a couple of vertebrae are dodgy. Any suggestions on how to "relax" a spine that always feels tense and rigid?
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Danny... its doesn't hurt. It is just really tight. Samuraisan.. have been to Chiropractor and just said it's wear and tear on vertebrae (not good at 45 years old!). It's a weird feeling that I cannot fully relax my spine when I get these episodes. Every lying flat seems that my back has a "fidgety" feeling. So weird.
Irishmaid.. the Osteopath clicks the vertebraes out of place one by one, then clicks them back into place. 2 different Osteo's told me the same thing I have one in my neck and one in my lower back that are weak. He also told me I have bad posture as I am quite tall and seem to stoop when sitting at my PC desk - hence one of the vertebraes in my neck being strained.
I had a bad back a couple of years ago...not as bad as yours by the sound of it, no spasms thank goodness.
I saw a physio (NHS so no charge) who gave me exercises that worked very well.
He also suggested that the issue was postural from sitting at a computer. I only had a desktop at the time.
The computer posture suggestion was bang on the money as, if I sit at the desk top now for any length of time, my bad back returns.
So....my suggestion to you is to see your GP, get a physio referral, but most of all check your posture whilst at your computer.
Have a look at a skeleton and try to ensure that your back is curved the right way, kind of like a reversed S shape.
I saw a physio (NHS so no charge) who gave me exercises that worked very well.
He also suggested that the issue was postural from sitting at a computer. I only had a desktop at the time.
The computer posture suggestion was bang on the money as, if I sit at the desk top now for any length of time, my bad back returns.
So....my suggestion to you is to see your GP, get a physio referral, but most of all check your posture whilst at your computer.
Have a look at a skeleton and try to ensure that your back is curved the right way, kind of like a reversed S shape.