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  • Stretching: the controversy

    The Associated Press
    Updated: 2:22 p.m. ET March 28, 2004WASHINGTON - Stretching does not live up to its reputation as an injury preventer, a study has found.


    “We could not find a benefit,” said Stephen B. Thacker, director of the epidemiology program office at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Athletes who stretch might feel more limber, but they shouldn’t count on stretching to keep them healthy, he said.

    Thacker and four CDC colleagues combed research databases for studies that had compared stretching with other ways to prevent training injuries. They combined data from five studies so they could look more closely for any benefits that might emerge as a pattern. Their report is in the March issue of the American College of Sports Medicine journal, Medicine and Science in Sports and Exercise.

    People who stretched were no more or less likely to suffer injuries such as pulled muscles, which the increased flexibility that results from stretching is supposed to prevent, researchers found. And the injuries found in the study typically happened within the muscle’s normal range of motion, so stretching them would not have made a difference, Thacker said.

    Warmups still helpful
    Other research has found that warmups, which increase blood flow through the muscle and make it more ready to respond to exercise, can reduce the risk of injury, Thacker said. Being in good shape also helps. Strength and balance training reduced injuries as well, he said.

    People such as gymnasts and dancers might be exceptions, because their activities require great flexibility, so stretching might improve their performance, Thacker said.

    In case future research does find a benefit, Thacker has no problem with athletes continuing to do gentle stretching. That’s not the case with stretches that include sudden fast movements, called “ballistic stretches,” which have been found in other studies to raise injury risks.

    The study’s findings make sense, said Mike Bracko, director of the Institute for Hockey Research in Calgary, Alberta. “We have done some work with hockey players showing flexibility is not an important variable,” he said.

    A strain typically happens when a muscle has to react suddenly to control an athlete’s movement, Bracko said. An example would be a tear in a muscle in the back of a sprinter’s leg as it contracts to keep the muscles in the front of the leg from moving the knee too far forward, he said.

    Some stretching likely still beneficial
    Two other researchers said, however, that there may still be value in the stretches that coaches require, and athletes do.

    Lynn Millar, a professor of physical therapy at Andrews University in Berrien Springs, Mich., said her experience in treating people with injuries tells her that those who don’t stretch may find they can’t move their arms and legs as far as they used to, and this could set them up for injury.

    “Unfortunately, a lot of us don’t have a normal range of motion,” Millar said.

    Stephen Rice, director of the sports medicine center at Jersey Shore University Medical Center in Neptune, N.J., said he values the experience of trainers and athletes.

    Flexibility is an element of fitness, and stretching ought to make a person more flexible, Rice said. “I would say the conventional wisdom has a certain amount of wisdom to it,” he added.

    © 2004 The Associated Press.
    Experienced Community organizer. Yeah, let's choose him to run the free world. It will be historic. What could possibly go wrong...

    "You're just a jaded cynical mother****er...." Jeffpeg

    (more comments in my User Profile)
    russbo.com



  • #2
    so what they're saying is that stretching itself doesn't prevent injury like muscle pulls within normal ranges of motion, but that it still helps to increase the total range of motion. so, it would help limit injury in people whose activities involve a larger-than-usual range of motion, such as dancers and gymasts. right?

    if so i think that martial artists would definitely fall inside the same category of dancers and gymasts. so this shouldn't affect our routines too much, should it?

    Comment


    • #3
      Well, it's like everything else in medicine.

      Picture this if you will. A university center. A bored assistant professor needs to write a certain number of papers, and get them published, to advance to associate professor (ie, pay raise). So, what do they do? They either write stuff that's new and groundbreaking (rare), new and bull**** hoping that one day it will eventually be proven to be new and groundbreaking (occasional), or, commonplace yet instigating.

      Of course stretching doesn't prevent injuries. Ir you stretch a muscle beyond its limits, it will tear. But, as you say, stretching to increase flexibility, makes you more limber (as an athlete), and therefore should help prevent injuries. One would think...
      Experienced Community organizer. Yeah, let's choose him to run the free world. It will be historic. What could possibly go wrong...

      "You're just a jaded cynical mother****er...." Jeffpeg

      (more comments in my User Profile)
      russbo.com


      Comment


      • #4
        Picking your nose..

        Must be why someone studied this... from a UK newspaper site :

        Top doc backs picking your nose and eating it
        Picking your nose and eating it is one of the best ways to stay healthy, according to a top Austrian doctor.

        Innsbruck-based lung specialist Prof Dr Friedrich Bischinger said people who pick their noses with their fingers were healthy, happier and probably better in tune with their bodies.

        He says society should adopt a new approach to nose-picking and encourage children to take it up.

        Dr Bischinger said: "With the finger you can get to places you just can't reach with a handkerchief, keeping your nose far cleaner.

        "And eating the dry remains of what you pull out is a great way of strengthening the body's immune system.

        "Medically it makes great sense and is a perfectly natural thing to do. In terms of the immune system the nose is a filter in which a great deal of bacteria are collected, and when this mixture arrives in the intestines it works just like a medicine.

        "Modern medicine is constantly trying to do the same thing through far more complicated methods, people who pick their nose and eat it get a natural boost to their immune system for free."

        He pointed out that children happily pick their noses, yet by the time they have become adults they have stopped under pressure from a society that has branded it disgusting and anti social.

        He said: "I would recommend a new approach where children are encouraged to pick their nose. It is a completely natural response and medically a good idea as well."

        And he pointed out that if anyone was really worried about what their neighbour was thinking, they could still enjoy picking their nose in private if they still wanted to get the benefits it offered.
        .
        I do not have a psychiatrist and I do not want one, for the simple reason that if he listened to me long enough, he might become disturbed.
        "Life can keep providing the rain and I'll keep providing the parade."
        "I would just like to say that after all these years of heavy drinking, bright lights and late nights, I still don't need glasses. I drink right out of the bottle."
        "Whatever guy said that money don't buy you pleasure didn't know where to go shopping"

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        • #5
          Thanks Steve. Wonderful post. Just what I wanted to read after breakfast.
          Experienced Community organizer. Yeah, let's choose him to run the free world. It will be historic. What could possibly go wrong...

          "You're just a jaded cynical mother****er...." Jeffpeg

          (more comments in my User Profile)
          russbo.com


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          • #6
            Those wacky Austrians. What will they come with next? An Alpine Shaolin Temple?
            Nothing is more frightening than ignorance in action - Goethe

            Comment


            • #7
              The problem is that it was an independent study, based only on stretching and in that context, is probably right. but if they had done a full study, they would have found that stretching, along with muscle conditioning and balance does indeed help to prevent injury.


              peace

              onefocus.

              Comment


              • #8
                well being in better shape certainly helps to prevent and recover from injury. the idea is that stretching doesn't play the role in that that we had previously thought.

                Comment


                • #9
                  zach, "stretching alone" . Besides, these mustv'e been some clumsy ass people!!!!

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