Pain
Free Training for Worn Out Boomers.
By: Dr. William Wong, ND, PhD.
.
So, you've
been training for years; you think you
know your body better than anyone else
and you have a considerable list of accomplishments
in sports. All sources of pride. But
lately the aches have been creeping in. They've
been coming on sooner and lasting longer
than you remember. Lately, on your
runs, there have been some occasional
sharp pains from deep within the knees. The
bursa sac under the kneecap is swollen
just enough that you can't see your patella
tendon on one side. And your shoulders! Sometimes
you want to dog paddle when you should
be crawling, never mind about it getting
caught when doing a lay up shot or (forbid)
it clunking in and out of joint when
you're getting the groceries out of the
trunk! Sound like you yet? If
not, it soon will be. It's not
a matter of if; it's a matter of when.
No,
not me - never me, you exclaim! (There's
the pride again). Yep, you. There
are only so many times you can red line
a car down a gravel road and you're getting
close to what we in the health profession
call "the Limitations
of Matter". As
a generation we Boomers have been more
active than any generation previous. Our
folks may have survived the Great Depression
and fought in the Second World War but
after they got home, work is the only
thing they did. They wore
themselves out being cogs in the industrial
machine. And what do they have
to show for it? Flabby weak bodies,
strokes, heart attacks, Alzheimer's and
social security... We've perceived
the problem and have been running away
from those images ever since. So
what do we have to look forward to? Well
a good many of us will never have to
worry about the ravages of old age! We're
not going to live that long!
It's
just an observation; it may just be the
patient population I've been dealing
with the last few years, and I've got
no hard stats to back up these observations
but I think we're dying faster than our
folks did. I've seen diseases I
had not expected to see in our generation
until we were well into our 60's come
up and hit boomers hard in their early
40's! Since the 1960's we've
been burning the candle at both ends
and the middle. From sincere activism
and serious partying we dove head long
into work. To obviate the effects
of flying desks or assembly lines we
played hard. On top of that we
attempted to be super parents. We
have faced more stress in one year than
our ancestors faced in a lifetime. It's
taken its' toll and it shows; in our
joints (and elsewhere). Some of
us look as bad as our parents did at
our age. I'm grateful to say though
that most of us don't, but we sure feel
like we should! So how do we deal
with the effects of overusing our bodies
for so long? How can we make our
natural equipment last longer? And
most important of all, how do we strengthen
and support our faded over zapped immune
systems? If we've been at sports and
exercise for a while, then we've trashed
out our immune systems as a consequence.
(1).
Lets
start with the obvious:
-
Muscles when
over used will rebuild given rest
and the proper therapeutic exercise. Rest,
that's the key word here no more training
every day of the week! For every
day of hard training there are 2 to
3 days of immune suppression following! On
another matter, muscles need definite
nutrition to heal them from the repeated
micro injuries incurred while training,
and no I don't mean they need just
protein, they need different stuff
than that.
-
Joints are
another matter. The manic over
exercise craze will be the greatest
single source of future knee replacement
and shoulder reconstruction patients
for orthopedic surgeons. The
days when you could shake it off and
keep on going are gone, or soon will
be. Low
to mid level wear at joints can be
dealt with nutritionally. With
joint wear the body wants to shield
the injured area from further insult
so it splints the joint with swelling
and pain thus attempting to restrict
the range of motion (ROM) of the joint. Along
with that the system attempts to feed
nutrients to the injured area and speed
healing by greatly increasing the blood
flow to the joint thus causing the
redness and sometimes the throbbing
that oft times accompanies the swelling.We
need to think of a joint as having
two sides - an outside and an inside. Inside
of the joint we have the gliding surfaces
of the articulation, which are made up
of hyaline cartilage. This smooth shiny
cartilage is hydrophilic, it loves water. Not
only is the hyaline smooth and slick
but also it absorbs the mucous like synovial
fluid into its surface creating a virtually
frictionless bearing. When compression
forces squeeze the joint ends closer
this fluid gets forced out from in-between
the surfaces and cartilage touches directly
on cartilage. Over time and with
repeated use the sections of the cartilage
that do touch will wear. Flat spotting,
grating and even fracturing occur. Improper
tibial rotation angles, knock-knees,
bow legs and excessive Q angles all contribute
to knee problems and accelerate wear. (The
Q angle is the line drawn from the origin
of the Rectus muscle at the front of
the thigh, down through the patella tendon
to mid kneecap and the turn the tendon
takes at mid kneecap to get to it's attachment
on the Tibial Tuberosity. An angle
of 20 degrees or greater is too much. These
patients will tend to have greater
knee wear as well as a tendency to
patella dislocation).
-
As for
the Shoulder, can
you think of any joints more used
than your poor shoulders. For
years you've been doing what the
muscle heads in the exercise magazines
have told you is the "all fired
greatest stuff" for building
bigger delts, wider lats and slab
like pecs. The
problem is those muscle heads didn't
have a clue as to the science of
biomechanics and the years of behind
the neck pulldowns, and wide grip
pull-ups have micro trauma'ed your
rotator cuffs into macro trauma. Those
behind the neck shoulder presses
that were supposed to give you that
wide look have instead has torn your
supraspinatus muscle. Don't
believe me? Try
this test... Stick your arm out in
front of you to shoulder level. Now
point your thumb down towards the
floor as if you are pouring a soda. Have
someone place their hand atop your
wrist and apply some downward pressure,
not a lot but enough to keep your
arm from going any higher. You
them push up against their resistance. Do
this test out to the front then out
to the side. Didn't know you
had that pain in the back of the
shoulder did you? As for
benches, flys and dips; what about
that chronic pain at the front of
the shoulder just under the anterior
delt and leaning towards the chest. Strum
the middle of the anterior delt deeply
with your thumb. Start at the margin
of the pec and pull towards the outside. Hurts
doesn't it?
Now
those are just the signs of overuse and
injury to the outside of the joint, on
the soft tissue. What about the
stuff inside? What have the years
of pounding your knees, grinding your
shoulders and pushing all of the other
joints of your body done to that smooth
sponge like gliding surface?
The
hyaline was formed early in life from
something called mucopolysaccharides. Your
body stopped making the stuff somewhere
during or after puberty. Now, the
inside of the joint has no blood supply. The
articulating surfaces are fed directly
by the mucous synovial fluid which gets
it's supply of nutrients through the
joint capsule membrane from the blood
supply on it's outside. If
we still made these mucopolysaccharides
our joints hardly ever wear. But
we don't so they do. Nutritional
science has the answer - and you've likely
heard of it by now; Chondroitin and Glucosamine. These
mucopolysaccharides are well absorbed
and travel through the blood to where
they get taken in by the areas that need
it. (With the Glucosamine HCL being better
absorbed than the Glucosamine sulfate). A
rehab patient of mine underwent two shoulder
surgeries. In the first there was
considerable wear present at the ball
joint (glenoid). A year later after having
been on the glucosamine for some months
he needed a second surgery to correct
things improperly done in the first.
Pictures attest to the difference in
the hyaline of the glenoid. Where
there was once spotted wear there was
now a clean smooth hyaline layer! Neat
stuff. Now to something you
haven't heard about - Systemic
Enzymes.
Dr.Max
Wolf M.D. and Ph.D. times 7 of Columbia
University is widely acknowledged as
the father of systemic oral enzyme therapy.
(1). Wolf found that as we age
or are under stress our bodies own production
of enzymes is depleted. Age related
changes he said are directly attributable
to depletion of enzymes. Systemic
enzymes differ from digestive enzymes
in that the tablets are taken in between
meals so that the constituents can be
absorbed into the blood stream and do
their work there instead of expending
their action on digesting food. With
40 years of use and over 160 peer reviewed
verifying studies behind it, systemic
enzymes are the second best selling over
the counter preparation in Germany. When
a joint or any soft tissue is injured
or infirm the body creates irritants
called Circulating Immune Complexes. It's
these complexes that cause the inflammation
of joint capsules, bursae, tendons, muscles,
blood vessels, internal organs etc. These
complexes also are responsible for autoimmune
diseases such as Rheumatoid Arthritis
and Lupus. In those conditions
a large build up of the complexes attack
the joints or muscles, respectively thinking
these to be foreign invaders. Enzymes
eat Circulating Immune Complexes. (2).
In eating
away at the substances that cause inflammation,
its pain, swelling and redness are reduced. As
a consequence pain is relieved. Nifty! But
for athletes the other actions of systemic
enzymes are just as important. These
enzymes are anti-fibrotic. "Over
expression" of Fibrin and Fibrinogen
create the matrix in the blood vessels
for arteriosclerotic plaque. Systemic
enzymes control this over expression
and eat away slowly at established plaque.
Systemic Enzymes are also used in Europe
to fight thrombosis, blood clots deep
in the veins. (3). Isn't cardiovascular
health why most of us started exercising
in the first place! Now science
has found that a little critter called
a C- reactive protein is the cause of
inflammation in blood vessels and can
possibly lead to heart disease. Two
things destroy C-reactive proteins: aspirin
and systemic enzymes. Aspirin use
has side effects the natural enzymes
do not. (4). According to
the Wall Street Journal, April 20 1999,
20,000 Americans die from aspirin, ibuprofen
and that whole class of Non Steroidal
Anti Inflammatory Drugs. That means
that more Americans die every year from
aspirin and its related drugs than die
from Aid's!
The
enzymes are also a great blood cleaner. In
eating away at Circulating Immune Complexes,
necrotic derbies and fibrin in the blood
these actions reduce the viscosity of
blood by removing the gunk. This
is a different mechanism for reducing
blood viscosity than aspirin. (5) To
anyone who exercises or plays a sport,
thinner blood means improved circulation
to working muscles and increased micro
circulation. Most folks walk around
with blood that's as thick as catsup!
(6). Folks who exercise make that worse
by the dehydration they suffer. Many
endurance athletes make things worse
still by taking the drug EPO which in
order to have greater numbers of red
blood cells to move oxygen around with. EPO
was invented for cancer therapy patients
suffering from extreme anemia. It
was never meant to augment the hemoglobin
count of athletes. Mainly triathloners,
tennis players and cyclists use this
drug. They have also been dying
of blood clots caused from using this
stuff!
Systemic
Enzymes help the body to recover faster
from exercise, preventing micro trauma
from becoming macro trauma. In
cases of injury, systemic enzymes are
used by pro-athletes to reduce the effects
of injury and speed healing. European
sport physicians have found that recovery
times are cut dramatically. (8).
Now
we come to something that over exercises
and endurance athletes are seriously
lacking in - an immune system. It
is common knowledge in exercise physiology
that for each day of heavy training there
are two to three days of immune suppression
to follow. If you tag too many
workout days together, as we manic compulsive
boomers tend to do, then in time the
immune system becomes completely trashed. There
are numerous cases of marathoners coming
down with chronic reoccurring infections
because they don't have anything in their
bodies to fight bugs for them. Systemic
Enzymes to the rescue! The front
line soldier of the immune system is
the white blood cell. These guys
have little hands around them called
FC receptors. These hands tear
apart nasties and then pick up the derbies
for deposition. As long as it takes
them to get rid of the junk they are
holding is as long as it's going to take
them out of the fight. Systemic
enzymes eat away at the derbies the FC
receptors are holding enabling the white
blood cells to return to combat earlier
and in greater numbers.
Another
principle to remember is that immunity
begins in the bowel! The balance
of pH, good bacteria and it's colonizing
medium hold the reins to increasing the
bodies' ability to fight off infection. Another
European product enters the scene here,
inulin from Chicory. This sweet
fiber firstly creates a situation where
the bowel has the right amount of moisture. Too
much moisture leads to mold, too little
to constipation. Then the inulin
helps good bacteria to re -colonize the
gut by providing a colonizing medium
for them. Good bacteria feed off
of the inulin and proliferate. In
a conversation with Dr. Monika Kreiger,
Professor at Leipzig University and the
worlds leading expert on the function
of inulin, the fiber inhibits the growth
of bad bacteria by "cutting off
the arm they use to attach themselves
to the bowel wall". Further
in controlling yeast she asserts that
the inulin "surrounds the candida
buds and carries them out of the bowel". By
lowering the bacterial and yeast load
of the intestines the entire body breathes
a sigh of relief in not having to deal
with those nasties behind absorbed and
carried throughout the body. By the inulin
creating a haven for the good bacteria
the positive actions of these on life
are enhanced. To provide
the good bacteria, needed for the inulin
to feed, Lactobacillus Sporogenes is
the only protected fully survivable good
bacteria product that is not killed off
either by stomach acid, body heat or
anti-biotic use. Adding this to the inulin
will complete the circle of ingredients
needed for intestinal health and immune
system building.
When
we think of supplementing and sport we
usually think of performance enhancement
products. The supplements covered
here don't so much fit that bill as they
fall into the category of maintenance
supplements. Take care of your
equipment and it will take care of you;
that thought goes for your internal gear
as well as your external ones! These
supplements can extend an athlete's career,
and minimize the damaging effects of
training. Along with our daily doses
of vitamins, minerals and the like, the
mucopolysaccharides and systemic enzymes
and inulin should be part of our daily
maintenance and health programs. Now
lets cover the stuff to stay away from
to maintain out bodies instead of breaking
them.
Exercises
to Avoid:
- A lot of
Running - Remember Dr.
Ken Coopers admonition that anything
over 3 miles 3 times a week is done
for "reasons other than fitness".
- Treadmills - These bio-mechanically
really don't simulate running and actually
uses the opposite muscles creating
a lot of lower back pain. Think
of it; in real running you are propelling
yourself across a surface, in treadmill
running you are keeping yourself from
falling on your nose! Difference
in muscular action. While the
lungs and heart might not be able to
tell the difference, your hips and
back sure can. If they can't
run, you can't run. Keep that
in mind.
-
Cycling - Men
in Holland have a greater than 25%
rate of impotence and sterility. The reason; those
silly skinny bicycle seats! They
press on the prostate and the spermatic
tubes and swell them to all get out! There's
a reason why prostate cancer runs high
among committed male cyclists.
-
Behind
the neck pull downs. If
you value your rotator cuffs stop this
inefficient exercise. Replace
the Behind the Neck Pull downs with
Front Pull downs, (palms facing you
hands shoulder width apart, bar pulled
to below the chin). This is a
vastly superior exercise with double
the range of motion at the shoulder
and since it is bio-mechanically superior
it produces nearly double the strength. Most
folks who train have what we call in
biomechanics an anterior / posterior
(front to back) imbalance. Your
upper and middle back is supposed to
be stronger than your chest or at least
equal to it. Can you lat pull
down as much as you can bench press? Didn't
think so! Not many folks can
and yet the latissimus are three times
longer, two times thicker and have
a better bio-mechanical attachment
onto the shoulder than the pectorals
do! So why are you stronger
in the front than in the back? The
answer is easy. For years you've
been doing those dumb bodybuilding
pull downs because of what the inexpert
experts said.
-
Behind
the Neck Shoulder Press: another horrible
exercise . The
delts stop working at 90 degrees
of abduction. That's
about the starting position for this
exercise! So
what are you really working here,
your upper back some, your triceps
a lot your delts act as fixators,
muscles that support the joint and
allow movement to happen but they
do not act as prime movers or even
agonists (in other words the delts
don't do much here at all). What
this exercise will do is to wreck
the rear of your rotator cuff.
-
Full
Bench Presses: Most
folks over 35 should not do these. Anterior
shoulder tendinitis is a leading
cause of lifters not being able to
keep working out their upper bodies. Half
bench presses with the elbows being
brought only to level with the ribs
and not below it is all that should
be done.
Supplement-Wise here's the scoop:
- Systemic
Enzymes - 3 to 5 tablets
or capsules 3 times a day forever
(depending on the enzyme. Please
refer to Finding
Your Activation Dose for more specific instructions)
- Glucosamine - 1000 mg
- Chondroitin - 1000 mg
- CMO - 1000 mg
- Chicory Inulin - 2 teaspoons
of the powder a day.
- Lactobacillus
Sporogenes - 1 teaspoon
daily.
For
one of the best written and most scientifically
sound exercise manuals of the last few
decades read: "Power to the People" by
Russian strength coach and exercise physiologist
Pavel Tsatsouline, published by Dragon
Door
References:
- Wrba H., Pecher O.: Enzymes A
Drug of the Future. Page 13. Pub.
By Eco Med. Germany in English 1998.
- Ibid. Page 37.
- Thrombenbildung und Thrombolyse. Med.
Welt 39 (1988), 277.
- Ridker PM., et al: Inflammation,
aspirin and the risk of cardiovascular
disease in apparently healthy men. The
New England Journal of Medicine, 1997;
336(14): 973-979, 1014-1016.
- Ernst E., Matrai A.: Orale Therapie
mit proteolytischen Enzymen modifiziert
die Blutrheologie. Klin. Wschr.
65 (1987), 994.
- Jager H., Popescu M., Samtleben
W.,Stauder G.: Hydrolytic enzymes
as biological response modifiers (BRM)
in HIV-infection. San Marino
Conferences _ Highlights in Medical
Virology, Immuneology and Oncology,
Volume 1 San Marino, 1988, 44, Pergamon
Press, Oxford, New York, Beijing, Frankfurt,
Sao Paulo, Sydney, Tokyo, Toronto.
- Worschhauser S.: Konservative Therapie
der Sportverletzungen Enzympraparate
fur Therapie und Prophylaxe. Allgemeinmedizin
19 (1990), 173.
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