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New Advice: Don't Sit Up Straight
By Sara Goudarzi
The longstanding advice to "sit up
straight" has been turned on its head by a new study that suggests
leaning back is a much better posture.
Researchers analyzed different
postures and concluded that the strain of sitting upright for long
hours is a perpetrator of chronic back problems.
Using a new form of magnetic
resonance imaging (MRI), researchers studied 22 volunteers with no
back pain history. The subjects assumed three different positions:
slouching; sitting up straight at 90 degrees; and sitting back with
a 135-degree posture—all while their spines were scanned.
"A 135-degree body-thigh sitting
posture was demonstrated to be the best biomechanical sitting
position, as opposed to a 90-degree posture, which most people
consider normal," said study author, Waseem Amir Bashir, a
researcher at the University of Alberta Hospital in Canada. "Sitting
in a sound anatomic position is essential, since the strain put on
the spine and its associated ligaments over time can lead to pain,
deformity and chronic illness."
Back pain, according to the
National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke, is the most
common cause of work-related disability in the United States. It
costs Americans nearly $50 billion annually. Sitting appears to be a
major cause of this ailment.
"We were not created to sit down
for long hours, but somehow modern life requires the vast majority
of the global population to work in a seated position," Bashir said.
"This made our search for the optimal sitting position all the more
important."here
When strain is placed on the spine,
the spinal disks start to move and misalign. At a 90-degree sitting
position, this movement was most prominent. The disks were least
moved when subjects were sitting back at a 135-degree sitting
position.
"We have to do something that is
similar to the lying position," Bashir told LiveScience. Lying down
in a relaxed position with your knees slightly bent is the best
position that a person can be in, because it doesn't cause any
stress on the ligaments, the thigh muscles as well as on the back.
Sitting on a chair that provides
proper support, such as a slightly tilted back car seat, can mimic
the relaxed supine position. Slouching caused a reduction in the
spinal height which means that there was high rate of wear and tear
in the lowest two spinal levels.
"This may be all that is necessary
to prevent back pain, rather than trying to cure pain that has
occurred over the long term due to bad postures," Bashir said.
The study was detailed today at the
annual meeting of the Radiological Society of North America (RSNA). --
The
Associated Press
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