In honor of tonight's The Office series finale, I thought I'd share a bit of a tangent inspired by one of
my favorite characters on television, Dwight Schrute. Today's message: Don't
be an idiot.
Only a
few things get me more agitated than watching people in the fitness center
perform abdominal crunches. You will NEVER get a six-pack or a flat stomach
from doing crunches. Never. Period.
The
reason is quite simple, but unfortunately never really talked about - there is
no such thing a spot reduction. You cannot target an area and find a specific
exercise to reduce the amount of fat in that area. You cannot perform crunches
until you "feel the burn" and assume you are trimming down the beer
belly. One source claims it takes 5,000 crunches to burn... 1 pound of fat.
That poor soul who had to endure 5,000 reps! I could go on for an hour
about why they are a terrible choice for a core strength exercise, but I will
just highlight the main points.
The
intervertebral disc in the low back (lumbar) region is very susceptable to
injury during improper mechanics of movements. Anytime you are in an upright
position, heck even when you are sleeping at night, there is a given amount of
pressure on these discs. In severe situations where too much pressure is placed
on the disc, an injury can occur. Every time you bend over to touch your toes
you increase the amount of pressure on your discs in the lumbar spine. And, any
time you couple flexion with any rotation, you are begging to blow out a disc.
Isn't a crunch the same movement? One text suggests that any flexion in the
lumbar spine along with hip flexion puts 4 times the amount of pressure on the
disc than our normal body weight when laying down. That means a 175lb
individual will put 700 pounds of pressure on his lumbar disc during an
abdominal crunch. That's a good enough reason for me to never do
another crunch in my life. Well, unless I feel like blowing out a disc and
skipping school for a week.
The above
photo depicts the amount of pressure on the disc in a variety of movements or
postures. Note that this source found only 225% in lumbar
flexion solely, and only 275% lumbar flexion with hip
flexion...Still, that's a little too much for my liking.
Long
story short, your discs are fantastic entities that (like everything if
stressed too much) can deteriorate. Proper biomechanics and common sense can
provide you with better results and less injuries.
Some alternatives
to crunches are planks, pikes, ab wheel rollouts, pallof presses, isometric
theraband holds, any exercise on a TrX strap, and dozens more that are safer
and more effective for you to achieve your goals. The biggest
difference between these exercises and the abdominal crunch is that the crunch
utilizes the rectus abdominis muscle only, whereas the other exercises
mentioned utilize multiple muscles around the core in order to properly
contract the abdominal musculature as a unit and perform proper
biomechanics.
TrX Atomic Pushup.
Sources
Neumann, Donald Kinesiology of the Musculoskeletal System: Foundations for Rehabilitation. Mosby Elsevier, 2010.
Andersson, Ortengren, and Nachemson. Intradiscal pressure, intra-abdominal pressure and myoelectric back muscle activity related to posture and loading. Journal of Clinical Orthopedic Medicine.
Neumann, Donald Kinesiology of the Musculoskeletal System: Foundations for Rehabilitation. Mosby Elsevier, 2010.
Andersson, Ortengren, and Nachemson. Intradiscal pressure, intra-abdominal pressure and myoelectric back muscle activity related to posture and loading. Journal of Clinical Orthopedic Medicine.
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