Thank you so much for actually demonstrating the exercises vs just talking about them. I am glad I found your channel and hope to reverse my osteopenia. Excellent video!
Excellent information that I would love to try. Unfortunately my nearby gym closed. I look forward to your video demonstrating use of the same muscles with free weights. Thank you, Sarah.
❤Thank you for another very informative, well edited video. You’re an excellent educator and I really enjoy learning from you. You’re quite the inspiration!😊
This was very good for people that have access to the gym. I live in a small town and I no longer have access to a gym. Is there a way to change these to free weights that I could do at home? Thanks for all your information. It's been very helpful.
Yes, you can absolutely adapt these for free weights. I will see about putting together some shorts that demonstrate these exercises using free weights. GOing to the gym isn't accessbile for everyone and it also doesn't appeal to everyone... I am more inclined toward using weights at home personally🥰
Hello. Because I have a bad knee. I put the bar with weight on,on my shoulder,but don't squat,I stand for ,30 seconds and do it 3 reps. Is that just as good. I can do a dead lift and lifting with a trainer,50 kgs. ❤
Much thanks for a video about the LIFTMOR trial and how to use the exercises involved for those of us not near someone that has been trained to use this approach. One small point, the trial participants did 5 sets of 5 reps. So 25 reps of each exercise, not 5 reps. I must say that number of reps just seems impossible to me if you are doing 85 % of your 1 rep max or even close to that. Still, that is what the trial requirements were. I just do the best I can and adjust, - mostly by going lower than the 85%. I had pretty severe osteoporosis so lowering below that 85% seemed safer anyway. Maybe I'll get to that 85% one day.
It is an excellent point! I think the important part to keep in mind is that everyone's heavy is different. If you are lifting what is your heavy that is the right place to be. Strength is developed gradually over time and you can get there!
I can't do a pull-up either, but my gym has an assisted pull-up machine that uses a counterweight, so even a relative weakling like me can do them. After watching this, I will continue to practice these pull-ups. Thank you for this video - I will share it with my trainer.
Hey Sarah - My wife has been loving this podcast. Again, so completely well spoken and concise. She had a question regarding weights in these sequences. What do you think is the harm, if you were to say, just stop at lifting, say 40 pounds for a long time, feeling comfortable at that level, and not wanting to stress the spine, and body in general ? Seems as though the same benefits would apply, even if not "progressing" to higher levels. Thanks, again, my wife is just dedicated to your work. Thanks, Richard
This is a great question and one that I think I will actually make a whole video about. To give you an overview now though- there is benefit of using weights even if not continually increasing the amount of weight. What continues to make training beneficial while maintaining a certain load is to do slighlty different exercises while using the weights such as moving into doing lunges intead of squats. The other option is to keep the same amount of weight and exercises, but to do more reptitions. By changing the exercises or number of repetitions or both your wife will continue to build strength which is what we want when working to improve bone health. I hope that helps.
@@sarahmapes_bonebuildersystem Sarah- Thank you for your response! Anyway, it set off sparks, as my wife and I talked about the issue more. It's curious. It's human nature to work with a lower weight that's comfortable - and you keep coming back without feeling fatigue, or losing interest. My wife (for reference) uses Osteostrong, and has a Marodyne plate at home. We talked about the trigger points, as they call them - So, if you could use, let's say, a thirty pound weight for two years, and then get a BMD or Echolite, and even a Dexa score - that saw actual progress, would it be reasonable to conclude, hey, if it's working at thirty pounds, why not plateau there ? And check again in another year? I watch these older women bench pressing over a hundred pounds, and sort of wince - is this really necessary ?? One wonders, really, how much muscle, is required to stimulate activity ? You don't need to be a gym monster, perhaps, to get that growth. I just wonder, at what point is an actual fulcrum point, and enough is enough. I look at you, and you have a similar physique to my wife, and yet, I don't see you over loading weights, you appear careful and know your limits. Me, the idea of stressing the spine and other elements worries me a lot for my wife. I can understand the deep anxiety of women, and it's a normal urge to make this monster go away, but I don't see what the harm would be in consuling patience, and diligence. Sometimes, it's true, the tortoise does win the race. Would love your erudite thoughts on this ! Wow, might make a cool podcast- perhaps you can invite a specialists in the muscular dynamics of all this. Beyond my scope - but not yours!@ We'll be watching..... Happy lifting - more or less......💥 Richard
@@rc24888 I made a video about this topic that will be coming out first thing Monday morning. I think you are right that it would be interesting to get a specialist to discuss this topic. There are research studies that I did not include in tomorrow's discussion that actually discuss that more repetitions at a lower weight is as effective as lifting heavy. The thing to keep in mind is that there is more than one way to do things. It doesn't have to mean continually adding more weight. If something is working there is not a reason to change it. If you are still seeing progress with dexa then there isn't a reason to change anything yet. If you stop seeing progress and you still need to make more progress then it is time to change something but that change does not have to be more weight. There are different options and possiblities. It may mean trying out some different exercises or doing more repetitions at a lower weight. It is about finding what works for you wife in her body.
th-cam.com/video/1s92Cxg4glo/w-d-xo.htmlsi=I4F7K7YnZKj4ZF2p Here is a link for using regular dumbells at home. I hope that helps. Are you looking for a straight up exercise session with these exercises with dumbells?
Sarah, I appreciate you taking the time to show us how do do these exercises!😊 What do you suggest for the frequency for doing these exercises? I go to the gym 5x week. Each day I break up my routine into different muscle groups: back/bicep; shoulders/glutes; chest/tricep; legs; abdominals. Would all these exercises you demonstrated (Dead Lift, Back Squat, Overhead Lift, Pull Up and Drops, Australian Pull Up) fall into the back muscle category?
These exercises do fall into the back muscle category. The squat variations also work glutes. It is reccomended to do these exercises twice per week with five repetitions each ❤ I think it is awesome that you are going to the gym five times per week❣
Thank you so much for this video. I've just had my spine score of -2.7 and hip -2.4 diagnosed at the age of 52. My Mum has very severe osteoporosis and recently had 6 compression fractures in her spine. I'ts been awful. I was very worried when the doctor just said....Oh don't worry, although you are young, just have another scan in 3 to 5 years and here is some calcium :( . I'm very fit and bloods all fine but have neck issues so I'm going to pay for an xray for my neck before I try these bar exercises. I already do strength workouts with dumbells and feel quite strong so I am worried Thank you so much again. You really are so calm, kind and reasuring in your videos
I am so sorry to hear about your Mum. I hope that hse will recover as well as she can as quickly as she can ❤ It sounds like you are busy doing hte right things working on building strength! Keep that going. I would also check for any potential nutritional deficiencies. They are silent and can contribute to bone loss. There might be something that you need that you don't realize you are missing. That was true for me... The good news is you know early and there is time to make a big difference in how things go for you ❤
Thank you so much for your quick and very kind response Sarah. My Mum is healing and now on daily injections. She’s had lots more going on but is thankfully in less pain and taking less pain relief so that is good I’m definitely going to follow your advise and search for any deficiencies through having more tests. The doc said my vit D was fine but I’ve just done a test from the chemist and it says not sufficient so that’s a starter point Thanks again❤. I’m working through your videos carefully making notes I reached 1 year alcohol free earlier this month and that was my challenge so my next one will be to reduce my t scores Have a lovely week and take care 🥰
@@Travellingtherapistcreates It sounds like you are doing lots of really AMAZING things! I am glad to hear that things are going better for your momma, relatively speaking ❤
Hi my name is Fe , ( Faith in english )…Thank you very much, this information is so valuable and you are so generous in sharing it. I wonder how many repetitions and sets of each of these exercises we should do. Thank you very much, cordial greetings from Argentina😊
Faith, the goal with these exercises is to do 5 repetitions of each exercise. Work from wherever you are now and increase weight when where you are now gets easy. I am so glad you found this video helpful ❤
One of the ways to work toward doing a pull up is to do a negative. I jump up to the bar, put my chin over the bar and then slowly lower myself down , say over 15 to 20 seconds while keeping my core and glutes tight, and scapula engaged as I lower myself down.
Since you can do the jump up, you are correct that slowly lowering yourself down with your core, back muscles, and glutes engaged will build strength toward doing a pull up. You must be wonderfully strong ❤
So if you have one bad knee, what is a version of any of these? I don't have osteoarthritis, the bad knee has a healthy meniscus. It's a problem with the posterior cruciate ligament (PCL). I had an isolated incomplete tear surgically treated by keeping the PCL intact but only trimming the piece that got caught in the joint. So I have what might be a less strong PCL. I do use bands but on the bad leg, I place the band ABOVE the knee because I don't want to take the chance of stressing the PCL.
With a knee that is still healing, I would focus on doing some exercises to strengthen the muscles around your knee because that will create stability for your knee. These probably are not the exercises that I would start with for this situation. One exercises that helps to strengthen the knee area are heel drops. After doing a set of them stay up on the ball of your feet for a little while- the hold time at the top will help to strengthen both your knee and your ankle. Would it be helpful if I make a short video about strengthening knees?
Muscle protects bones so building muscle is key I learned many yoga moves are dangerous for people with osteo I’m very flexible Do what we can but don’t stress to do more I do Pilates and barre classes daily
You are right that having strong muscles is essential for having strong bones. Any exercise in either yoga or pilates that causes the spine to round should be avoided with osteoporosis. It is important to makes sure that whatever form of exercises you are doing that it has been adapted for osteoporosis or that you know how to adapt it safely yourself ❤ Doing what you can and not stressing about what you can't get to is important too. We can all only do what we can do and not worrying about the rest is a good thing.
A posterior pelvic tilt can cause the lower back to round, placing excessive stress on the lumbar spine. This also increases the risk of injury, especially herniated discs and with osteoporosis it could even lead to a compression fracture. Don't come into a posterior tilt when doing deadlifts and squats❤
This is a really interesting question. Since we have to have a day between using wieghts. You could approach this in several ways. If you are going to the gym daily you could alternate working on your lower body and the next day working on your upper body. You could also choose to do a full body workout with a full day of rest in between. If you are using a variety of different types of exercises then you could do weight based practices two to three times per week and yoga or another type of exercise on the other days. With yoga, you have the potential to use your body's own weight to build strength and you don't have to have a day of rest inbetween. This might look like doing weight lifting a few times a week and then doing yoga or walking on tthe other days. I like to do a bit of core work every day because it provides support for our spines. I generally do core work laying flat on my back and then lower and lift my legs to makes sure that I am not coming into a rounded shape with my spine. Is this helpful? Do you have other questions about how to set up a full body workout for osteoporosis?
This is a great question. You want to work at 85% of your max lift weight. You want to lift heavy, but not to the point of failure. With osteoporosis it is incredibly important to be able to do these exercises with good form to protect your spine from fracture and injury. This is why you are working at 85% of your max weight. Experiment a bit and determine what the right weight is for you right now. When this weight gets easy then increase teh weight a little bit at a time.
There are several things you can do. I actually have a video about how to adapt the exercises from this study at home. The video for that is found below. If you don't have any weights or resistance bands at home then you might try doing yoga or Pilates that has been specifically adapted for osteoporosis because both of these forms of exercises will leverage your own body weight to build strength and to improve bone health. It is important to find versions of yoga and Pilates that have been adapted for osteoporosis because there are movements in both in a regular class that cause the spine to round which is really important to avoid with bone loss. I actually have a monthly membership with no commitment (it is come and go from month to month) that focuses on exercises for bone health that is intended to be done at home. It is yoga based at different fitness levels. I teach live every Tuesday and have an on demand library. Let me know if you would like more information about that. th-cam.com/video/1s92Cxg4glo/w-d-xo.htmlsi=5eILA5sysBEflr7W
You can lift weights and it will likely be a very good thing for building strength and reducing future fracture risk. I would start light with whatever amount of weight is comfortable for you. You might start with 3 to 5 pounds. The things to keep in mind is that you increase the amount of weight you are using when what you are currently doing feels easy. Weight should be added gradually. If 5 pounds becomes easy then try out 8 pounds and then make a shift to ten pounds when the next amount of weight is easy. You can do this, and it will make a positive difference to your bones ❤
Having arthritis in your spine shouldn't make it so that you can't lift weights. It is important to make sure that you don't start out too heavy. Start out with an amount that feels comfortable for you and then gradually increase what you are lifting from there as it is comfortable for you. I have arthritis in both my hands and feet. With weight lifting sometimes I can curl my hands around weights and sometimes I cannot. I skip it when my hands are swollen and can't wrap around weights and I lift when I can get my hands to work. I invite you to experiment a bit and see if there are things you can do without irritating your back. With bone loss even when you have arthritis it is still important to work on building strength. Just make sure that you don't overdo it. Find what feels right in your body ❤
@sarahmapes_bonebuildersystem thanks for your reply! I have another question, I'm doing yoga, walk aerobics and soon Zumba. Do I still need to do your stretch exercise? I'm looking into finding a good gym.
@@Maggiepr64 You should get your stretching as part of doing yoga and you likely don't need something beyond that. Stretching is helpful for bone health in a few ways. First, it helps to be able to move from your hip in a way that protects your spine from coming into a rounded shape. Second, having flexibility will help to reduce the risk of injury overall. Third, flexibility will increase blood flow throughout different parts of your body which is good for maintaining your ability to move. I hope that helps❤
Don't do deadlifts on a Smith machine. If you can't lift a 45lb bar, you can get a 15lb aluminum bar and 15lb plates that are the size of 45's. And DON'T do squats on a Smith machine, unless you want more strain on the knees. Very unnatural bar path. The Smith machine just isn't a good machine for lifting period. A barbell is much better, with safety pins of course.
I would add that all weight lifting should be done with good form and at the appropriate weight for each person. Everyone's "heavy" is different and that is okay 🥰
@@sarahmapes_bonebuildersystem yes , and most can become stronger than they think just by slowly coaxing the body with tiny amounts of weight over time. All it takes is effort.
I think a Smith machine is a good starting point to get good technique and form, it keeps a good straight line. Once you are confident and your mind to muscle has connected with your technique you can try without the Smith machine.
My doctor told me not to lift more than 4 pounds . I don’t agree with him. I lift heavy grocery bags . I don’t break anything . I am 60 years old . I’m in pretty good shape.
You are young and I am happy to hear that you are in good shape! If you haven't been lifting then starting light is a good idea, and then working your way up form there. You can start with weights as heavy as your graocery bags ❤
Can you just stand with a bar with weight on the spine,nit do the squats. I do that for 30 seconds fir ,3 reps. I do a dead lift eith 59 kgs. All with a perfesional trainer ❤ Is that ok to stand with a bar on the shoulder with wright for 30 seconds.
Yes, anytime you put weight on your spine it is going to be helpful. There are mnay ways to improve bone hjealth outside of this particular study. The Liftmor study was the topic for this video, but all studies ar elimited to just a few things because that helps the study measure more effectively what is happening. Know that there are many ways to build strength and you don't have to squat to build strength.
That is okay. Lift the five pounds. Everyone has a different "heavy" and that is what I think is frustrating. We see someone else lifting their version of heavy and we think we need to lift like that, but we don't. We need to lift what is heavy for us personally ❤
Thank you so much for actually demonstrating the exercises vs just talking about them. I am glad I found your channel and hope to reverse my osteopenia. Excellent video!
Juanita, I am so glad this information is helpful for you❤Working to reverse osteopenia is a great plan!
Excellent information that I would love to try. Unfortunately my nearby gym closed. I look forward to your video demonstrating use of the same muscles with free weights. Thank you, Sarah.
Julie, I will get on recording versions of this with free weights that can be done at home ❤ I am glad this information is helpful!
❤Thank you for another very informative, well edited video. You’re an excellent educator and I really enjoy learning from you. You’re quite the inspiration!😊
Thank you for your kind words! I am so happy to hear that you are finding these videos insightful and helpful❤
This was very good for people that have access to the gym. I live in a small town and I no longer have access to a gym. Is there a way to change these to free weights that I could do at home? Thanks for all your information. It's been very helpful.
Yes, you can absolutely adapt these for free weights. I will see about putting together some shorts that demonstrate these exercises using free weights. GOing to the gym isn't accessbile for everyone and it also doesn't appeal to everyone... I am more inclined toward using weights at home personally🥰
@@sarahmapes_bonebuildersystem TY so much. I look forward to those.
@@PaintingThePieces Yes, I will get on recording those!
Hello. Because I have a bad knee. I put the bar with weight on,on my shoulder,but don't squat,I stand for ,30 seconds and do it 3 reps. Is that just as good. I can do a dead lift and lifting with a trainer,50 kgs. ❤
Much thanks for a video about the LIFTMOR trial and how to use the exercises involved for those of us not near someone that has been trained to use this approach. One small point, the trial participants did 5 sets of 5 reps. So 25 reps of each exercise, not 5 reps.
I must say that number of reps just seems impossible to me if you are doing 85 % of your 1 rep max or even close to that. Still, that is what the trial requirements were. I just do the best I can and adjust, - mostly by going lower than the 85%. I had pretty severe osteoporosis so lowering below that 85% seemed safer anyway. Maybe I'll get to that 85% one day.
It is an excellent point! I think the important part to keep in mind is that everyone's heavy is different. If you are lifting what is your heavy that is the right place to be. Strength is developed gradually over time and you can get there!
I can't do a pull-up either, but my gym has an assisted pull-up machine that uses a counterweight, so even a relative weakling like me can do them. After watching this, I will continue to practice these pull-ups. Thank you for this video - I will share it with my trainer.
It is wonderful to hear that this video is helpful in your life! I am glad you have a good trainer to work with as well ❤
Hey Sarah - My wife has been loving this podcast. Again, so completely well spoken and concise. She had a question regarding weights in these sequences. What do you think is the harm, if you were to say, just stop at lifting, say 40 pounds for a long time, feeling comfortable at that level, and not wanting to stress the spine, and body in general ? Seems as though the same benefits would apply, even if not "progressing" to higher levels.
Thanks, again, my wife is just dedicated to your work. Thanks, Richard
This is a great question and one that I think I will actually make a whole video about. To give you an overview now though- there is benefit of using weights even if not continually increasing the amount of weight. What continues to make training beneficial while maintaining a certain load is to do slighlty different exercises while using the weights such as moving into doing lunges intead of squats. The other option is to keep the same amount of weight and exercises, but to do more reptitions. By changing the exercises or number of repetitions or both your wife will continue to build strength which is what we want when working to improve bone health. I hope that helps.
Thank you!
@@robyn3349 I am glad you found it helpful ❤
@@sarahmapes_bonebuildersystem Sarah- Thank you for your response!
Anyway, it set off sparks, as my wife and I talked about the issue more. It's curious. It's human nature to work with a lower weight that's comfortable - and you keep coming back without feeling fatigue, or losing interest. My wife (for reference) uses Osteostrong, and has a Marodyne plate at home. We talked about the trigger points, as they call them - So, if you could use, let's say, a thirty pound weight for two years, and then get a BMD or Echolite, and even a Dexa score - that saw actual progress, would it be reasonable to conclude, hey, if it's working at thirty pounds, why not plateau there ? And check again in another year? I watch these older women bench pressing over a hundred pounds, and sort of wince - is this really necessary ??
One wonders, really, how much muscle, is required to stimulate activity ? You don't need to be a gym monster, perhaps, to get that growth. I just wonder, at what point is an actual fulcrum point, and enough is enough.
I look at you, and you have a similar physique to my wife, and yet, I don't see you over loading weights, you appear careful and know your limits. Me, the idea of stressing the spine and other elements worries me a lot for my wife. I can understand the deep anxiety of women, and it's a normal urge to make this monster go away, but I don't see what the harm would be in consuling patience, and diligence. Sometimes, it's true,
the tortoise does win the race.
Would love your erudite thoughts on this !
Wow, might make a cool podcast- perhaps you can invite a specialists in the muscular dynamics of all this. Beyond my scope - but not yours!@ We'll be watching.....
Happy lifting - more or less......💥
Richard
@@rc24888 I made a video about this topic that will be coming out first thing Monday morning. I think you are right that it would be interesting to get a specialist to discuss this topic.
There are research studies that I did not include in tomorrow's discussion that actually discuss that more repetitions at a lower weight is as effective as lifting heavy. The thing to keep in mind is that there is more than one way to do things. It doesn't have to mean continually adding more weight.
If something is working there is not a reason to change it. If you are still seeing progress with dexa then there isn't a reason to change anything yet. If you stop seeing progress and you still need to make more progress then it is time to change something but that change does not have to be more weight. There are different options and possiblities. It may mean trying out some different exercises or doing more repetitions at a lower weight. It is about finding what works for you wife in her body.
Thank you so much for demonstrating these exercises-I feel relieved to know how to do them!
I am so glad this video is helpful and that you are ready to lift weights! That's a wonderful thing! Keep it going ❤
TY ! Could you do a follow along video using regular dumbbells showing these moves ? Thanks ❤
th-cam.com/video/1s92Cxg4glo/w-d-xo.htmlsi=I4F7K7YnZKj4ZF2p
Here is a link for using regular dumbells at home. I hope that helps. Are you looking for a straight up exercise session with these exercises with dumbells?
Thank you for the information. I look forward to try these exercices with of course, a professional.
WOrking with a professional is a good way to go. I am glad this is good information!
Sarah, I appreciate you taking the time to show us how do do these exercises!😊 What do you suggest for the frequency for doing these exercises? I go to the gym 5x week. Each day I break up my routine into different muscle groups: back/bicep; shoulders/glutes; chest/tricep; legs; abdominals. Would all these exercises you demonstrated (Dead Lift, Back Squat, Overhead Lift, Pull Up and Drops, Australian Pull Up) fall into the back muscle category?
These exercises do fall into the back muscle category. The squat variations also work glutes. It is reccomended to do these exercises twice per week with five repetitions each ❤ I think it is awesome that you are going to the gym five times per week❣
Thank you !! 😍@@sarahmapes_bonebuildersystem
Thank you for making this excellent video
I am so glad you found this video helpful❤
Thank you so much for this video. I've just had my spine score of -2.7 and hip -2.4 diagnosed at the age of 52. My Mum has very severe osteoporosis and recently had 6 compression fractures in her spine. I'ts been awful. I was very worried when the doctor just said....Oh don't worry, although you are young, just have another scan in 3 to 5 years and here is some calcium :( . I'm very fit and bloods all fine but have neck issues so I'm going to pay for an xray for my neck before I try these bar exercises. I already do strength workouts with dumbells and feel quite strong so I am worried
Thank you so much again. You really are so calm, kind and reasuring in your videos
I am so sorry to hear about your Mum. I hope that hse will recover as well as she can as quickly as she can ❤
It sounds like you are busy doing hte right things working on building strength! Keep that going. I would also check for any potential nutritional deficiencies. They are silent and can contribute to bone loss. There might be something that you need that you don't realize you are missing. That was true for me...
The good news is you know early and there is time to make a big difference in how things go for you ❤
Thank you so much for your quick and very kind response Sarah. My Mum is healing and now on daily injections. She’s had lots more going on but is thankfully in less pain and taking less pain relief so that is good
I’m definitely going to follow your advise and search for any deficiencies through having more tests. The doc said my vit D was fine but I’ve just done a test from the chemist and it says not sufficient so that’s a starter point
Thanks again❤. I’m working through your videos carefully making notes
I reached 1 year alcohol free earlier this month and that was my challenge so my next one will be to reduce my t scores
Have a lovely week and take care 🥰
@@Travellingtherapistcreates It sounds like you are doing lots of really AMAZING things!
I am glad to hear that things are going better for your momma, relatively speaking
❤
Thanks so much. I will tell my Mum ❤
Hi my name is Fe , ( Faith in english )…Thank you very much, this information is so valuable and you are so generous in sharing it. I wonder how many repetitions and sets of each of these exercises we should do. Thank you very much, cordial greetings from Argentina😊
Faith, the goal with these exercises is to do 5 repetitions of each exercise. Work from wherever you are now and increase weight when where you are now gets easy. I am so glad you found this video helpful ❤
Thanks a lot❤
One of the ways to work toward doing a pull up is to do a negative. I jump up to the bar, put my chin over the bar and then slowly lower myself down , say over 15 to 20 seconds while keeping my core and glutes tight, and scapula engaged as I lower myself down.
Since you can do the jump up, you are correct that slowly lowering yourself down with your core, back muscles, and glutes engaged will build strength toward doing a pull up. You must be wonderfully strong ❤
❤️👍
I'm 63. Negatives are how I got to my current 10 pullups, and also doing butterfly pullups. Negatives are great for building up to that first pull-up!
@@feliciacoffey6832 That is so awesome!!! I need to work on them myself...
Can you please show us how to use dumbbell to do the same exercise? I don't have access to barbell, thanks!
Absolutely! I have another video where I do just that. I will link it below
th-cam.com/video/1s92Cxg4glo/w-d-xo.htmlsi=crEScchaOko-V6gA
How long should you hang for? to fatigue? Thank you for this informative video.
Thanks this video was very informative
I am so glad it is helpful ❤
So if you have one bad knee, what is a version of any of these?
I don't have osteoarthritis, the bad knee has a healthy meniscus. It's a problem with the posterior cruciate ligament (PCL). I had an isolated incomplete tear surgically treated by keeping the PCL intact but only trimming the piece that got caught in the joint. So I have what might be a less strong PCL.
I do use bands but on the bad leg, I place the band ABOVE the knee because I don't want to take the chance of stressing the PCL.
With a knee that is still healing, I would focus on doing some exercises to strengthen the muscles around your knee because that will create stability for your knee. These probably are not the exercises that I would start with for this situation. One exercises that helps to strengthen the knee area are heel drops. After doing a set of them stay up on the ball of your feet for a little while- the hold time at the top will help to strengthen both your knee and your ankle. Would it be helpful if I make a short video about strengthening knees?
Muscle protects bones so building muscle is key
I learned many yoga moves are dangerous for people with osteo
I’m very flexible Do what we can but don’t stress to do more
I do Pilates and barre classes daily
You are right that having strong muscles is essential for having strong bones. Any exercise in either yoga or pilates that causes the spine to round should be avoided with osteoporosis. It is important to makes sure that whatever form of exercises you are doing that it has been adapted for osteoporosis or that you know how to adapt it safely yourself ❤
Doing what you can and not stressing about what you can't get to is important too. We can all only do what we can do and not worrying about the rest is a good thing.
Have a posterior pelvic tilt when doing deadlift and squat, not a straight back?
A posterior pelvic tilt can cause the lower back to round, placing excessive stress on the lumbar spine. This also increases the risk of injury, especially herniated discs and with osteoporosis it could even lead to a compression fracture. Don't come into a posterior tilt when doing deadlifts and squats❤
Hi Sarah, can you please advise in each full body workout, what's the % split between the strengthen, core and resistence training? Thanks!
This is a really interesting question. Since we have to have a day between using wieghts. You could approach this in several ways. If you are going to the gym daily you could alternate working on your lower body and the next day working on your upper body. You could also choose to do a full body workout with a full day of rest in between. If you are using a variety of different types of exercises then you could do weight based practices two to three times per week and yoga or another type of exercise on the other days. With yoga, you have the potential to use your body's own weight to build strength and you don't have to have a day of rest inbetween. This might look like doing weight lifting a few times a week and then doing yoga or walking on tthe other days. I like to do a bit of core work every day because it provides support for our spines. I generally do core work laying flat on my back and then lower and lift my legs to makes sure that I am not coming into a rounded shape with my spine. Is this helpful? Do you have other questions about how to set up a full body workout for osteoporosis?
how heavy do I have to do to increase bone density? Do I have to train close to failure?
This is a great question. You want to work at 85% of your max lift weight. You want to lift heavy, but not to the point of failure. With osteoporosis it is incredibly important to be able to do these exercises with good form to protect your spine from fracture and injury. This is why you are working at 85% of your max weight. Experiment a bit and determine what the right weight is for you right now. When this weight gets easy then increase teh weight a little bit at a time.
This is the best so far for understanding the proper exercise moves
What can you do at home if your don’t have access to this equipment?
There are several things you can do. I actually have a video about how to adapt the exercises from this study at home. The video for that is found below. If you don't have any weights or resistance bands at home then you might try doing yoga or Pilates that has been specifically adapted for osteoporosis because both of these forms of exercises will leverage your own body weight to build strength and to improve bone health. It is important to find versions of yoga and Pilates that have been adapted for osteoporosis because there are movements in both in a regular class that cause the spine to round which is really important to avoid with bone loss. I actually have a monthly membership with no commitment (it is come and go from month to month) that focuses on exercises for bone health that is intended to be done at home. It is yoga based at different fitness levels. I teach live every Tuesday and have an on demand library. Let me know if you would like more information about that.
th-cam.com/video/1s92Cxg4glo/w-d-xo.htmlsi=5eILA5sysBEflr7W
Thank you I will watch this, I have some resistance bands and hand weights
@@christineadams4317 That's awesome!
I HAD BEFORE L2,L4 COMPRESSION FRACTURE, CAN I DO WIEGHT LIFT NOW ? I AM 73 KG , HOW MANEY KG. I WEIGHT .
You can lift weights and it will likely be a very good thing for building strength and reducing future fracture risk. I would start light with whatever amount of weight is comfortable for you. You might start with 3 to 5 pounds. The things to keep in mind is that you increase the amount of weight you are using when what you are currently doing feels easy. Weight should be added gradually. If 5 pounds becomes easy then try out 8 pounds and then make a shift to ten pounds when the next amount of weight is easy. You can do this, and it will make a positive difference to your bones ❤
Civil engineers who transfer huge structures load to soil can design appropriate yuga postures and compressed/ depressed body parts.
Yes, isn't it interesting?!
I'm confused, with my OA in the thoracic spine I can lift weights?
Having arthritis in your spine shouldn't make it so that you can't lift weights. It is important to make sure that you don't start out too heavy. Start out with an amount that feels comfortable for you and then gradually increase what you are lifting from there as it is comfortable for you. I have arthritis in both my hands and feet. With weight lifting sometimes I can curl my hands around weights and sometimes I cannot. I skip it when my hands are swollen and can't wrap around weights and I lift when I can get my hands to work. I invite you to experiment a bit and see if there are things you can do without irritating your back. With bone loss even when you have arthritis it is still important to work on building strength. Just make sure that you don't overdo it. Find what feels right in your body ❤
@sarahmapes_bonebuildersystem thanks for your reply! I have another question, I'm doing yoga, walk aerobics and soon Zumba. Do I still need to do your stretch exercise? I'm looking into finding a good gym.
@@Maggiepr64 You should get your stretching as part of doing yoga and you likely don't need something beyond that. Stretching is helpful for bone health in a few ways. First, it helps to be able to move from your hip in a way that protects your spine from coming into a rounded shape. Second, having flexibility will help to reduce the risk of injury overall. Third, flexibility will increase blood flow throughout different parts of your body which is good for maintaining your ability to move. I hope that helps❤
@@sarahmapes_bonebuildersystem it does! I'm only going once a week. Would love more but haven't found a place yet. Do you offer yoga online?
@@sarahmapes_bonebuildersystem I want to like to enroll in your course. My question is I have OA in the thoracic spine. Can you help me?
How many sets and reps do you recommend?
5 repetitions is what is reccomended from the study ❤
Don't do deadlifts on a Smith machine. If you can't lift a 45lb bar, you can get a 15lb aluminum bar and 15lb plates that are the size of 45's. And DON'T do squats on a Smith machine, unless you want more strain on the knees. Very unnatural bar path. The Smith machine just isn't a good machine for lifting period. A barbell is much better, with safety pins of course.
I would add that all weight lifting should be done with good form and at the appropriate weight for each person. Everyone's "heavy" is different and that is okay 🥰
@@sarahmapes_bonebuildersystem yes , and most can become stronger than they think just by slowly coaxing the body with tiny amounts of weight over time. All it takes is effort.
@@gcruishank9663 Yes, effort and patience ❤
I think a Smith machine is a good starting point to get good technique and form, it keeps a good straight line. Once you are confident and your mind to muscle has connected with your technique you can try without the Smith machine.
My doctor told me not to lift more than 4 pounds . I don’t agree with him. I lift heavy grocery bags . I don’t break anything . I am 60 years old . I’m in pretty good shape.
You are young and I am happy to hear that you are in good shape! If you haven't been lifting then starting light is a good idea, and then working your way up form there. You can start with weights as heavy as your graocery bags ❤
Can you just stand with a bar with weight on the spine,nit do the squats. I do that for 30 seconds fir ,3 reps. I do a dead lift eith 59 kgs. All with a perfesional trainer ❤ Is that ok to stand with a bar on the shoulder with wright for 30 seconds.
Yes, anytime you put weight on your spine it is going to be helpful. There are mnay ways to improve bone hjealth outside of this particular study. The Liftmor study was the topic for this video, but all studies ar elimited to just a few things because that helps the study measure more effectively what is happening. Know that there are many ways to build strength and you don't have to squat to build strength.
There’s no way I can lift more than 5 pounds
That is okay. Lift the five pounds. Everyone has a different "heavy" and that is what I think is frustrating. We see someone else lifting their version of heavy and we think we need to lift like that, but we don't. We need to lift what is heavy for us personally ❤
@@sarahmapes_bonebuildersystem
@@sarahmapes_bonebuildersystem
Your so pretty I’m distracted from what you’re saying