McKenzie Explained PDF
McKenzie Explained PDF
habits or as the result of an injury, a crack or crevice can develop in a disc -allowing the jelly in the center to seep into the crevice and exerting pressure on
the nerves that can cause neck or back pain, sometimes also producing pain,
numbness, or tingling radiating down an arm or leg.
When a disc has degenerated with age, or
is injured, the internal crack or crevice in a
disc can develop in any direction, but it
usually develops on the back side of a
disc.
The reason why most disc injuries are to
the back side of a disc is simple -- nearly
everything we do involves forward
bending. We bend forward to put on our
clothes, brush our teeth, pick up children,
lift boxes, work in the garden and we sit
slouched for hours and hours. Rarely, if
ever, do we bend backwards to
compensate for all of this forward bending!
Slouched sitting and excessive forward
bending squeezes the front side of our
discs, putting backward pressure on the
nucleus of our discs day after day, year
after year.
Finally one day you bend over and pick up
a paperclip and get a nasty pain in your back, buttock or even down a leg. It
wasn't the paperclip -- that was merely the straw that broke the camel's back.
That's the bad news.
The good news is that most of us can abolish our own back or neck pain by
doing repeated movements in the opposite direction, by repeatedly bending your
neck or low back in the proper direction to push the jelly back in the disc and
maintain it there to allow the crack in the disc to heal properly and not allow the
jelly escape again.
Just because we say that the pain is coming from a disc does not mean that you
need surgery or that this is a serious condition. For most of you, all you need to
do is perform repeated movements of your neck or low back in the appropriate
direction to make your pain diminish and then go away.
McKenzie believes that most people who hurt enough in the neck or low back to
go to a doctor have a disc bulge/herniation or "disc derangement".
Question: Why couldn't it merely be a "strain" of the neck or back?
Answer: Because most people's pain has a directional preference!
Most people with low back pain are like the patient who laid face down on the
table with his low back arched. His symptoms changed quickly. The pain
decreased and completely resolved in his leg and back in just a few minutes.
If what he had was a real back "strain"? Then lying on his stomach with his low
back arched would not make the pain go away.
When you sprain your ankle by twisting it, you cannot merely put the ankle in a
certain sustained position or repeatedly move it and make the pain completely
and quickly go away. The pain of a sprained ankle or real strained back has
tissue damage that typically takes weeks to go away, diminishing a little day by
day until the pain is completely gone.
By contrast, the patient from McKenzie's accidental discovery felt his low back
and leg pain go away quickly, within 5-10 minutes, by lying on his stomach with
his low back arched.
If pain goes away quickly or even just changes quickly because of holding a
certain position or performing certain repeated movements and stays that way,
that is not the pain of a muscular "strain" -- it has to be something else.
The only piece of anatomy in your back or neck that can account for this
observed phenomenon is a disc. Pain that has a directional preference and can
be made to go away quickly is discogenic -- the pain is coming from a disc.
The disc has pain receptors in the outer third of the disc, but not in the inner two
thirds. When the jelly in the center of the disc is pushed away from the pain free
center to the painful outer layers, pain is produced. By performing the correct
movements and squeezing the jelly back toward the middle of the disc where it
belongs, the pain will quickly go away and the resolve.
Many more people have discogenic pain than are aware of it. Since we are all
more familiar with muscles than spinal anatomy and mechanics we attribute most
pain to tight muscles or muscle spasms when they arent the true pain
generating structure.