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Improve Both Adrenal Function and Back Pain with Exercise

This study suggests that exercise can also improve adrenal responsiveness. Remember the "E" in "SHINE" (exercise as able). Walking and warm water swimnastics are a good starting point for many. "As able" is critical as well. If you feel worse the next day, you did too much (aim for "good tired after and better the next day"). After 10 weeks of treatment with the SHINE Protocol, you can increase your walking by UP TO 1 minute a day as able. In this study, exercise not only improved adrenal function, but also decreased pain, increased over all function, and decreased associated anxiety and depression.

The Effect of Exercise On Adrenocortical Responsiveness of Patients with Chronic Low Back Pain, Controlled for Psychological Strain

D Chatzitheodorou, S Mavromoustakos, and S Milioti
Clinical Rehabilitation, April 1, 2008; 22(4): 319-28.

Objective

To investigate the effects of high-intensity aerobic exercise on adrenocortical responsiveness and on standard outcome measures in patients with chronic low back pain.

Design

Controlled clinical trial.

Setting

Physical therapy department of a university general hospital.

Subjects

Sixty-four patients with chronic low back pain were randomly allocated into positive and negative suppression test groups and assigned to exercise protocol.

Interventions

Subjects in the positive and negative dexamethasone suppression test groups received a 12-week high-intensity aerobic exercise programme.

Main outcome measures

Dexamethasone suppression test as an index of adrenocortical responsiveness, pain measured with the McGill Pain Questionnaire, functional status measured with the Roland Morris Disability Questionnaire, and psychological strain measured with the Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale.

Results

Data analysis in the positive group identified a significant reduction of pain by 30% (t(30) = 11.2, P<0.001), a recovery of the lost functioning by 34% (t(30) = 19.7, P<0.001), a reduction of anxiety/depression by 25% (t(30) = 10.2, P<0.001), and a change in adrenocortical responsiveness by 40% (t(30) = 14.1, P<0.001). In the dexamethasone suppression test negative group, data analysis identified a significant reduction of pain by 8% (t(31) = 4.2, P<0.001), a recovery of lost functioning by 10% (t(31) = 4.8, P<0.001), a reduction of anxiety/depression by 11% (t(31) = 5.0, P<0.001), and no change in adrenocortical responsiveness (t(31) = 1.2, P=0.22). In univariate analysis between—subject differences were significant for dexamethasone suppression test (F(61) = 163, P<0.001), and for anxiety/depression (F(61) = 21.3, P<0.001).

Conclusion

Exercise alleviated pain, functional disability and anxiety/depression, also improved adrenocortical responsiveness in patients with chronic low back pain with dexamethasone suppression test positive values.


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Some information on this site is from the book From Fatigued to Fantastic! Third Edition by Jacob Teitelbaum MD, copyright 2007 by Jacob Teitelbaum MD. Used by permission of Avery Publishing, an imprint of Penguin Group (USA) Inc.


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