Hi, I'm Natalie. And today, Veritas Health is going to bring you a five-minute routine to help treat low back pain. This is going to be a real-time exercise routine. So I encourage you all to go along and do these exercises with me.

Before I begin, if any of these exercises cause pain or worsen your symptoms, please discontinue and consult with your medical provider. These exercises are going to be good for helping with back mobility and for helping improve core strength.

The first exercise we're going to do is a pelvic tilt. You can lay on the ground or on your bed with your feet bent. You're going to draw your belly button in towards your spine, which will cause your back to round and push into the ground. Hold for 10 seconds then relax.

While you are holding the pelvic tilt, make sure that you are still breathing. All right, we'll do number 4. You might feel your core muscles working. Number 5.

Awesome. The next exercise we will do is called a prone press-up. You will lie on your belly with your hands on either side of your shoulders. You will then press yourself up trying to keep your hips on the ground and hold for five seconds. You can then go back down to the ground. If this exercise is too much of a stretch, you can modify it by just coming up onto your elbows.

Once again, if these exercises increase your pain or worsen your symptoms, please discontinue and consult with your medical provider. During this exercise, you might feel some pressure through your low back or a stretch through the front of your stomach. These sensations are all good as long as they're not painful.

Excellent. The next exercise we will do is going to be a straight leg raise. This exercise is going to be beneficial for helping strengthen the hips and the core muscles. You will lie on your back with one knee bent up and one leg straight. You will then lift your leg to about the level of your bent knee, and then come back down.

While doing this, try to keep your core tight and your back against the ground. If this exercises causes any pain down your leg, please discontinue and consult with your medical provider.

Great. Now, we will switch to the other leg. So bend your other knee and let your other leg straighten out. Remember, try to keep your core tight and your back against the ground. You should make sure these movements are nice and controlled. You might feel muscles along the front of your hip or your abdomen contracting as you go.

Awesome. The next exercise we'll do will be a bridge. This exercise will help strengthen the core muscles and the glute muscles. You will lie on your back with both of your knees bent and your feet flat on the ground. You will put your hands on the ground, then lift your hips up as high as you can go comfortably. Hold for about 10 seconds at the top.

If it is uncomfortable or hard, you don't have to lift your hips all the way off the ground. You might start to feel your ab muscles or your glute muscles get a little fatigued with this.

The last exercise we'll do will be a prone leg extension. This exercise will help strengthen the back and the glute muscles. You will lie on your belly and you will tighten one glute muscle and lift your hip off the ground. This exercise helps strengthen the glute muscles. So you might feel your muscles working through your hip and your glute region. Good. And then you can switch to the other leg.

All right, nice job. To learn more about exercises that can be beneficial for low back pain, please visit us at Spine-health and be sure to subscribe to our channel for more videos like this. Thank you for watching.

Dr. Natalie Ullrich is a physical therapist specializing in orthopedic and sports medicine at Plymouth Physical Therapy Specialists. She is passionate about treating each individual as a whole.

advertisement