Guest guest Posted March 5, 2004 Report Share Posted March 5, 2004 I have not seen much on arthritis in the past year or so, although I have not read every post. If I have neglected earlier discussions of this topic in this forum - my apologies. A quick Google search reveals that weight training can have both negative and positive consequences regarding the development of arthritis. A few excerpts from the search are given at the end of this post. My own case is less severe than most of these but may be more common and therefore of interest to older power lifters. I was an OL in my teens and have been a PL since my late 20's. I am currently 65 and have been competing once or twice a year since age 58 (USAPL in Colorado). About 1.5 years ago I started having persistent pain in my left shoulder during the bench press, and particularly while getting under and holding the bar on my back for squats and good mornings. I always used a low bar position with the bar located just below the spine (protrusion) on each scapula. I tried varying my exercise routines, laying off for 6 weeks, various NSAIDs (aspirin, Tylenol, ibuprofen, Celebrex, Bextra), large amounts of glucosamine/chondroitin sulfate, MSM and other herbal and health products with little success. As the pain increased and my range of motion decreased I was no longer able to compete or even work out satisfactorily. After seeing local physicians, I went to the Mayo Clinic in Rochester MN (Dr. R.H. Cofield) since their orthopedic department was highly rated by US News. In his report Dr. Cofield stated that: " x-rays (of the left shoulder) show a typical osteoarthritic picture with loss of cartilage on the posterior half of the glenoid (socket) and certainly on the central-superior portion of the humeral head " . The right shoulder appeared normal. Since there was no single event that I could identify as initiating the condition and since I had no symptoms in other joints (after adequate warm-up), he was of the opinion that the cause of the condition was a series of small injuries incurred during training or competition. Assuming these small injuries correlate with pain experienced in a given exercise, I would have to rate holding the bar in the low position for squats and good mornings as the worst, followed by bench press on a wide bench, lat pull-downs and inclined presses. Unfortunately most benches used in PL meets are quite wide (~12 " , 30cm). Interestingly there is very little pain when doing dumbbell bench presses on a bodybuilding type bench, which is often narrower (~9-10 " , 23-26cm). So what can I conclude from these observations? Not much, since this is by no means a controlled experiment. My suspicion is that holding the bar low on the back in the squat and good morning - particularly when one side is lowered or raised while putting the bar back on the rack - and too frequent bench pressing on a wide bench, are the most likely culprits. This does not explain why both shoulders are not injured - perhaps the weakest link principle applies here. I am wondering if others have had similar experiences and how they have dealt with the condition. Excerpts from Google search for Osteoarthritis and Power Lifting: " athletes subjected to heavy loading and resistance are relatively free from osteoarthritis in old age and the subjects that were not exposed to heavy loading and resistance show a much greater incidence of osteoarthritis and cartilage fibrillation " . (KC and Osman : Weghtlifting Q and A, www.wannabebig.com/article.php?articleid=106 ) " every time I moved my arm it sounded like rocks grinding together plus an audible clunk. Without comment he ordered x-rays done of the shoulder area. After reading the x-rays he advised that I should have total shoulder replacement done on both sides, osteoarthritis had totally destroyed both shoulder joints (complete loss of joint space, large osteophyte formation). In other words the cartilage had worn away and the bone ends touched together and were grinding into each other " . (Osmo Kiiha: Osteoarthritis: My Experience. Posted on NaturalStrength.com on June 24, 2002. www.naturalstrength.com/ features/detail2.asp?AuthorID=158 & ArticleID=552 ) " A number of weight lifters, many of them my friends - Grimek, Tommy Kono, Bill and Pat O'Shea are prominent examples - have suffered from arthritis later in life and eventually had to have joint replacements. I've also experienced some joint problems. One might think, based on these cases and others, that weight training is bad for the joints. Obviously, it can be hard on the joints. In most cases, however, strength training protects the joints, and relieves pain and improves mobility for those who suffer from arthritis " . (Clarence Bass: Weights and Arthritis - Good & Bad www.cbass.com/Arthritis.htm ) Predecki Denver CO. USA Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You are posting as a guest. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.