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Thursday, August 14, 2025

YOUR DAI­LY HEALTH

Beware of hazardous get-fit resolutions

by

20140108

Div­ing in­to New Year's res­o­lu­tions to get fit or lose weight may be haz­ardous to your health.

"Con­sult your doc­tor be­fore be­gin­ning a new ex­er­cise pro­gramme" is a com­mon dis­claimer on gym sign-up sheets and work­out equip­ment man­u­als, and one more peo­ple could stand to fol­low.

Doc­tors and phys­i­cal ther­a­pists say they of­ten see pa­tients dur­ing the ear­ly part of the year with in­juries-some of them se­ri­ous-stem­ming from New Year's res­o­lu­tions. Not on­ly can such in­juries lead to ex­pen­sive med­ical bills, they may al­so waste cash shelled out for fit­ness gear and gym mem­ber­ships.

"Peo­ple tend to get su­per ex­cit­ed when they make their res­o­lu­tions," said Dr Derek Ochi­ai, an or­thopaedic sur­geon in Ar­ling­ton, Va. "But go­ing from ze­ro to 60 in a work­out reg­i­men can set you up for a lot of prob­lems."

In­juries from ex­er­cise and ex­er­cise equip­ment sent 459,978 peo­ple to the emer­gency room in 2012, up 12 per cent from 2011, ac­cord­ing to the Con­sumer Prod­uct Safe­ty Com­mis­sion.

Of those, 31,844 re­quired hos­pi­tal­i­sa­tion, up 34 per cent from the pri­or year. And that's just a small slice of ex­er­cise-re­lat­ed in­juries-many more con­sumers end up at their doc­tor's of­fice rather than the emer­gency room.

Erin W was off to a good start on her res­o­lu­tion to reg­u­lar­ly work out in her Wash­ing­ton, DC, con­do's gym, vis­it­ing al­most dai­ly for a ses­sion on the el­lip­ti­cal ma­chine. "Be­ing clin­i­cal­ly obese and out of shape meant I wasn't as con­scious of my form as I should have been," said Erin, who asked that her last name be with­held for pri­va­cy.

By Feb­ru­ary, Erin no­ticed a side ef­fect of her work­outs. "There was this vis­i­ble mus­cle twitch in my knee," she said. "It wasn't par­tic­u­lar­ly painful, but it was an­noy­ing."

Her pri­ma­ry care physi­cian sus­pect­ed knee strain and rec­om­mend­ed Erin re­frain from ex­er­cis­ing for a few months un­til the twitch sub­sided. "Not the re­sult I had want­ed," Erin said.

Sprains, joint in­flam­ma­tion and oth­er overuse in­juries are among the most com­mon mal­adies doc­tors see among res­o­lu­tion-mak­ers.

"It's usu­al­ly one of the 'itis­es,' like ten­donitis or bur­si­tis," said phys­i­cal ther­a­pist Tom Di­An­ge­lis, di­rec­tor of op­er­a­tions at Or­thoSport Phys­i­cal Ther­a­py in Lyn­wood, Wash. Both are caused by repet­i­tive ac­tiv­i­ties that ag­gra­vate joints. In peo­ple who haven't pre­vi­ous­ly been ac­tive, the trig­ger could be any­thing from too-lengthy runs to over­head lifts of too-heavy weights, he said.

Usu­al­ly, the prob­lem is com­pound­ed by peo­ple who take the phrase "no pain, no gain" lit­er­al­ly. "Hu­man na­ture is to think, work through it and it'll go away," said Di­An­ge­lis. But do­ing so can lead to com­pli­ca­tions and chron­ic con­di­tions that take more than a few weeks' rest to treat.

Of course, there are al­so one-time ac­ci­dents, like some­one who takes a head­er off the tread­mill, trips dur­ing a boot camp sprint or tum­bles at­tempt­ing a DVD ex­er­cise rou­tine.

"They can have in­juries where they slip, fall and tear some car­ti­lage in their knee," said Ochi­ai.

Res­o­lu­tion-mak­ers age 40 and old­er might even be at risk for a heart at­tack. "At low-ex­er­cise fre­quen­cy, the 'week­end war­rior,' for ex­am­ple, the risk of ex­er­cise trig­ger­ing a heart at­tack is mul­ti­ples high­er than in peo­ple who ex­er­cise reg­u­lar­ly," said Dr Mic­ah Eimer, car­di­ol­o­gy and med­ical di­rec­tor for North­west­ern Med­i­cine Glen­view Out­pa­tient Cen­ter in Glen­view, Illi­nois.

Doc­tors say the best course to avoid in­jury is to ease, rather than dive, in­to new ex­er­cise rou­tines, work­ing your way up to longer dis­tances, heav­ier weights or more ad­vanced class­es.

Oth­er tricks to avoid sidelin­ing res­o­lu­tions:

Vary ex­er­cise

If you're ex­er­cis­ing mul­ti­ple times a week, switch up ac­tiv­i­ties, said Di­An­ge­lis. "Our body needs rest and mus­cles in dif­fer­ent ar­eas need rest from dif­fer­ent ac­tiv­i­ties," he said. That lessens the risk of overuse in­jury-and it's al­so what makes you stronger in the long run.

Warm up

It read­ies your mus­cles for a tougher work­out, said phys­i­cal ther­a­pist Joe Millen. who is al­so a per­son­al train­er, owns Im­pact Health in Palm Har­bor, Flori­da. Warm­ing up might en­tail a gen­er­al low-lev­el ac­tiv­i­ty such as walk­ing or stretch­ing, or a slow­er, more con­trolled take on what­ev­er ex­er­cise they plan to do.

Ask­ing for help

"Get a train­er to help you, or even just some ad­vice from a gym em­ploy­ee on how to prop­er­ly use the equip­ment," said Dr Shari Liber­man, an or­thopaedic sur­geon at Hous­ton Methodist Hos­pi­tal in Texas. Bad pos­ture or form while ex­er­cis­ing can up the risk of in­jury, she said, as can us­ing equip­ment set up for some­one of a dif­fer­ent height.

Read your body

Af­ter a tough work­out, it's com­mon (and nor­mal) to feel mus­cle sore­ness with­in 48 hours, said Millen. Feel­ing pain soon­er, or in the joint rather than mus­cles, is a sign that some­thing isn't right, he said.

Liber­man said ice, com­pres­sion and el­e­va­tion-is a good rule to fol­low in that case. "If it doesn't get bet­ter in a few days, then I would go see a doc­tor," she said. (CN­BC)


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