subject: Weightlifting Exercises That Can Hurt Your Back [print this page] Most people are aware that they should avoid bending at the waist when lifting something heavy at home or at work, but this rule of back safety often gets forgotten when the heavy lifting is part of an exercise program. Even personal trainers may sometimes overlook low back safety and recommend exercises that place their clients in danger of serious low back injury.
The basic rule for lifting things at work or at home is the same as the rule for lifting weights - avoid lifting while bent forward at the waist. If we observe this rule, certain exercises should be avoided at all costs. While it is true that exercises like straight legged dead lifts can promote the development of specific muscles, they tend to be extremely damaging to the lumbar intervertebral discs.
Although muscles will become stronger and more developed the more you work them, the spinal discs actually get structurally weaker the more mechanical stress you place on them. It's not worth developing muscles at the risk of causing a disc herniation. After all, the inactivity that will follow a disc injury is going to wipe out any muscle development you'd get from bad exercise choices anyway.
It's easy to see how certain weightlifting exercises violate the "don't bend at the waist" rule. Exercises like the aforementioned straight legged dead lifts and the classic exercise, "Good Mornings" where you bend forward with a weight bar across your shoulders are obviously not good choices if you want to avoid a low back injury, but there are a few exercises that might not be so obvious as to their potential to damage the low back.
One of these is the popular standing bicep curl. Now, there's actually nothing wrong with this exercise when done with proper form. The trouble is, a large number of weight lifters will often attempt to lift much more weight than they are actually able to (this is an especially common phenomenon among male weight lifters, particularly in settings where they may wish to show off for others who may be watching).
With standing bicep curls, the common "cheat" to lift more than your capabilities is to do what I call the "lean and jerk" (not to be confused with the powerlifting event, the clean and jerk). Basically, the lean and jerk consists of leaning forward with the weight and then quickly jerking backwards with the torso to build up momentum on the weight to be able to complete the curl. Although the forward lean is only a few degrees, that's all it takes to place uneven pressure on the spinal discs in the low back, particularly when holding a heavy weight in your hands. Besides the damaging pressure placed on the spinal discs, the rapid backward jerk of the upper torso can easily damage muscles and ligaments. So, the bottom line here is if you want to do curls, choose an appropriate amount of resistance and do the exercise with proper form.
One other exercise that breaks the "don't bend at the waist" lifting rule without being obvious about it is the seated row machine. Some seated row machines have a support that goes against the chest and reduces stress on the back, but those that don't have considerable potential for misuse that can easily injure the low back.
As with the "lean and jerk" maneuver to cheat when doing bicep curls, many individuals will try to use too much weight on the row machine and wind up getting pulled forward (bending at the waist), on the eccentric (relaxation) phase of the exercise. So, the exercise winds up being one of the weight pulling the torso forward, and the lifter jerking backwards as he or she performs the row. Once again, there's nothing wrong with seated rows per se, even on machines without the chest support, but when done with improper form and too much weight, they are a back injury waiting to happen.
To sum things up, avoid any weightlifting exercise that requires you to bend forward at the waist to perform the lift, and for all other exercises, use an appropriate amount of resistance for your level of strength and maintain proper form at all times.