The Baby Boomer Athlete: Prevention and Treatment of Minor Injuries

Written by Louise Roach


Are you a Baby Boomer? If you were born betweenrepparttar years of 1946 to 1964, you are part ofrepparttar 115247 79.1 million Boomers, comprising 29 percent ofrepparttar 115248 total US population. According torepparttar 115249 AARP, every seven seconds a Baby Boomer turns 50! And, about one-third of Americans who take part in sports activities are Boomers.

As this generation grows older, they are working harder to keep their youth and vitality, are staying active with physical activity, and unfortunately are experiencing more injuries thanrepparttar 115250 generation before them.

A US Consumer Product Safety Commission report states there were 1 million sports injuries to persons betweenrepparttar 115251 ages of 35 and 54 in 1998. This is a 33% increase overrepparttar 115252 same statistics of 1991. While this sounds like distressing news for aging bodies, many sports-related injuries are minor aches, sprains and strains that can be treated or even prevented using self-treatment techniques. Whether you are a weekend warrior or a lifelong athlete,repparttar 115253 following suggestions may help you stay limber and relatively pain-free.

Warm-up before stretching or an activity. Muscles that are warm through slow-paced pre-exercise such as jogging or walking, will be less likely to tear.

Stretching before and after exercise. Stay limber and flexible. Stretching is one ofrepparttar 115254 best preventive measures against injury.

Get fitted withrepparttar 115255 proper shoe. This is a top priority especially for running, hiking, and cross training. Go to a running store with someone on staff who will analyze your walk, arch, and how your foot turns in or out during activity. They will then fit you with a shoe havingrepparttar 115256 right amount of support or cushioning for your particular body type. This alone can substantially reducerepparttar 115257 incidence of injury.

Start daily conditioning. Do some type of activity every day to help condition your body for more strenuous weekend exercise.

Try adding low-impact activities torepparttar 115258 mix. Such as: Pilates, Yoga, Tai Chi, Elliptical Trainer, Recumbent Cycling, Spinning.

The Power of Ice

Written by Louise Roach


Using ice to treat injuries is one ofrepparttar oldest methods of pain control. Proven to be safe and effective at reducing swelling, relieving pain and decreasing muscle spasms, ice therapy is an easy self-care technique that anyone can administer. Every mother knows to put ice on a bruised knee after a soccer game or on a teething toddler’s tender gums. But do you really know how ice works?

Cold therapy, also known as cryotherapy, works onrepparttar 115246 principle of heat exchange. This occurs when you place a cooler object in direct contact with an object of warmer temperature, such as ice against skin. The cooler object will absorbrepparttar 115247 heat ofrepparttar 115248 warmer object. Why is this important when it comes to cold therapy?

After an injury, blood vessels that deliver oxygen and nutrients to cells are damaged. The cells aroundrepparttar 115249 injury increase their metabolism in an effort to consume more oxygen. When all ofrepparttar 115250 oxygen is used up,repparttar 115251 cells die. Also,repparttar 115252 damaged blood vessels cannot remove waste. Blood cells and fluid seep into spaces aroundrepparttar 115253 muscle, resulting in swelling and bruising. When ice is applied, it lowersrepparttar 115254 temperature ofrepparttar 115255 damaged tissue through heat exchange and constricts local blood vessels. This slows metabolism andrepparttar 115256 consumption of oxygen, therefore reducingrepparttar 115257 rate of cell damage and decreasing fluid build-up. Ice can also numb nerve endings. This stopsrepparttar 115258 transfer of impulses torepparttar 115259 brain that register as pain.

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