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Metalworking (rec.crafts.metalworking) Discuss various aspects of working with metal, such as machining, welding, metal joining, screwing, casting, hardening/tempering, blacksmithing/forging, spinning and hammer work, sheet metal work. |
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#1
Posted to rec.crafts.metalworking
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OT sudden back pain
Something strange happened yesterday. I was riding a bicycle, along
with my son also riding his tricycle. He finally got tired and asked me to carry his bike home, which I did by riding my own bike with his tricycle in my right hand. So far so good. Then, as I arrived home, still sitting on my bicycle, I leaned to set his tricycle on the ground. As I did that, I had sudden back pain and it is not going away. I have hard times bending in a certain way and walk with a funny gait. What could this be and should I be worried? thanks i |
#2
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OT sudden back pain
Ignoramus21303 wrote:
What could this be and should I be worried? It's OK if you stay away from the computer! Nick -- Motor Modelle // Engine Models http://www.motor-manufaktur.de DIY-DRO // Eigenbau-Digitalanzeige http://www.yadro.de |
#3
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OT sudden back pain
Ignoramus21303 wrote:
Something strange happened yesterday. I was riding a bicycle, along with my son also riding his tricycle. He finally got tired and asked me to carry his bike home, which I did by riding my own bike with his tricycle in my right hand. So far so good. Then, as I arrived home, still sitting on my bicycle, I leaned to set his tricycle on the ground. As I did that, I had sudden back pain and it is not going away. I have hard times bending in a certain way and walk with a funny gait. What could this be and should I be worried? thanks i Welcome to middle age, pal. This is a back spasm, well known to all blue collar workers. I suggest you follow a routine of taking anti-inflammatory medication (I take aspirin, lots of people take ibuprofen), heat & ice, rest, and light duty for about two weeks. If you don't do that, the guys in the metal trades taught me, the pain will be longer and worse. As I get older (I'm now mid-50s) I still get back spasms but by now they are pretty mild because I never lift anything stupid anymore. If you think about it, you loaded your back all funny riding your bicycle with a weight in one hand only. Some muscle was overworked and spasmed when you bent over. It might be a slight muscle pull, a strain, whatever, doesn't really matter except to a surgeon. Take ibuprofen religiously unless you take it a lot (don't overdo ibuprofen, it will hurt your kidneys badly) and take it easy, and try soaking in a hot tub or lying on a heating pad. Make your kids wait on you. Grant |
#4
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OT sudden back pain
What Grant said, and if you happen to have any friend who is a physical
therapist offer to trade favors for their help. Careful warmup and stretching will fix you right up. Whenever your back hurts, fix it then start regular situps/crunches. Fred Ignoramus21303 wrote: Something strange happened yesterday. I was riding a bicycle, along with my son also riding his tricycle. He finally got tired and asked me to carry his bike home, which I did by riding my own bike with his tricycle in my right hand. So far so good. Then, as I arrived home, still sitting on my bicycle, I leaned to set his tricycle on the ground. As I did that, I had sudden back pain and it is not going away. I have hard times bending in a certain way and walk with a funny gait. What could this be and should I be worried? thanks i -- Fred R "It doesn't really take all kinds; there just *are* all kinds". Drop TROU to email. |
#5
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OT sudden back pain
On Thu, 27 Apr 2006 17:15:58 GMT, Fred R "spam wrote:
What Grant said, and if you happen to have any friend who is a physical therapist offer to trade favors for their help. Careful warmup and stretching will fix you right up. Whenever your back hurts, fix it then start regular situps/crunches. Thank you, Fred and Grant. i Fred Ignoramus21303 wrote: Something strange happened yesterday. I was riding a bicycle, along with my son also riding his tricycle. He finally got tired and asked me to carry his bike home, which I did by riding my own bike with his tricycle in my right hand. So far so good. Then, as I arrived home, still sitting on my bicycle, I leaned to set his tricycle on the ground. As I did that, I had sudden back pain and it is not going away. I have hard times bending in a certain way and walk with a funny gait. What could this be and should I be worried? thanks i |
#6
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OT sudden back pain
RAM³ wrote:
Igor, think back to what you'd been doing a couple of days _before_ the spasm hit - were you doing any heavy lifting at an odd angle? That's the killer. I could unload lumber all day and not hurt my back. Lift a big sack of grocerys out of the trunk with my feet at right angle to the load and I am seriously fsked up... |
#7
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OT sudden back pain
Jim Stewart wrote:
RAM³ wrote: Igor, think back to what you'd been doing a couple of days _before_ the spasm hit - were you doing any heavy lifting at an odd angle? That's the killer. I could unload lumber all day and not hurt my back. Lift a big sack of grocerys out of the trunk with my feet at right angle to the load and I am seriously fsked up... From the overall description, this certainly sounds like a back spasm. One other possibility might be a kidney stone. These can often feel REMARKABLY like a badly pulled lower-back muscle. The exception is that, with a bad back, you can usually find SOME position to contort yourself into that relives all or some of the pain, at least temporarily. No such luck with a 'stone' ... it just hurts ALL the time (which doesn't keep one from writhing around TRYING to find a position that gives relief). Stones can hit you at totally random times. They can grow in place for months or years, with few if any symptoms, until something causes them to start moving. Stones are often remarkably sharp shard-like little pieces, with many spikes, horns and edges to get caught on things as they move along. Such movement, forcing themselves through tiny ducts, is usually what causes most of the pain. When they get caught in a duct they can cause a blockage, and a 'backpressure' can build up causing further discomfort. NO FUN AT ALL! While they can, and often do, begin their journey for no apparent reason, sometimes vigorous activity dislodges them and starts them on their way. Simple tests in a hospital or doctor's office will usually identify a stone. Often they will pass by themselves in a few hours (if you're lucky) or days. If not, various medical procedures are available to deal with them. Dan Mitchell ============ |
#8
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OT sudden back pain
"Ignoramus21303" wrote in message ... Something strange happened yesterday. I was riding a bicycle, along with my son also riding his tricycle. He finally got tired and asked me to carry his bike home, which I did by riding my own bike with his tricycle in my right hand. So far so good. Then, as I arrived home, still sitting on my bicycle, I leaned to set his tricycle on the ground. As I did that, I had sudden back pain and it is not going away. I have hard times bending in a certain way and walk with a funny gait. What could this be and should I be worried? thanks Lot's of good advise--I'll put in my 2¢ . The sequence of bend over, turn to one side, set something down, and straighten up while still turned to the side. Did it once setting down a bucket of water. Not heavy, maybe 15 lbs. When I straightened up it HURT in my lower back. Did Tylenol, Ibuprofen, Ketoprofin, heat, cold, etc. Still hurt a few days later, so I hit the chiropractor. Way it was explained to me is that that particular sequence can cross up the vertebrae in the lower spine, and if you straighten up before turning back to face forward they can lock out of alignment. The weight of the load doesn't really matter. Some heat, a stretch/twist and a pop, fixed. Bill |
#9
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OT sudden back pain
Ignoramus21303 wrote: Something strange happened yesterday. I was riding a bicycle, along with my son also riding his tricycle. He finally got tired and asked me to carry his bike home, which I did by riding my own bike with his tricycle in my right hand. So far so good. Then, as I arrived home, still sitting on my bicycle, I leaned to set his tricycle on the ground. As I did that, I had sudden back pain and it is not going away. I have hard times bending in a certain way and walk with a funny gait. What could this be and should I be worried? Do you have pain radiating down your leg? If so, you have most likely crunched a disc, and a nerve is getting pinched. If no, then most likely you have a muscle that is cramping up. That should go away a lot quicker. I used to get this in my neck a couple times a year, and taking calcium supplements completely got rid of them. Jon |
#10
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OT sudden back pain
Grant Erwin wrote:
Welcome to middle age, pal. This is a back spasm, well known to all blue collar workers. I suggest you follow a routine of taking anti-inflammatory medication (I take aspirin, lots of people take ibuprofen), heat & ice I never understood this, isn't the inflammation the immune system kicking in to fix the damage area (by increasing the bloodflow among other things) ? Why would you want to stop that? I suppose in severe cases the body can get confused and inflammation can turn into a bad thing, but for plain jane problems like this its seems a good thing, doesn't it? I don't know, but I would think if it was a bad thing your body wouldn't go to all this trouble to begin with... , rest, and light duty for about two weeks. This makes more sense. |
#11
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OT sudden back pain
Ignoramus21303 wrote in article ... Two questions...... 1.) Does the pain seem to radiate down the leg? 2.) Do you carry a rather thick wallet in the rear pocket on that side? If the answer to both is "yes", then you MAY have pinched a sciatic nerve. I used to do it all the time to my left side - which happened to be the side I carried my wallet on. Doctor explained that the wallet usually sits over the sciatic nerve in the back pocket and irritates it. Everything that has been recommended - prescription muscle relaxants (I use Norflex), pain killers such as Acetminophen or Ibuprofen, and heat - coupled with time - all help I fixed the wallet problem by moving it to a side pocket, but my sciatica has returned with a narrowing of my spinal column at the L-5 - aka "Spinal Stenosis" - which puts pressure on the same sciatic nerve, so I'm having an occasional attack of sciatica when I don't bend and stand "just right." |
#12
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OT sudden back pain
Grant Erwin wrote:
Welcome to middle age, pal. This is a back spasm, well known to all blue collar workers. I suggest you follow a routine of taking anti-inflammatory medication (I take aspirin, lots of people take ibuprofen), heat & ice, rest, and light duty for about two weeks. If you don't do that, the guys in the metal trades taught me, the pain will be longer and worse. As I get older (I'm now mid-50s) I still get back spasms but by now they are pretty mild because I never lift anything stupid anymore. What works for me when I have a back spasm is sucking in my gut, i.e., tightening my ab muscles and keeping them tight until the spasm goes away, which usually takes only a few seconds. I suspect the reason it works is that the abs stabilize the torso enough to allow the back muscles to relax. Of course, it helps to have strong abs. Now that I've spent some time strengthening my core muscles, spasms occur only rarely and when they do occur, they respond to the suck-in-the-gut trick with no need for any further treatments such as those mentioned by Grant. YMMV. As for preventing spasms, in addition to being smart about lifting things, I have three recommendations: strengthen your core (ab and back exercises), stretch on a regular basis (especially the hamstrings and lower back), and stay hydrated. And if you have a beer belly, you might want to do something about that as well. ;-) HTH. |
#13
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OT sudden back pain
In article 01c66a34$b2f54560$2fa6c3d8@race, * wrote:
: :Two questions...... : :1.) Does the pain seem to radiate down the leg? : :2.) Do you carry a rather thick wallet in the rear pocket on that side? : : :If the answer to both is "yes", then you MAY have pinched a sciatic nerve. : :I used to do it all the time to my left side - which happened to be the :side I carried my wallet on. : octor explained that the wallet usually sits over the sciatic nerve in the :back pocket and irritates it. To relieve the condition, the doctor emptied your wallet, right? -- Bob Nichols AT comcast.net I am "RNichols42" |
#14
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OT sudden back pain
On Thu, 27 Apr 2006 16:22:55 GMT, Ignoramus21303
wrote: ,;Something strange happened yesterday. I was riding a bicycle, along ,;with my son also riding his tricycle. He finally got tired and asked ,;me to carry his bike home, which I did by riding my own bike with his ,;tricycle in my right hand. ,; ,;So far so good. ,; ,;Then, as I arrived home, still sitting on my bicycle, I leaned to set ,;his tricycle on the ground. As I did that, I had sudden back pain and ,;it is not going away. I have hard times bending in a certain way and ,;walk with a funny gait. ,; ,;What could this be and should I be worried? Probably not. Sounds like a muscle spasm. If you have pain running down the leg than it may be a disk problem. I used to get these. Usually by some awkward position and reaching for something. Not necessarily heavy lifting. I found two ways to deal with them. 1. Use a heat pad, sleep on the floor for the three or four days. (It was extremely painful to try to move when in bed) Things returned to normal in about ten days. 2. Go to the clinic and get a muscle relaxant prescription. Take pills per schedule. Use a heat pad, sleep on the floor for the three or four days. (It was extremely painful to try to move when in bed) Things returned to normal in about ten days. In subsequent years I found #1 to be the best solution. |
#15
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OT sudden back pain
What the others said; just one comment on the perscription "muscle
relaxant". The other name for these is "jello pills" because that is what your body will feel like after taking them. Any position other than horizontal is just not going to happen. Unknown wrote: On Thu, 27 Apr 2006 16:22:55 GMT, Ignoramus21303 wrote: ,;Something strange happened yesterday. I was riding a bicycle, along ,;with my son also riding his tricycle. He finally got tired and asked ,;me to carry his bike home, which I did by riding my own bike with his ,;tricycle in my right hand. ,; ,;So far so good. ,; ,;Then, as I arrived home, still sitting on my bicycle, I leaned to set ,;his tricycle on the ground. As I did that, I had sudden back pain and ,;it is not going away. I have hard times bending in a certain way and ,;walk with a funny gait. ,; ,;What could this be and should I be worried? Probably not. Sounds like a muscle spasm. If you have pain running down the leg than it may be a disk problem. I used to get these. Usually by some awkward position and reaching for something. Not necessarily heavy lifting. I found two ways to deal with them. 1. Use a heat pad, sleep on the floor for the three or four days. (It was extremely painful to try to move when in bed) Things returned to normal in about ten days. 2. Go to the clinic and get a muscle relaxant prescription. Take pills per schedule. Use a heat pad, sleep on the floor for the three or four days. (It was extremely painful to try to move when in bed) Things returned to normal in about ten days. In subsequent years I found #1 to be the best solution. |
#16
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OT sudden back pain
And there are patches - HOT-COLD that are menthol IIRC - that really helps!
Martin Martin Eastburn @ home at Lions' Lair with our computer lionslair at consolidated dot net NRA LOH & Endowment Member NRA Second Amendment Task Force Charter Founder IHMSA and NRA Metallic Silhouette maker & member Grant Erwin wrote: Ignoramus21303 wrote: Something strange happened yesterday. I was riding a bicycle, along with my son also riding his tricycle. He finally got tired and asked me to carry his bike home, which I did by riding my own bike with his tricycle in my right hand. So far so good. Then, as I arrived home, still sitting on my bicycle, I leaned to set his tricycle on the ground. As I did that, I had sudden back pain and it is not going away. I have hard times bending in a certain way and walk with a funny gait. What could this be and should I be worried? thanks i Welcome to middle age, pal. This is a back spasm, well known to all blue collar workers. I suggest you follow a routine of taking anti-inflammatory medication (I take aspirin, lots of people take ibuprofen), heat & ice, rest, and light duty for about two weeks. If you don't do that, the guys in the metal trades taught me, the pain will be longer and worse. As I get older (I'm now mid-50s) I still get back spasms but by now they are pretty mild because I never lift anything stupid anymore. If you think about it, you loaded your back all funny riding your bicycle with a weight in one hand only. Some muscle was overworked and spasmed when you bent over. It might be a slight muscle pull, a strain, whatever, doesn't really matter except to a surgeon. Take ibuprofen religiously unless you take it a lot (don't overdo ibuprofen, it will hurt your kidneys badly) and take it easy, and try soaking in a hot tub or lying on a heating pad. Make your kids wait on you. Grant ----== Posted via Newsfeeds.Com - Unlimited-Unrestricted-Secure Usenet News==---- http://www.newsfeeds.com The #1 Newsgroup Service in the World! 120,000+ Newsgroups ----= East and West-Coast Server Farms - Total Privacy via Encryption =---- |
#17
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OT sudden back pain
Your alignment is out. Get some good references and see a Chiropractor.
They can perform miracles in my book. |
#18
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sudden back pain
Another two cents worth!
As most of us age we tend to reduce our consumption of dairy products , quite often due to lactose intolerance.This one item has not been mentioned yet there is a simple and effective way to reduce the muscle spasms that are associated with aging and calcium deficiencies due to diet. These spasms are a catch 22 proposition since as we age lactose intolerance becomes more prevalent therefore we reduce one of our main sources of dietary calcium and generally our muscle tone diminishes as well. To combat this and to avoid muscle cramping you need to increase your calcium intake , but just taking calcium will not serve the purpose alone . You must take a calcium supplement that has magnesium with it or the calcium will not be absorbed by the body. If your diet does not supply enough absorbable calcium the body will start depleting the calcium reserves from your bones and you will eventually end up with osteoporosis and spasms. As a side bar comment anyone working with lead / zinc ( welders especially) should never allow their bodies to end up in a calcium deficient state since the body will start storing lead in the bone structure a little bit at a time where the calcium should be. When your body has a severe demand for calcium the stored lead will cause lead poisoning. Your next stop will be cleation. Pete "Ignoramus21303" wrote in message ... Something strange happened yesterday. I was riding a bicycle, along with my son also riding his tricycle. He finally got tired and asked me to carry his bike home, which I did by riding my own bike with his tricycle in my right hand. So far so good. Then, as I arrived home, still sitting on my bicycle, I leaned to set his tricycle on the ground. As I did that, I had sudden back pain and it is not going away. I have hard times bending in a certain way and walk with a funny gait. What could this be and should I be worried? thanks i |
#19
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OT sudden back pain
A couple of things to add to what's been said (all good stuff):
I go for alcohol as a muscle relaxant. Pick your favorite. The idea is your muscles are hurt and clenched up as a result of the injury--relaxing them helps them heal faster. I've gotten useful help from a chiropractor or masseuse, but I find their help less effective the longer I wait after the injury. I don' t know about you, but in my case I had problems because I have a desk job and do blacksmithing on weekends (i.e. moving heavy things at times). My chiropractor got me to doing morning exercises to strengthen my back and stomach muscles, which helps a lot. So does paying close attention to correct lifting practices. Steve Ignoramus21303 wrote: Something strange happened yesterday. I was riding a bicycle, along with my son also riding his tricycle. He finally got tired and asked me to carry his bike home, which I did by riding my own bike with his tricycle in my right hand. So far so good. Then, as I arrived home, still sitting on my bicycle, I leaned to set his tricycle on the ground. As I did that, I had sudden back pain and it is not going away. I have hard times bending in a certain way and walk with a funny gait. What could this be and should I be worried? thanks i |
#20
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sudden back pain
I want to say thanks to everyone. The pain is 90% gone. It was
definitely a muscle spasm. I will work on my abs. I can do pullups, actually, but I am not paying much attention to "core strength". That needs to change. Good points on calcium deficiency, indeed, I need to eat more dairy as I am not lactose intolerant. This sort of thing happens about twice before. i |
#21
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OT sudden back pain
On Thu, 27 Apr 2006 16:22:55 GMT, Ignoramus21303
wrote: Something strange happened yesterday. I was riding a bicycle, along with my son also riding his tricycle. He finally got tired and asked me to carry his bike home, which I did by riding my own bike with his tricycle in my right hand. So far so good. Then, as I arrived home, still sitting on my bicycle, I leaned to set his tricycle on the ground. As I did that, I had sudden back pain and it is not going away. I have hard times bending in a certain way and walk with a funny gait. What could this be and should I be worried? thanks i Welcome to the real world of back issues. You pinched a nerve. The nerve bundle is now swollen in its sheath..and is being pinched more Take an anti inflammatory, lay down and stay down I found out yesterday..that you can indeed put a 3/4" diameter finger in the 5/16" gap between the concrete floor and the heavy sheet metal base of a Hardinge HLS speed lathe. You can actually do it..if when the guy holding the base off the floor with the pinch bar sneezes and jerks the bar out and it falls several inches and lands perfectly across the first joing of your Bird finger. It doesnt cut off your finger this way. It hyper extends the joint..ie wedges both sides of the joint apart 3/16", but blowing out the blood vessels and tissus. It also..if you have the clarity, to make you anunciate very clearly, and loudly to over come shop noise, the firm request to pick up the machine again. However..it may cause the pinch bar weilding shop owner, suddenly seeing a rapidly expanding pool of blood running out from under his machine, on both sides of of what appears to be a completly severed finger..to turn green, then white..then drop the pinch bar..stumble backwards several feet and freeze. Having a well practiced Command Voice will often (after several command sequences) unfreeze the shop owner who will then utilize the pinch bar to lift the machine, after what feels like several lifetimes has passed by..so the now gushing digit may be examined in relief in finding it still is attached..and still flexes. At this point..a well practiced Command Invective sequence iniitializes..and runs through a 50 yr collection of invective, in at least 5 language. Afterwhich a Invective Generation Program Macro turns on and additional New Invective is developed and uttered at random level and pitches. Punctuated by Artistic New Age Art comprised of splashes and splotches of the Artists own essence applied to any canvas nearby, machines, walls, floors as the Artist does The Steel Dance. However..the bandaged and swollen digit does require the Artist to type rather ackwardly and slowly..depending on his Spell Checker to repair mangled text. Pictures available on request. Gunner "I think this is because of your belief in biological Marxism. As a genetic communist you feel that noticing behavioural patterns relating to race would cause a conflict with your belief in biological Marxism." Big Pete, famous Usenet Racist |
#22
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OT sudden back pain
Had he been a NYC owner, while the machine was on yer finger, he would have
asked to re-negotiate your rates. -- Mr. P.V.'d formerly Droll Troll "Gunner" wrote in message ... On Thu, 27 Apr 2006 16:22:55 GMT, Ignoramus21303 wrote: Something strange happened yesterday. I was riding a bicycle, along with my son also riding his tricycle. He finally got tired and asked me to carry his bike home, which I did by riding my own bike with his tricycle in my right hand. So far so good. Then, as I arrived home, still sitting on my bicycle, I leaned to set his tricycle on the ground. As I did that, I had sudden back pain and it is not going away. I have hard times bending in a certain way and walk with a funny gait. What could this be and should I be worried? thanks i Welcome to the real world of back issues. You pinched a nerve. The nerve bundle is now swollen in its sheath..and is being pinched more Take an anti inflammatory, lay down and stay down I found out yesterday..that you can indeed put a 3/4" diameter finger in the 5/16" gap between the concrete floor and the heavy sheet metal base of a Hardinge HLS speed lathe. You can actually do it..if when the guy holding the base off the floor with the pinch bar sneezes and jerks the bar out and it falls several inches and lands perfectly across the first joing of your Bird finger. It doesnt cut off your finger this way. It hyper extends the joint..ie wedges both sides of the joint apart 3/16", but blowing out the blood vessels and tissus. It also..if you have the clarity, to make you anunciate very clearly, and loudly to over come shop noise, the firm request to pick up the machine again. However..it may cause the pinch bar weilding shop owner, suddenly seeing a rapidly expanding pool of blood running out from under his machine, on both sides of of what appears to be a completly severed finger..to turn green, then white..then drop the pinch bar..stumble backwards several feet and freeze. Having a well practiced Command Voice will often (after several command sequences) unfreeze the shop owner who will then utilize the pinch bar to lift the machine, after what feels like several lifetimes has passed by..so the now gushing digit may be examined in relief in finding it still is attached..and still flexes. At this point..a well practiced Command Invective sequence iniitializes..and runs through a 50 yr collection of invective, in at least 5 language. Afterwhich a Invective Generation Program Macro turns on and additional New Invective is developed and uttered at random level and pitches. Punctuated by Artistic New Age Art comprised of splashes and splotches of the Artists own essence applied to any canvas nearby, machines, walls, floors as the Artist does The Steel Dance. However..the bandaged and swollen digit does require the Artist to type rather ackwardly and slowly..depending on his Spell Checker to repair mangled text. Pictures available on request. Gunner "I think this is because of your belief in biological Marxism. As a genetic communist you feel that noticing behavioural patterns relating to race would cause a conflict with your belief in biological Marxism." Big Pete, famous Usenet Racist |
#23
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sudden back pain
Except that magnesium doesn't have anything to w/ Calcium
absorption--vitamin D does. It is recommended that Ca/Mg/Potassium/Phosphorous/Na occur in the diet in certain ratios, laregly (I believe) for electrolyte balance purposes, but not for absorption purposes. But magnesium, and potassium, are more important in muscle cramping. It is unlikely that low calcium predisposes lead storage in the bones, as the electronic structures are different, but anything is possible--lead is thought (by some) to be a natural (very trace) component of bone anyway. Otoh, cadmium poisoning *can* be affected by zinc, due to similar electronic structure, and zinc might even do sumpn for Hg poisoning for similar reasons, assuming elemental Hg is a culprit as well as the notorious methylated mercury. Finally, Calcium balance, or imbalance in the Merkin diet, is largely due to piggish over-consumption of protein in our diets, furthered in part by diet gurus who don't know a fukn thing about nutrition, but who advocate diets w/ a "conservative" 30% protein. This is an OUTRAGE, when the RDA, on a %-basis (which not the correct way to do protein inyway), is more like 5-8%!!! Protein, btw, is the only toxic nutrient--de-amination, donchaknow... And, the RDA, by definition of the bell curve and the two standard deviations to its right, is *already* excessive for 48% of the g-d population!!! Go figger. BigfuknMac, inyone?? Unsurprisingly, w/ the lower protein intakes of other countries, these countries achieve calcium balance w/ 1/4 of our calcium intake. High protein diets screw up the modulating role of Vit D in calcium absorption. And abs have little to do w/ your back--or posture. The obliques mebbe slightly more. This ab **** that has swept the country since Tony fuknLittle introduced his Ab Isolator, is one of the biggest con jobs ever to be put on the end of a broom stick--bigger than Cold Fusion, which was mercifully short-lived. Note that the pudgy li'l huckster Tony Little didn't/dudn't have a g-d ab *anywhere* on his pudgy li'l body. Why do you think that pudgy li'l runt had to wear a fukn spandex *body suit*???? Nor would his abs-olutely useless Isolator *ever* give him abs. Getting abs, for the normal person, is like growing to 7' in height, when yer 40 y.o and 5'8". So much for the importance of abs. But, you can kill a number of birds w/ one stone by a variety of hanging techniques. Hanging techniques and/or chiropractic care, for some back conditions, can be virtually instant near-magical cures, from excruciating pain to complete normalcy, in seconds. Unfortunately back spasms is not one of these conditions, but the jury is almost always hung on what is or is not a neuro-skeletal mis-alignment, and what is true muscle strain. Or, if they are even located in the spine-proper! Imo, pill popping, be it otc or prescription, is but another scourge of Merka, from numerous povs. Hanging by yer hands from an overhead bar (a system which I build), either free-hanging or with your feet still on the ground, at various positions/angles, can be magical. With your feet off the ground, the hang is of course a little more intense/strenuous, but often not as effective as w/ the feet still on the ground, due to sed strenuousness. But, you can then do knee lifts, which will help yer abs a little, but mostly yer back. You can also inversion hang, another system I build, or buy a passive inversion machine you see on QVC (Teeter Totter), which, unlike most of the **** they feature, is not at all over-hyped, even tho everything there does sound hyped--makes me gag. However, they do misrepresent the dangers of ICP (IntraCranialPressure), the risk of which increases w/ age, and which are esp. prevalent in passive inversion machines. Active inversion techniques (mine) are more of a pita and less convenient, but far more versatile from pt/rehab/fitness povs, w/ drastically less ICP. Sams Club had one of many Teeter Totter clones for $139. Bought one, not bad. Teeter-totter is $2-300. If you have only 15 seconds a day to exercise, that 15 seconds should be spent hanging. Every organism on earth should hang. Well, at least the constipated bi-peds--ie, humans. Oh, fwiw, most of the elements in this discussion are classified as "metals". -- Mr. P.V.'d formerly Droll Troll "Ignoramus22287" wrote in message news I want to say thanks to everyone. The pain is 90% gone. It was definitely a muscle spasm. I will work on my abs. I can do pullups, actually, but I am not paying much attention to "core strength". That needs to change. Good points on calcium deficiency, indeed, I need to eat more dairy as I am not lactose intolerant. This sort of thing happens about twice before. i |
#24
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OT sudden back pain
" * " has been heard from again . The use of a punctuation mark for a
handle begs the question: Why? Does it indidcate a footmark, perhaps, denoting an embarrasingly low IQ? Oh!, I know. Spam avoidance. Bob Swinney "*" wrote in message news:01c66a34$b2f54560$2fa6c3d8@race... Ignoramus21303 wrote in article ... Two questions...... 1.) Does the pain seem to radiate down the leg? 2.) Do you carry a rather thick wallet in the rear pocket on that side? If the answer to both is "yes", then you MAY have pinched a sciatic nerve. I used to do it all the time to my left side - which happened to be the side I carried my wallet on. Doctor explained that the wallet usually sits over the sciatic nerve in the back pocket and irritates it. Everything that has been recommended - prescription muscle relaxants (I use Norflex), pain killers such as Acetminophen or Ibuprofen, and heat - coupled with time - all help I fixed the wallet problem by moving it to a side pocket, but my sciatica has returned with a narrowing of my spinal column at the L-5 - aka "Spinal Stenosis" - which puts pressure on the same sciatic nerve, so I'm having an occasional attack of sciatica when I don't bend and stand "just right." |
#25
Posted to rec.crafts.metalworking
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OT sudden back pain
" * " has been heard from again . The use of a punctuation mark for a
handle begs the question: Why? Does it indidcate a footmark, perhaps, denoting an embarrasingly low IQ? Oh!, I know. Spam avoidance. Bob Swinney "*" wrote in message news:01c66a34$b2f54560$2fa6c3d8@race... Ignoramus21303 wrote in article ... Two questions...... 1.) Does the pain seem to radiate down the leg? 2.) Do you carry a rather thick wallet in the rear pocket on that side? If the answer to both is "yes", then you MAY have pinched a sciatic nerve. I used to do it all the time to my left side - which happened to be the side I carried my wallet on. Doctor explained that the wallet usually sits over the sciatic nerve in the back pocket and irritates it. Everything that has been recommended - prescription muscle relaxants (I use Norflex), pain killers such as Acetminophen or Ibuprofen, and heat - coupled with time - all help I fixed the wallet problem by moving it to a side pocket, but my sciatica has returned with a narrowing of my spinal column at the L-5 - aka "Spinal Stenosis" - which puts pressure on the same sciatic nerve, so I'm having an occasional attack of sciatica when I don't bend and stand "just right." |
#26
Posted to rec.crafts.metalworking
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OT sudden back pain
On Sat, 29 Apr 2006 08:34:17 -0400, "Proctologically Violated©®"
wrote: Had he been a NYC owner, while the machine was on yer finger, he would have asked to re-negotiate your rates. And knowing Gunner, if the guy tried to pull something exceptionally stupid like that he would have suddenly come down with an acute case of Lead Poisoning. Double-tap, right between the eyes even if he's shooting lefty and from a bad angle. Geez, Gun - How many times have we discussed keeping all bodily parts well clear and out from under heavy things in motion? -- Bruce -- |
#27
Posted to rec.crafts.metalworking
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OT sudden back pain
Mebbe dats why Gunner don't appear to have any employees... he shot'em
all?? Which is OK, since he's a cat lover. Yeah, that finger is going to hurt for at least a month. yikes... -- Mr. P.V.'d formerly Droll Troll "Bruce L. Bergman" wrote in message ... On Sat, 29 Apr 2006 08:34:17 -0400, "Proctologically Violated©®" wrote: Had he been a NYC owner, while the machine was on yer finger, he would have asked to re-negotiate your rates. And knowing Gunner, if the guy tried to pull something exceptionally stupid like that he would have suddenly come down with an acute case of Lead Poisoning. Double-tap, right between the eyes even if he's shooting lefty and from a bad angle. Geez, Gun - How many times have we discussed keeping all bodily parts well clear and out from under heavy things in motion? -- Bruce -- |
#28
Posted to rec.crafts.metalworking
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OT sudden back pain
On Sat, 29 Apr 2006 16:23:49 GMT, Bruce L. Bergman
wrote: On Sat, 29 Apr 2006 08:34:17 -0400, "Proctologically Violated©®" wrote: Had he been a NYC owner, while the machine was on yer finger, he would have asked to re-negotiate your rates. And knowing Gunner, if the guy tried to pull something exceptionally stupid like that he would have suddenly come down with an acute case of Lead Poisoning. Double-tap, right between the eyes even if he's shooting lefty and from a bad angle. Fortunately it was my left hand..my right was over my ankle holster. Geez, Gun - How many times have we discussed keeping all bodily parts well clear and out from under heavy things in motion? -- Bruce -- It wasnt in motion until he sneezed. Shrug... Gunner "I think this is because of your belief in biological Marxism. As a genetic communist you feel that noticing behavioural patterns relating to race would cause a conflict with your belief in biological Marxism." Big Pete, famous Usenet Racist |
#29
Posted to rec.crafts.metalworking
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OT sudden back pain
"Ignoramus21303" wrote in message
... | Something strange happened yesterday. I was riding a bicycle, along | with my son also riding his tricycle. He finally got tired and asked | me to carry his bike home, which I did by riding my own bike with his | tricycle in my right hand. | | So far so good. | | Then, as I arrived home, still sitting on my bicycle, I leaned to set | his tricycle on the ground. As I did that, I had sudden back pain and | it is not going away. I have hard times bending in a certain way and | walk with a funny gait. | | What could this be and should I be worried? The comment about this being familiar to blue collar trades is spot on. I've had them on and off over the years. I've screwed my back up pretty bad, but never anything that a trip to the emergency room for some pills and stuff wouldn't solve. Guess I'm lucky. What I've learned is that you can rarely say that any one thing did it. I got a bad one recently crouching down to get something out of a kitchen cabinet one morning. Why? Who cares, won't solve anything. I have learned that the most important thing is not to stop moving around. Keep active. I did my back in one time and two days later I got laid off for unrelated reasons. Spent weeks royally messed up because I was laying around the house. Keeping the muscles moving and working will fix you up a lot faster than letting it rest and get worse. I learned that the hard way, and after a bad back event I'm good to go three or days later, rather than weeks later. |
#30
Posted to rec.crafts.metalworking
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OT sudden back pain
(Catching up on old news...)
I have found the book "Treat Your Own Back", by Robin McKenzie, to be most useful. A quote from it: "Many publications set out to tell you how to look after your own back, and you may well wonder why yet another one is now offered. The reason is that this is the first book to show you how to _put your back in_ if you are unfortunate enough to have _put it out_; and in addition, it shows you what steps you must take to prevent recurrence." The companion pamphlet "Treat Your Own Neck" is also quite good. They can be had from: http://optp.com/index.cfm/pageid/203 (I have no connection with these people except as a satisfied customer.) -- Norman Yarvin http://yarchive.net |
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