Break Out of That Slump
Bad posture can be a pain in the head
By Kelly James-Enger
Special to MSN

Diane Harrington of Madison, Wis., admits she has bad posture. She also
suffers from migraines as well, and believes the two are related. They often
begin with tightness in her neck or shoulders.

"I always find that the 'origination point,' if you will, is a particular
spot in my shoulder or at the base of my skull - always on the same side the
migraine is on," the 40-year-old writer says. "By the time the migraine's
here, though, no amount of stretching exercises for my shoulders and neck
will make it go away."

When a pain in the neck becomes a pain in the head

It turns out your mom was right when she told you not to slouch. As
Harrington has discovered, there's a connection between poor posture and
headache frequency. "If someone has chronic headache pain, [we find] he or
she often sits in a slouched, head-forward position," explains Dr. Merle
Diamond, associate director of the Diamond Headache Clinic in Chicago. "That
aggravates the muscles of the head and neck and can lead to more muscle
spasms and more pain." Doctors call these cervicogenic headaches, and they
can cause something called "referred pain." While the problem may originate
in your neck, it's the back of your head that aches.

There are definite associations between neck or cervical spine triggers and
both migraine and tension-type headaches, says Dr. Robert Kanieki, an
assistant professor of neurology at the University of Pittsburgh and
director of the Headache Center there. Tension-type headaches are often due
to muscle irritation in the neck; the resulting headache is often felt
around the area where the muscles insert at the base of the skull, says
Kanieki. "The head is essentially a 10-pound structure," he says. "If it's
not balanced on the top of your neck and shoulders, it can certainly
aggravate the cervical spine and trigger muscle tension, and muscle
tightness. This can lead to spasms or the development of headaches."

However, doctors now believe that there's also a connection between neck
pain and migraines. "Recently we learned that migraine, as opposed to
arising from blood vessel or vascular problems, appears to arise from
neurological origins, " says Kaniecki. "And the structure that processes
pain in the head that's inside the brain - the relay center for pain - also
relays pain signals from the upper neck. " That's why doctors believe that
irritation in the neck and upper shoulder area - the cervical region - can
trigger migraines too.

Sit up straight, feel better

If you already have neck problems, you may be one of the unlucky people
predisposed to these headaches. One study found people found that people
with joint or muscular abnormalities in their heads and necks were more
likely to suffer from both tension and migraine headaches. However, if you
tend to get headaches at the end of the day, poor posture may be the
culprit.

Improving your posture and strengthening your neck and shoulder muscles can
make a big difference - in clinical trials, people who did posture and
strengthening exercises reduced their headache frequency. "One of the things
we tell our patients with chronic daily headaches is to work on their
posture," says Diamond. "They should do a check-in and make sure that
they're sitting upright because it's clear that a lot of these people slouch
a lot."

At the Headache Center at the University of Pittsburgh, patients learn
natural means of improving headache, including regulating their sleep and
meal patterns and performing a daily 30-minute walk. Kanieki suggest that
headache sufferers keep the phrase, "walk tall, sit straight, stretch out"
in mind. During your daily walk, focus on maintaining good posture - imagine
that there's a string at the top of your head and keep your head balanced
over your shoulders, back straight, as you stroll.

At work, make sure that you're sitting straight, not hunched over, and take
regular breaks away from your computer. Finally, implement a regular
stretching routine into your day. Even a simple series of neck stretches
(tilting your head to the left, then right, forward and back, for example)
helps. You'll reduce your chances of leaving work with stiff shoulders and
an achy, pounding head - and your mom will compliment you on your new and
improved posture as well.

Kelly James-Enger is a freelance journalist specializing in health, fitness
and nutrition topics. Her work has appeared in more than 50 national
magazines including Redbook, Self, Health, Muscle Media, American Health &
Fitness, Family Circle, Woman's Day, Continental, Fitness, and Oxygen. She
is the coauthor of the forthcoming "Small Changes, Big Results" (Random
House, 2005), a nutrition/fitness/wellness book.











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