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Thread: A Few Quick Questions About Traction

  1. #1
    Join Date
    Jul 2014
    Posts
    985

    Default A Few Quick Questions About Traction

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    Good evening Rip,

    I ordered this traction apparatus from amazon. I searched the forums for other traction threads and I had a few quick questions that I didn't find definitive answers for.

    1. What is the safe upper limit for traction in this position in a single session?

    2. Is it safe to add weight in this position?

    3. May you elaborate on the safety of the 90/90 position vs your recommended method of hanging from 2 belts from a pull-up bar? I ask this question because I do weighted chin-ups regularly and I find that I actually overextend my lower back sometimes when I am doing a heavy rep (I am currently doing doubles with 55 pounds at 245 BW). After searching the forums, I noticed that you recommend adding weight (using your traction method) when BW is not enough. Could overextension happen when tractioning this way (maybe accidentally tense your lower back?

    I have seen that some SS coaches who work in rehab clinics use the 90/90 position (although they didn't specify whether they add weight or not). I'm not stating this to stir something up, I am just curious to see your current opinion on it since this thread was almost 3 years ago.

    Thank you so much for your time Rip! I am almost over this damn back injury that I have been dealing with and barbells have been a tremendous part of the recovery. However, I just can't seem to get that magical "pop" in my back that allows me to train at 100% again.

  2. #2
    Join Date
    Jul 2007
    Location
    North Texas
    Posts
    53,712

    Default

    1. I don't know. Titrate it.

    2. I don't know. I used armpit straps and a dip belt, and I have no experience with this bizarre device.

    3. I don't know what 90/90 means. I must not be in the club. Much more important, there may be no "magical pop" in your lower back -- some chiropractors often make this mistake, and the "pop" may not be magical at all, unless you consider a soft-tissue injury to be magical. Shitty chiropractors sell the "pop," even when that's not the best thing for your spine. I have come to believe that the less you move an injured low back, the faster it heals, especially an older back. That's why deadlifts and squats are the best therapy.

  3. #3
    Join Date
    Dec 2016
    Posts
    177

    Default

    I have both a 45° hyperextension bench, that seems like it would be pretty similar stretch, and I also have an inversion table ("Teeter Hangups"-like, but a cheaper brand).

    I can hang with full body-weight on the inversion table, and I have occasionally tried lifting a pair of 20# dumbells while hanging; and then twisting around, etc.
    If you are like me, it seems like the stretch should help, but as a practical matter it has not cured my injuries, and I can't correlate to any improvement. I have tried stretches, exercise, and doing absolutely nothing for various time periods, and the back just seems to operate independently of anything I am doing.

    The "pops" are sometimes startling, but they also don't really seem correlated to any actual pain relief or general improvement. The pops seem related to how successfully I can totally relax my back muscles, not how much weight I have suspended. In fact, if I just lay there and almost go to sleep, I will suddenly be awakened by a "pop" that feels like my spine just lengthened by about an eighth of an inch (an exaggeration). I actually frightens me, so I stopped doing that, since it also didn't provide any real relief.

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