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Thread: It's over

  1. #1
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    Default It's over

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    It's over folks, pack it in. This TikTok neurologist has exposed THE TRUTH about lifting heavy.

    Neurologist explains why he quit powerlifting after learning of its life-wrecking effects | Daily Mail Online

  2. #2
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    I almost wish this didn't have a paywall. Maybe you could post the relevant parts of this important story.

  3. #3
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    It is just a Daily Mail article, no paywall for me, and I assure you that I don't SUBSCRIBE to the Daily Mail. I'll link it again in case I used some weird version of the url. But, if all else fails, you can learn the HARD TRUTH about lifting heavy by googling "Neurologist explains why he quit powerlifting after learning ..." It's the first result for me.

    Neurologist explains why he quit powerlifting after learning of its life-wrecking effects | Daily Mail Online

  4. #4
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    Dr Sergej Stjepic, a neurologist in Chicago, Illinois, revealed on TikTok three things he would never do, knowing what he knows now about health.

    'I wouldn't have powerlifted so much,' he said. 'For example, squatting very heavy weights.'

    Powerlifting describes using a barbell while squatting, bench pressing or deadlifting.

    It involves lifting a certain amount of weight in one go, rather than repeated exercises.

    But it is harmful because it can 'decrease your overall disc height in your spine,' he said.

    When height in your spinal discs is lost, pinched nerves, bone and joint inflammation and pain can occur.

    The degeneration of discs in the spine can cause a loss of space between joints, which causes sensations similar to arthritis pain. In some severe cases, pain may be constant.

    'Decreasing the disc heights causes bone on bone friction and can sometimes cause what's called neural foraminal narrowing as well as central canal narrowing,' he explained in the video.

    This, he explained, can cause you to develop pinching on the nerves that travel through your spine, causing extreme pain.

    Neural foraminal narrowing is the narrowing of the small openings between the vertebra in the spine which nerve roots pass through.

    It does not always lead to symptoms, but if a nerve gets stuck in the gap, it will be painful.

    The Cleveland Clinic likened it to 'what happens to an electrical cord when you shut a door on it, wedging it between the door and frame.'

    It said: 'Eventually, the pressure on the cord can damage it, affecting how it conducts electricity.

    'Likewise, [neural foraminal narrowing] can put pressure on affected nerves. Eventually, that can affect signals travelling through the nerve and cause nerve pain, and sometimes, permanent nerve damage.'

    'Powerlifting is really bad for your spine in the end,' Dr Stjepic said.
    This feels like it was written by an ai.

  5. #5
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    Quote Originally Posted by Mark Rippetoe View Post
    I almost wish this didn't have a paywall. Maybe you could post the relevant parts of this important story.
    “'I wouldn't have powerlifted so much,' he said. 'For example, squatting very heavy weights.'

    But it is harmful because it can 'decrease your overall disc height in your spine,' he said.

    When height in your spinal discs is lost, pinched nerves, bone and joint inflammation and pain can occur.

    The degeneration of discs in the spine can cause a loss of space between joints, which causes sensations similar to arthritis pain. In some severe cases, pain may be constant.

    'Decreasing the disc heights causes bone on bone friction and can sometimes cause what's called neural foraminal narrowing as well as central canal narrowing,' he explained in the video.

    This, he explained, can cause you to develop pinching on the nerves that travel through your spine, causing extreme pain.

    Neural foraminal narrowing is the narrowing of the small openings between the vertebra in the spine which nerve roots pass through.

    It does not always lead to symptoms, but if a nerve gets stuck in the gap, it will be painful.


    'Likewise, [neural foraminal narrowing] can put pressure on affected nerves. Eventually, that can affect signals travelling through the nerve and cause nerve pain, and sometimes, permanent nerve damage.'

    'Powerlifting is really bad for your spine in the end,' Dr Stjepic said.”



    For what it’s worth, he also used the term “do marijuana” which I always think is funny

  6. #6
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    The evidence he presents is irrefutable. He makes the statement about it being bad TWICE…..

  7. #7
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    Quote Originally Posted by Mark Rippetoe View Post
    I almost wish this didn't have a paywall. Maybe you could post the relevant parts of this important story.
    “it is harmful because it can 'decrease your overall disc height in your spine,'” he said.

    That one line about sums up the article. Throw in some scare phrases and analogies like, “bone on bone grinding”, “like closing the door on an electrical cord”.

  8. #8
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    A neurologist has explained why he regrets powerlifting after he learned about the potential life-wrecking effects.

    Dr Sergej Stjepic, a neurologist in Chicago, Illinois, revealed on TikTok three things he would never do, knowing what he knows now about health.

    'I wouldn't have powerlifted so much,' he said. 'For example, squatting very heavy weights.'

    Powerlifting describes using a barbell while squatting, bench pressing or deadlifting.

    It involves lifting a certain amount of weight in one go, rather than repeated exercises.

    But it is harmful because it can 'decrease your overall disc height in your spine,' he said.

    When height in your spinal discs is lost, pinched nerves, bone and joint inflammation and pain can occur.

    The degeneration of discs in the spine can cause a loss of space between joints, which causes sensations similar to arthritis pain. In some severe cases, pain may be constant.

    'Decreasing the disc heights causes bone on bone friction and can sometimes cause what's called neural foraminal narrowing as well as central canal narrowing,' he explained in the video.

    This, he explained, can cause you to develop pinching on the nerves that travel through your spine, causing extreme pain.

    Neural foraminal narrowing is the narrowing of the small openings between the vertebra in the spine which nerve roots pass through.

    It does not always lead to symptoms, but if a nerve gets stuck in the gap, it will be painful.

    The Cleveland Clinic likened it to 'what happens to an electrical cord when you shut a door on it, wedging it between the door and frame.'

    It said: 'Eventually, the pressure on the cord can damage it, affecting how it conducts electricity.

    'Likewise, [neural foraminal narrowing] can put pressure on affected nerves. Eventually, that can affect signals travelling through the nerve and cause nerve pain, and sometimes, permanent nerve damage.'

    'Powerlifting is really bad for your spine in the end,' Dr Stjepic said.

    Pinched nerves occur when there is too much pressure on a nerve by surrounding bones or muscles.

    According to the Mayo Clinic, the pressure can cause pain, tingling, numbness or weakness.

    Dr Stjepic said he would also not have played football.

    'I definitely wouldn't have played football in college. I probably wouldn't have played football at all. My kids definitely won't,' he said.

    'There's this thing called chronic traumatic encephalopathy, they're finding it in 18 year old kids... we don't know why it happens other than repeated hits.'

    Chronic traumatic encephalopathy (CTE) is a brain disorder likely caused by repeated head injuries.

    It causes the death of nerve cells in the brain, according to the Mayo Clinic.

    'I wouldn't do any kind of alcohol or drugs, especially if I was younger, below the age of 20.

    'Your frontal lobe keeps developing up until the age of 25, but even more important than that is the gross amount of development your brain undergoes from zero to 25.'

    He added: 'People who were to develop schizophrenia in the future, who were genetically more likely to, if they do marijuana, they tend to have their schizophrenic breaks a lot sooner than they would have had them.

    'It just messes with your development.'

    A wealth of research links marijuana use to schizophrenia later in life.

    Most recently, researchers backed by the National Institute on Drug Abuse estimated 30 percent of schizophrenia cases in American men aged 21 to 30 are linked to cannabis addiction.
    TLDR: Don't squat cannabis.

  9. #9
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    Butbutbutbut after all, he IS a dcotor.

  10. #10
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    starting strength coach development program
    Somehow when one of these guys surfaces you can just TELL they think they "powerlifted" because they got their deadlift to 315.

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