WELCOME TO JOHNS HOPKINS HEALTH ALERTS!

This free public service from Johns Hopkins Medicine helps keep you up to date on the latest breakthroughs for the most common medical conditions which prevent healthy aging. Browse all the articles via the Health Alert Topics navigation bar on the right, or read the headlines below.


Get the latest news sent straight to your Inbox. Register now for your FREE Johns Hopkins Health Alerts. Check the boxes below for all the topics you are interested in, enter your email address, and click "Send." It's fast, easy, and FREE.   Benefits of Being A Registered User

Enter your email here: (Example: yourname@domain.com)
Please send my alerts as:

We value your privacy and will never rent your email address.Already a Member? Manage your Health Alerts


Johns Hopkins Health Alert

Treating Ankylosing Spondylitis With Exercise

Comments (0)

A reader with ankylosing spondylitis asks: How effective is physical therapy for ankylosing spondylitis? Here’s our advice.

Ankylosing spondylitis is a form of inflammatory arthritis. It primarily affects the joints and ligaments in the spine and in the sacroiliac area (where the spine connects to the pelvis). The severity of ankylosing spondylitis varies greatly from one person to another. The most prominent initial symptoms are low back pain and stiffness in the spine and hips.

For people with ankylosing spondylitis, exercise is essential to maintain and improve posture, spinal mobility, and chest expansion. Exercise also helps reduce pain and keeps abdominal and back muscles strong.

In fact, a recent review of 11 studies involving 763 people with the ankylosing spondylitis indicates that physical therapy involving some type of exercise is helpful. The findings, which were reported in the Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews, found that individual and supervised exercise programs improved spinal mobility.

For example, ankylosing spondylitis patients who took part in a supervised home program had less pain and more improved posture and function than those who did not exercise. Group exercise -- three hours a week of strengthening, stretching, aerobics, sports, and water therapy -- improved spinal movement and overall wellbeing more than home exercise. Researchers surmise that group support and sociability may have enhanced improvement.

Spa therapy plus group exercises trumped weekly group exercise, improving pain and wellbeing. And an experimental exercise group that addressed posture and disease-shortened muscles made significant improvement in spinal mobility compared with a conventional exercise group. The bottom line: If you have ankylosing spondylitis, exercise can help mobility, pain, and wellbeing, no matter what type you choose.

Posted in Arthritis on April 26, 2010
Reviewed October 2011


Medical Disclaimer: This information is not intended to substitute for the advice of a physician. Click here for additional information: Johns Hopkins Health Alerts Disclaimer


Notify Me

Would you like us to inform you when we post new Arthritis Health Alerts?

Post a Comment

Comments

Health Alerts registered users may post comments and share experiences here at their own discretion. We regret that questions on individual health concerns to the Johns Hopkins editors cannot be answered in this space.

The views expressed here do not constitute medical advice, and do not represent the position of Johns Hopkins Medicine or Remedy Health Media, LLC, which has no responsibility for any comments posted on this site.


Post a Comment


Already a subscriber?

Login

Forgot your password?

New to Johns Hopkins Health Alerts?

Register to submit your comments.

(example: yourname@domain.com)

(800) 829-0422

Registered Users Log-in:

Forgot Password?

Become a Registered User!
It's fast and FREE!
The Benefits of Being a Registered User

Health Topic Pages

  • Health Alert
  • Special Report

What is this?

XML


Johns Hopkins’ Arthritis Bestsellers

Introducing...

Making the Right Decisions About Knee Replacement Surgery

  • Making the Right Decisions About Knee Replacement Surgery
    If you're facing knee replacement surgery and wonder what to expect, our authoritative 50–page guide can help. The report presents the latest thinking on knee replacement surgery from specialists who perform the surgery regularly. It includes answers to dozens of real questions from patients like you, plus in–depth discussions on the physiology of the knee . . . knee replacement surgical techniques . . . arthritis management, medication advice and other important information to guide you through the steps and decisions you face as you weight your options.
    Read more or order Making the Right Decisions About Knee Replacement Surgery

Understanding & Managing Fibromyalgia Syndrome

Presenting the latest thinking on the causes and treatments of fibromyalgia

Treating and Managing Rheumatoid Arthritis

  • Treating and Managing Rheumatoid Arthritis
    Are you sure you’re doing everything you can to fight your rheumatoid arthritis? Our Special Report, Treating and Managing Rheumatoid Arthritis, will help you make informed decisions about your treatment -- so you can partner with your doctor effectively, ask the right questions, and understand the answers. Click here to read more
  • Johns Hopkins Recipes for Arthritis Health
    How food affects arthritis has been a source of controversy for years and has often resulted in questionable remedies and diets. What is not controversial, however, is that those with arthritis should control their weight and maximize nutritional health by... Read more...

Johns Hopkins White Papers