A quick look on-line came up with this:
weight-bearing
The physical state of supporting an applied load. This often refers to the weight-bearing bones or joints that support the body's weight, especially those in the spine, hip, knee, and foot. (www.biology-online.org/dictionary/Weight-bearing)
Katy Bowman defines weight bearing in her Foot pain relief book as:
weight bearing: when a structure is carrying the full burden of its own mass, in the human case, when the bones are holding the vertical mass of the body.
Weight bearing exercises are usually all exercises in which you support your full body weight as a unit, as in running or walking as opposed to exercises were you don’t.
Not fully weight bearing:
Swimming: the water supports a lot of your body weight
Cycling: where part of your body weight is pushing against a cycle seat, taking the load off the hip joint - part of the body is supported on the cycle seat, and another part on the pedals - two separate units. In this case the hip joint is not weight bearing.
In Katy’s alignment theory weight bearing is often referring to the hip (joint). If you are aligned, i.e. hip is aligned over knee and heels you are more weight bearing than if your hips are out front aligned over the mid-foot, where you are less weight bearing. Aligned in this instance means aligned to the graviational pull i.e. straight up and down or vertical.
Described as less weight bearing as hip aligned over front of foot. (www.restorative exercise.com) |
The hip or the head being out of alignment is the same situation. In both, the weight is forward of their supporting bones. So why are we talking about bearing less weight in one scenario and more in the other?
As we all know, the actual mass is not changing and neither is the weight. The weight being the mass pulled towards the ground by a constant gravitational force. So why are we talking about more or less weight being borne?
The answer to this, is in the way the weight is borne and what effects the weight has on the part of the body that is carrying it. The weight can be borne by being balanced on a bone and squashing the bone vertically towards the ground or it can be borne by muscles, which pull the weight towards a bone that can support the weight. Here is a graphic of a simplified leg bone and a foot.
The same appies to the situation of the head being out-front of the spine. Here it is a little bit more complicated since the spine consists of several vertebra stacked on top of each other. By the way they are shaped and connected they are able to carry weight just like a solid leg bone. The further forward the head is in front of the spine, the more weight is pushing down on thin air, causing rotational forces. These rotational forces are then counteracted by muscles in the neck and upper back. Instead of the head being balanced on top of the spinal column and creating just bone squash in the spine, the muscles have to pull the head back connecting it with the spine, which can carry the weight.
Does it matter, how your body weight is carried?
I have found no evidence in literature that the alignment of bones to the vertical axis is crucial for bone regeneration, it seems to depend more on the impulses that are send through the bones and not the angle they are at and both muscle contraction and gravitational squash can cause bone regeneration (more about this in a later blog).
What it does affect however is pressure in joints and tension pattern in muscles throughout the body. If you use muscles further down the body to keep you upright, you often end up using muscles further up the body to do the same. This causes tension in muscles that have not evolved to carry body weight. Bones are stronger and have evolved to do this.
In joints, when they are pushed together by bones at an angle that is not optimal, they often wear out quicker. The pressure on joints in these situations tends to concentrate on one part of the joint e.g. the inner knee only. When pressure is distributed over the whole area of the joint, the pressure decreases and causes less wear and tear.
I have found no evidence in literature that the alignment of bones to the vertical axis is crucial for bone regeneration, it seems to depend more on the impulses that are send through the bones and not the angle they are at and both muscle contraction and gravitational squash can cause bone regeneration (more about this in a later blog).
What it does affect however is pressure in joints and tension pattern in muscles throughout the body. If you use muscles further down the body to keep you upright, you often end up using muscles further up the body to do the same. This causes tension in muscles that have not evolved to carry body weight. Bones are stronger and have evolved to do this.
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