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Scoliosis & Exercise Manual Details

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Filed Under (Scoliosis Exercises) by Rick Kaselj on 17-04-2009

Effective Exercises for Scoliosis

- Fitness Professional’s Guide to Exercise and Scoliosis -

What is in the Scoliosis & Exercise Manual?

Scoliosis Stretches Exercises Scoliosis & Exercise Manual Details- 22 page report

- 50 minute cd with three interviews

- 177 page resource manual

Order Your Copy of the Scoliosis & Exercise Program

What is in Each Part of the Scoliosis & Exercise Manual?

Scoliosis & Exercise REPORT

- 4 page research based article that highlights the key points when designing an exercise program for a client with scoliosis

- 1 page of resources to get more information on scoliosis and exercise

- 16 pages transcripts of the interview of the fitness professional, client and health care professional on scoliosis and exercise.

Scoliosis & Exercise INTERVIEW CD

- Audio cd that is 50 minutes in length with an interview from a fitness professional, client and health care professional on scoliosis and exercise.

- An interview with Ryan Ketchum who is a fitness professional and he provides his experience designing exercise programs for clients with scoliosis, plus he shares the keys that a fitness professionals should remember when designing an exercise program for a client with scoliosis

- An interview with a Simone Icough who is a client that suffers from scoliosis.  She shares her experience with scoliosis surgery and how she manages scoliosis

- An interview with Dr. Will Kalla on providing his opinion on exercise for the scoliosis client.  He talks about exercise considerations for youth and older adults with scoliosis plus share new research in the area of scoliosis

Scoliosis & Exercise MANUAL

- Resource manual that is 177 pages in length

- 107 pages dedicated to theory behind scoliosis

- 75 pages dedicated to exercises for your client with Scoliosis

- has over 168 photos

- 78 different exercises for scoliosis

- 50 question distance education exam (3 to 4 Continuing Education Credits are pending.)

Order Your Copy of the Scoliosis & Exercise Program

Topics Covered in the Scoliosis & Exercise Manual:

- 3 Big Myths about Scoliosis and Exercise

- 5 Main Benefits of Scoliosis and Exercise

- The most effective yoga poses for scoliosis

- 6 Components of a Your Scoliosis Client’s Exercise Program

- Tips and tricks to modify your posture and body mechanics to decrease scolisosis back pain

- The 6 risk factors will make your clients scoliosis worse

- 4 Common Areas of the Scoliosis Curves

- Learn the 7 different types of scoliosis and which one your client has

- The 5 most common symptoms scoliosis clients have

- What health complecations can arise from scoliosis

- How a quick scoliosis assessment of a teenager can help with their quality of life in later years

- After a positive scoiosis screen, what tools are used to diagnosis scoliosis

- The 3 ‘O’ medical treatment and management options for scoliosis

- The most common scoliosis braces

- Leading theory on what causes scoliosis

Order Your Copy of the Scoliosis & Exercise Program

Who is the Scoliosis & Exercise Manual for?

The Scoliosis & Exercise manual is targeted for fitness & rehabilitation professionals that work in exercise rehabilitation, post rehab, with special populations and with clients with chronic disease.  The manual will give fitness & rehabilitation professionals a resource to work with a client with scoliosis.

Exercise professions that have purchased the manual:

- Kinesiologist
- Exercise Therapists
- Exercise Physiologists
- Personal Trainers
- 3rd Age Instructors

Other professions that have purchased the manual:

- Chiropractor
- Physical Therapist
- Occupational Therapist
- Rehab Assistants
- University Faculty
- Pilates Studio Owner
- Personal Training Studio Manager
- Fitness Centre Owner
- Fitness Professionals in Rural Area

Continuing Education Credits

The Scoliosis & Exercise Program has been approved for:

- 6 BCRPA CEC
- 6 BCAK CEC
- 6 CSEP PDC
- 7 BCMT CEC

Order Your Copy of the Scoliosis & Exercise Program

I think that is it.

Have a great day.

- Rick Kaselj

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Leaping Hurdles and Blazing Trails on Court

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Filed Under (Scoliosis Exercises) by Rick Kaselj on 11-04-2009

Basketball Player Excels Despite Having Scoliosis

 
Saturday, March 14 2009 – Peter Applebombe – The New York Times
 
You would not have trouble coming up with reasons to be skeptical about Tiffara Steward’s prospects as a college basketball player.She’s all of 4-foot-6 and 90 pounds, too small to get on some amusement park rides, often handed the children’s menu at restaurants. She’s blind in her right eye, which has no cornea. She’s partly deaf. She was born three months premature, weighing 2 pounds 15 ounces. She has scoliosis, which left one leg shorter than the other. Some of her vertebrae didn’t develop properly. She had six operations by age 3.
 
And in her blue jeans, black vest and Size 1 Air Jordans, bouncing a ball on the rubberized court where the Farmingdale State Rams play on Long Island, she could be mistaken for someone’s kid sister who managed to sneak into the gym.
Read the rest of this entry »

Updating the Exercise Rehabilitation of the Upper Body Courses

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Filed Under (Knee Injury, Scoliosis Exercises) by Rick Kaselj on 10-04-2009

Doing Some Early Morning Research

 breakdancing injuries 150x150 Updating the Exercise Rehabilitation of the Upper Body Courses

I was up early this morning. 

What I try to do once a month is to see what is new in the exercise rehabilitation world. 

There are a lot of okay places to go but I have a list of journals that I try to visit to see what is new and if there is any new information that will improve my courses or new exercises for my clients.

Let me share with you a little of what I found:

Curve Progression in Idiopathic Scoliosis: Follow-up Study to Skeletal Maturity
Spine: 1 April 2009 – Volume 34 – Issue 7 – pp 697-700

This is article is at a great time.  I am just wrapping up the scoliosis and exercise manual.  It shows that Cobb angle is still the best predictor of long-term curve progression.  This content is already in the upcoming manual and if you have subscribed to the exercise and injuries manuals, you will learn more about Cobb angle and a pre-screen for scoliosis, next week.

Take Home Message – Know what Cobb Angle is and it is the besting indicator of the scoliosis getting worse in a client.

 

Patellofemoral Joint Force and Stress during the Wall Squat and One-Leg Squat.
Medicine & Science in Sports & Exercise. 41(4):879-888, April 2009.

This was very interesting article.  The research is nice but what I am looking at is how can it help with my clients.  I have a number of clients that report anterior knee pain with a wall squat.  I modify their technique in order to decrease that stress.  I never knew that I could change the joint angle of the squat in order to decrease the stress on the knee joint.

This is a nugget of information I will be adding to them Exercise Rehabilitation of the Lower Body courses:

“When the goal is to minimize patellofemoral compressive force and stress, it may be prudent to use a smaller knee angle range between 0[degrees] and 50[degrees] compared with a larger knee angle range between 60[degrees] and 90[degrees].”

Take Home Messages:

1 – Wall squat creates more force on the patella than a single leg squat. 

2 – Having the foot a short ways or a long ways from the wall created equal force on the patella in the wall squat except between 60 to 90 degrees of knee bend.

3 – A wall squat between 0 to 50 degrees of knee bend creates less force on the patella than one performed at 60 to 90 degrees of knee bend.

 

Breakdance Injuries and Overuse Syndromes in Amateurs and Professionals
Am J Sports Med April 2009 vol. 37 no. 4 797-802

Sometimes there is some fun research out there.  I thought breakdancing died in the 80s.  I do know one friend that goes and competes in breakdancing.  I have yet to rehab a breakdancer but I will remember their recommendations:

“Breakdance injuries and overuse should not be underestimated. Physicians should be aware of the common risks in this highly acrobatic kind of dancing.”

 Take Home Message – Breakdancing is dangerous like every other sport.

 

I only got to three journals, I guess I will have to do a little more reading.

Let me know what you think of the above, leave a comment.

Have  a great weekend.

P.S. – I have the Exercise Rehabilitation of the Upper Body courses that I am presenting at the end of the month.  For more information, click here.

- Rick Kaselj