HomeNewsHealth & FitnessHow to exercise with chronic pain
Trending Topics

How to exercise with chronic pain

Working out may seem like the last thing someone in pain wants to do. But it can bring relief.

November 20, 2021 / 21:34 IST
Story continues below Advertisement
A 2020 analysis found that yoga generally improves physical function, quality of life and pain for many people with knee pain, neck pain, headaches and low back pain. But, the review said, relief is often slight and some participants wind up reporting more pain after they take up yoga. (Image: Narinder Nanu/AFP)
A 2020 analysis found that yoga generally improves physical function, quality of life and pain for many people with knee pain, neck pain, headaches and low back pain. But, the review said, relief is often slight and some participants wind up reporting more pain after they take up yoga. (Image: Narinder Nanu/AFP)

For 25 years, Wei Liu had been practicing and teaching tai chi, including to people suffering from chronic knee pain, believing the exercises strengthen legs and instill calm.

Then he began running experiments with tai chi and surprised himself. A professor of physical therapy at the University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio, he used motion capture sensors to analyze people’s movements during a typical tai chi session. He noticed people shifting their weight and squatting, movements that can actually stress knees and exacerbate pain for some people, not alleviate it.

Story continues below Advertisement

Today Dr. Liu still tells students that tai chi is good for chronic knee pain—just not all of the movements, or forms, that make up a typical session. People with creaky knees should probably skip Laying the Lute (form 5) and Creeps Low Like Snake (form 16), which caused the greatest knee strain in his study. They could continue with Part the Horse’s Mane on Both Sides (form 2) and any other form that doesn’t amplify pain.

Dr. Liu’s study, and a wealth of additional science and experience, demonstrate that movement is desirable and therapeutic for almost anyone experiencing chronic pain. But finding the best activities to help you deal with your particular pain may require mixing and matching exercise options, asking the right questions about why you hurt afterward and finding the right trainer or physical therapist.