I've read that strengthening your leg & core muscles should improve OI but does it?
Has anyone found it so, or is this just some theoretical/marginal thing?
My understanding is that lower limb resistance training helps pump blood back to the heart.
First off, I am a moderate patient not a severe one and am able to do a once a week core-training, pilates done lying down with machines. I have done it for years. Does it reduce OI? Not to my knowledge. For a few hours after a class, my leg muscles are activated and filled with blood. I think that sort of works like a compression sock and yes, my OI is better. But the next day, not at all.'ve read that strengthening your leg & core muscles should improve OI but does it?
At the time and for a few hours afterward, my experience is yes.My understanding is that lower limb resistance training helps pump blood back to the heart.
Not in my experience. However, I continue with it for general health reasons--and to be able to lift a bag of groceries!I'm not talking about feeling better while you're doing the exercise or shortly after - I'm talking about strengthening your muscles so that those stronger muscles are better at keeping blood in your brain and heart in the long run.
Again, I'm moderate not severe. I do it lying down with my HR monitor as my guide. If my HR goes over my limit, I stop and wait for it to go down. In this way I don't get PEM.How would a PWME spend months strengthening their core and leg muscles without increasing their PEM to an extent that they would not even notice that their OI was better?
First off, I am a moderate patient not a severe one and am able to do a once a week core-training, pilates done lying down with machines. I have done it for years. Does it reduce OI? Not to my knowledge. For a few hours after a class, my leg muscles are activated and filled with blood. I think that sort of works like a compression sock and yes, my OI is better. But the next day, not at all.
From my experience, no. And I have been working on core strength and leg muscles for years. It is a very short-term benefit for me.I'm not talking about short-term benefits, even on the scale of a few days. I mean that if you trained for three months, and then stopped training, would the strength you'd built up mean that your OI was better than it was three months previously?
From my experience, no. And I have been working on core strength and leg muscles for years. It is a very short-term benefit for me.
I already had OI. Initially I had hopes that core training and leg training would improve it.Did you start your training after you had OI? Or were you already in such good nick that there might not have been much scope for improvement?
I already had OI. Initially I had hopes that core training and leg training would improve it.
We are each individuals and there is always hope!I've got so little core strength I'm wondering if there's maybe more scope for improvement
No, absolutely not. I was exercising (aerobics, weights, core, hiking, yoga) while my symptoms were increasing. It just made everything worse. I had to give it all up.I've read that strengthening your leg & core muscles should improve OI but does it?
Has anyone found it so, or is this just some theoretical/marginal thing?
An RCT. Dare to dream!I've got so little core strength I'm wondering if there's maybe more scope for improvement but I do wonder if the idea is all theory and zero evidence. I wonder if there's ever been an RCT.
@Sasha I have also tried the "corset thingumys." I'd say that core strength would be similier....if you could discipline yourself to activate it continuously. This would mean holding "tummy to spine" and active gluts. Hard to remember unless you are sort of a professional at it.I can't remember if you have tried one of those corset thingumys. Surely it would have a similar effect to increased core strength.
Is core strength not meant to counter act pooling in the abdomen? I know you've posted before about not being able to wear compression tights but I can't remember if you have tried one of those corset thingumys. Surely it would have a similar effect to increased core strength.
@Sasha I have also tried the "corset thingumys." I'd say that core strength would be similier....if you could discipline yourself to activate it continuously. This would mean holding "tummy to spine" and active gluts. Hard to remember unless you are sort of a professional at it.