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Thread: Neck Pain

  1. #1
    Join Date
    Jul 2003
    Location
    Columbia, SC
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    313

    Neck Pain

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    Hey guys -- when I did my 46 miler on Sunday, I did notice that for about the last 10 miles my neck started hurting right at the base of my neck in the back. It was pretty stiff feeling by the end of the ride. I had been by the bike shop recently & told the guy my elbows and arms were getting kind of numb when I was riding so he raised the seat & the handlebars & put a new stem on my bike. That worked -- no elbow and arm numbness anymore. Now -- neck pain! Does it take a while to get used to riding the distances & maybe that will go away over time? Or does this sound like another adjustment needed? I had considered moving my saddle forward to decrease the reach but I wasn't sure whether that would help or not.

  2. #2
    Join Date
    Aug 2003
    Location
    North Carolina
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    97
    I'm newer than you at this, but I'll still mention it - do you ride with your upper body relaxed or tense? If tense that might be part of it.

    I wish I knew more to help - I've had back and neck pain for 15 years and I know it sucks!! (did the wine help )

  3. #3
    Join Date
    Jul 2003
    Location
    Columbia, SC
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    Thanks grasshopper! I thought about that -- I may be tensing up -- probably still holding on for dear life! LOL Yes, that's why I drank the wine & it definitely helped!

  4. #4
    Join Date
    Aug 2003
    Location
    North Carolina
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    LOL! I still grab so tightly with my hands that my elbows want to lock up! I have to keep waving at people to keep them moving! It's getting better though.

    Now my hardest thing is remembering to keep my abs tucked in - for some reason I just want to let them sag - by the end of the ride I expect them to be scraping the ground under my bike... that's causing me some lower back pain - but it's my own fault!

    Well, good luck with it - it could still be your bike!

  5. #5
    Join Date
    Oct 2002
    Location
    San Francisco Bay Area
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    9,324
    I read somewhere that you don't want to keep your abs too tight because it constricts your breathing as you ride. Funny I never really think about my abs during a ride. I've got too many other aches and pains to consider.

    Veronica

  6. #6
    Join Date
    Aug 2003
    Location
    North Carolina
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    Veronica, I think you're probably right. If I try to hold them too tightly that does seem to happen. But I have to "tuck" them just a little to help support my back. It's very weak right now. Getting stronger though - I can really tell a difference!

  7. #7
    Join Date
    Oct 2002
    Location
    San Francisco Bay Area
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    We use to have a 30 minute yoga class before Spin classes. I could really see a difference in my flexibility and core strength doing that twice a week. It wasn't popular enough so the gym canceled it.

    The other yoga classes aren't scheduled at very good times - like when I'm at work and I miss it.

    Veronica

  8. #8
    Join Date
    Aug 2003
    Location
    North Carolina
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    I use to be religious about attending yoga classes but I've let it slip over the past year. I can really see how cycling and yoga would work well together. I'll have to pick it back up. I started doing pillates - that seems to flow well with cycling too.

  9. #9
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    Jul 2003
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    Traveling Nomad
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    Hibiscus,

    I too had neck pain early in the riding season (March-May), but it has gone completely away as I have continued to ride more often and longer distances through the summer. It is entirely possible that yours will too if you have recently increased your distance riding.

    Good luck!
    Emily

  10. #10
    Join Date
    Jul 2003
    Location
    Columbia, SC
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    I've been strength training for the last 7 to 8 years. I probably should have been doing yoga! I've stretched along the way but I don't feel very flexible. Lately, I just want to be flexible -- I tried a Yoga tape by Kathy Smith & I really felt inflexible after giving that a try! I'll have to work on that.

    Emily -- thanks! I was wondering if it may be something that will go away as I grow more accustomed to riding longer distances.

  11. #11
    Join Date
    Aug 2001
    Location
    Northern California
    Posts
    120
    I hate to be discouraging on this subject, but DON'T ignore the pain thinking that it will go away. I have permanently damaged my neck by doing this, and now I cannot lift my head up to level anymore--I must look down all the time. Now I ride a recumbent (at least I am riding again (YAY!)--I was having to use a wheelchair part time and was on the verge of not being able to work!). Get your bike adjusted so that the pain will go away (get a professional fitting), and if that doesn't work, get a recumbent NOW before it is too late! If I had only known 4 years ago that my mysterious symptoms (numb feet, numb legs, numb hands, numb arms, dizziness, and chest pain) were due to spinal cord compression in my neck, I could have gotten a recumbent then and not have gotten so much worse. I didn't know until this year because the pain in my neck that I have had since 1981 never got much worse than it had been all along. Spinal cord compression is mostly painless (at least it doesn't hurt at the site of compression), but it produces weird symptoms remotely in most other parts of your body. During the past 4 years I was tested for almost every disease known including endocrine disorders, metabolic disorders, and full cardiology workup, until a new MRI of my neck showed that my spinal cord is being compressed. I am trying to get surgery now, but since I am doing better now that I am keeping my neck bent forward all the time, I may have to wait for it to get much worse before I can convince the neurosurgeons to do surgery.

    Definitely if you start to get symptoms in your feet, STOP! Spinal cord compression may show up first as foot numbness because these nerves are located near the periphery of the spinal cord and are among the first to get compressed. (Of course you can get foot numbness from shoes that are too tight, but if the numbness persists when you aren't riding, this could be a major problem!)

  12. #12
    Join Date
    Jul 2003
    Location
    Columbia, SC
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    Thanks Lori -- I'm sorry you've been through all of that! My sister fell about 5 years ago and besides cracking her jaw & knocking her 4 front teeth out (she was about 48 at the time), she also compressed her 5th vertebra. That gave her more trouble than anything & after having all sorts of issues all over her body due to it and being put on neurontin and all sorts of other medication, she is finally feeling much better over the last year. What a mess! She also had really bad foot problems due to the injury.

  13. #13
    Join Date
    Feb 2003
    Location
    Arizona
    Posts
    70
    Another possiblity is where you are placing your hands and at what angle. If you are riding with the elbows bent/outward, thumbs slightly turned downward (in order to hold on to the bar with the thumbs to reach brakes with fingers) then you may be over using the rotator cuff. That will also cause neck pain in that you are recruiting other muscle groups to help give more support the neck via the upper trapizius/levetors. Also, gripping the bar more than you think over a longer period of time will cause some over-use syndrome of the smaller muscles of the arm/shoulder. The muscle on the thumb pad is a very over-used muscle and we forget to baby it/stretch it. That is where hand yoga comes in handy. I teach it in my classes about everyother week or so.

    Do you have a chiropractor who can to check for misalignment?

    I agree; don't wait and let it get worse. Consult a professional and get a second opinion.
    Terry

  14. #14
    Join Date
    Jul 2003
    Location
    Columbia, SC
    Posts
    313
    Thanks Terry! I did Yoga today to try to stretch myself out some. My hubby thinks I may be tensing up too much -- I'll concentrate on relaxing. I don't have a chiropractor -- I've never been to one. There is a massage therapist at my gym & although I've never received a professional massage, I may be visiting him soon. I have been stretching my hands out regularly while I ride. I think I need to get out of my neighborhood -- I've been doing most of my rides in there on a 1.2 mile loop. I cross 2 4-way stops and have to brake each time. There are also brick pavers at the 4-way stops that rattle my body to death when I cross them.

  15. #15
    Join Date
    Aug 2003
    Location
    North Carolina
    Posts
    97
    yeah, that can make for some tension. Take that baby out to the country and ride past some farms! You'll be amazed how appealing a cow looks at the end of a long ride heehee!!

 

 

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