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  • Ana1982
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    Post count: 6

    Dear Dr. Corenman,

    I expressed myself clumsily. When I said “the core remains extended” I meant that the point of a singer’s exhalation is to exhale as little air as possible over the greatest possible period of time, i.e. to exhale as if through a tiny hose, which requires you to preserve the initial inhaling position as much as possible.

    The starting position is with the belly relaxed, distended. Once you inhale you literally broaden at the ribs 360 degrees and the lower belly goes in. That’s the starting position. Then you stop for a split second and then starts the exhalation which involves maintaining the initial, broadened-ribs position (including the upper stomach and the thoractic back muscles) as much as possible. During the most demanding phrases, your upper stomach should protrude out–you consciously support your highest notes with your upper stomach–and your lower stomach goes in (the second one is the consequence of the first).

    Is this type of activity dangerous for the spine?

    Thank you and I apologize if the question sounds strange

    Ana

    Ana1982
    Participant
    Post count: 6

    Dear Dr. Corenman,

    I sincerely thank you for your helpful advice. If I lived in the US, I would certainly choose you to be my doctor.

    I am happy to tell you that the buttock pain reported before has significantly subsided. I had a few physical therapy sessions (electrotherapy including tens, magnet therapy and laser therapy) that made things worse almost immediately, but for the last two days I have been doing much better. I am still doing my exercises daily, plus swimming every other day and overall I am feeling pretty good.

    However, in the last two days, I have noticed some nerve tingling down my right leg, at the back of the knee, heel, and the big toe. It’s not painful. It’s just a sort of sensitivity I haven’t had since the surgery. Could it be that I haven’t walked enough? Other than swimming, exercise and two hour-long walks a day, I have been spending most of my time in bed for the rest of the day.

    Should I increase my walking? I am going back to work in roughly 10 days. I have a sitting job, 3 hours total commuting per day. That’s going to be almost 12 hours on my feet a day. How to best prepare for it, if there is a way? I know it would be best to still be on sick leave, but this is not possible. Is there a way to increase my physical fitness before work, so that the chance of having pain during the workday stays minimal?

    I thank you from the bottom of my heart for your answers.

    Ana

    Ana1982
    Participant
    Post count: 6

    Dear Dr. Corenman,

    thank you, I truly appreciate your answer. Obviously, I need to do a fresh MRI with gadolinum to discover what’s truly happening. In the meantime, I hope you don’t mind me asking another question.

    I do daily stretches, one of them being lifting legs straight while lying down. Before surgery, I couldn’t do this without there being a sharp, stabbing pain in my back, when lifting either leg, especially on the right side. Now I can do it pain-free. All I feel is the tightness in my hamstrings, no stabbing pain like before. Is this “straight leg test”of any relevance for determining whether it’s a reherniation or not? I am aware it might not be a positive test, but I was just wondering whether it meant anything.

    Thank you for your answers and your advice,

    Ana

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