The Washington Post
April 5, 2016
After a few weeks of working out at CrossFit, Charles Banfield says his back hurt constantly and his joints felt terrible. The 47-year-old’s aches and pains were so bad, he initially blamed his bed and purchased a new mattress.
After feeling a searing pain during a particularly grueling exercise, the Los Angeles-based chief executive officer of an event planning company learned he had torn his Achilles’ tendon.
“You miss one step and you could really hurt yourself,” Banfield said.
Although there have not yet been in-depth studies, some chiropractors, physicians and trainers say stories such as Banfield’s have become more frequent with the increasing popularity of high-intensity interval training espoused by CrossFit and similar hybrid-workout gyms.
Such workouts include such high-impact moves as jumping onto platforms and are performed during short periods of time, often without breaks, but some experts say they strain bodies beyond what they’re meant to endure as participants sling sledgehammers over their shoulders and perform headstand push-ups.
The notion that people are overdoing it has spawned an offshoot industry aimed at delivering lower-impact exercise and helping those recovering from injuries to continue breaking a sweat but without exacerbating their problems.
Many people who do the high-intensity workouts aren’t adequately conditioned for such rigorous workouts or have back and spine conditions that could worsen, said Marc Umlas, chief of orthopedic surgery at Mount Sinai Medical Center in Miami, who said his office has seen an increase in injuries from workouts at CrossFit and similar programs.
“They plunge headfirst into a high-intensity workout and they get injured,” Umlas said.
Torn tendons and ligaments are a common result, he added.
“Every CrossFit athlete that I see as patients, they have something going on as a result of being in CrossFit,” said Tyler Kallenbach, a Los Angeles-based chiropractor, who noted that knee and shoulder injuries including torn rotator cuffs are common. He estimated that 60 percent of his patients at one point were seeking treatment from CrossFit workouts, where Kallenbach says overtraining is common.
“I’ve got a guy in here who needs his shoulder repaired, a girl who keeps throwing her back out repeatedly. It’s always something with them,” he said.
A spokesman for CrossFit says it’s likely that more doctors are seeing injured CrossFitters — because so many people are doing CrossFit, not because it’s more dangerous than other workouts. The brand has more than 13,000 locations worldwide. A training program that’s completely safe would be ineffective, company spokesman Russell Berger said.
CrossFit is known for varied workouts that include gymnastics-style moves — weightlifting, burpees and jumping onto platforms — performed at relatively high intensity.
“There’s this view in the fitness industry that they treat safety as the golden calf, that the most important variable in training is safety, and that’s just honestly not true. CrossFit is relatively safe and is as safe as anything else you could be doing,” Berger said.
Although it may seem counterintuitive to conduct strength training while injured, experts say it’s the best way to heal.
“Stretching can be complementary to a rehab program, but the focus is usually on the strengthening. Often what we’re trying to do is create a balance between strength and flexibility,” said Kelly McInnis, a sports medicine physiatrist at Massachusetts General Hospital who is a consultant for the New England Patriots and the Boston Red Sox.
Most CrossFit and similar workouts are not meant for average gymgoers, said Jorden Gold, who founded Stretch Zone, which has 33 locations in four states. During the 30-minute sessions, therapists use bolsters and belts to stretch clients.
“The majority have no business being there in the first place,” Gold said. “It’s Olympic training. It’s probably only [suitable for] a very, very small percent that go.”
Los Angeles-based trainer Lauren Roxburgh has created an entire workout around the foam roller, a narrow tube often relegated to post-workout stretching, which she says can smooth out connective tissue, stimulate the lymphatic system and deliver highly effective core strengthening. Roxburgh noticed many clients struggling with injuries from high-intensity workouts and an obsession with training harder and longer.
“In our lifestyle it’s been very much about the doing. . . . It’s all about pushing through, doing, doing, doing, and it hasn’t been enough about the yin, which is the being, being in the moment, being present in our bodies,” she said.
At LIT Method, a studio in Los Angeles that specializes in low-impact workouts for people who are injured, participants’ injuries are written on the side of their rowing machines.
“Eighty-five to 90 percent of our clients are coming in with some sort of injury and they don’t want to get hurt anymore,” said LIT Method co-founder Justin Norris.
He said classes sell out a week in advance: “There was a huge, huge need for this.”
After a few weeks of working out at CrossFit, Charles Banfield says his back hurt constantly and his joints felt terrible. The 47-year-old’s aches and pains were so bad, he initially blamed his bed and purchased a new mattress.
After feeling a searing pain during a particularly grueling exercise, the Los Angeles-based chief executive officer of an event planning company learned he had torn his Achilles’ tendon.
“You miss one step and you could really hurt yourself,” Banfield said.
Although there have not yet been in-depth studies, some chiropractors, physicians and trainers say stories such as Banfield’s have become more frequent with the increasing popularity of high-intensity interval training espoused by CrossFit and similar hybrid-workout gyms.
Such workouts include such high-impact moves as jumping onto platforms and are performed during short periods of time, often without breaks, but some experts say they strain bodies beyond what they’re meant to endure as participants sling sledgehammers over their shoulders and perform headstand push-ups.
The notion that people are overdoing it has spawned an offshoot industry aimed at delivering lower-impact exercise and helping those recovering from injuries to continue breaking a sweat but without exacerbating their problems.
Many people who do the high-intensity workouts aren’t adequately conditioned for such rigorous workouts or have back and spine conditions that could worsen, said Marc Umlas, chief of orthopedic surgery at Mount Sinai Medical Center in Miami, who said his office has seen an increase in injuries from workouts at CrossFit and similar programs.
“They plunge headfirst into a high-intensity workout and they get injured,” Umlas said.
Torn tendons and ligaments are a common result, he added.
“Every CrossFit athlete that I see as patients, they have something going on as a result of being in CrossFit,” said Tyler Kallenbach, a Los Angeles-based chiropractor, who noted that knee and shoulder injuries including torn rotator cuffs are common. He estimated that 60 percent of his patients at one point were seeking treatment from CrossFit workouts, where Kallenbach says overtraining is common.
“I’ve got a guy in here who needs his shoulder repaired, a girl who keeps throwing her back out repeatedly. It’s always something with them,” he said.
A spokesman for CrossFit says it’s likely that more doctors are seeing injured CrossFitters — because so many people are doing CrossFit, not because it’s more dangerous than other workouts. The brand has more than 13,000 locations worldwide. A training program that’s completely safe would be ineffective, company spokesman Russell Berger said.
CrossFit is known for varied workouts that include gymnastics-style moves — weightlifting, burpees and jumping onto platforms — performed at relatively high intensity.
“There’s this view in the fitness industry that they treat safety as the golden calf, that the most important variable in training is safety, and that’s just honestly not true. CrossFit is relatively safe and is as safe as anything else you could be doing,” Berger said.
Although it may seem counterintuitive to conduct strength training while injured, experts say it’s the best way to heal.
“Stretching can be complementary to a rehab program, but the focus is usually on the strengthening. Often what we’re trying to do is create a balance between strength and flexibility,” said Kelly McInnis, a sports medicine physiatrist at Massachusetts General Hospital who is a consultant for the New England Patriots and the Boston Red Sox.
Most CrossFit and similar workouts are not meant for average gymgoers, said Jorden Gold, who founded Stretch Zone, which has 33 locations in four states. During the 30-minute sessions, therapists use bolsters and belts to stretch clients.
“The majority have no business being there in the first place,” Gold said. “It’s Olympic training. It’s probably only [suitable for] a very, very small percent that go.”
Los Angeles-based trainer Lauren Roxburgh has created an entire workout around the foam roller, a narrow tube often relegated to post-workout stretching, which she says can smooth out connective tissue, stimulate the lymphatic system and deliver highly effective core strengthening. Roxburgh noticed many clients struggling with injuries from high-intensity workouts and an obsession with training harder and longer.
“In our lifestyle it’s been very much about the doing. . . . It’s all about pushing through, doing, doing, doing, and it hasn’t been enough about the yin, which is the being, being in the moment, being present in our bodies,” she said.
At LIT Method, a studio in Los Angeles that specializes in low-impact workouts for people who are injured, participants’ injuries are written on the side of their rowing machines.
“Eighty-five to 90 percent of our clients are coming in with some sort of injury and they don’t want to get hurt anymore,” said LIT Method co-founder Justin Norris.
He said classes sell out a week in advance: “There was a huge, huge need for this.”
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