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HIP ABOUT FLEXORS
by Julie Gudmestad
Published
in Yoga Journal, November 2001
Stretching
hip flexors can relieve the tension built up from daily sitting
and ease all-too-common lower back pain.
Too
much sitting: You probably know it can contribute to serious health
problems like obesity and osteoporosis. But did you know it also
contributes significantly to back woes, including lower back pain
in yoga poses? Fortunately, you can use your yoga practice to
offset the effects of a sedentary lifestyle, relieve associated
back pain, and set the stage for safe practice of intermediate
poses like backbends.
The
connection between a sedentary lifestyle and lower back discomfort
in yoga poses is in the hip flexor muscles across the front of
the hips. If left unstretched, shortened hip flexors affect the
position of the pelvis, which in turn affects the position and
movement of the lower back.
Several
muscles cross the front of the hip and create hip flexion, pulling
the thigh and trunk toward each other, but probably the most important
is the iliopsoas. It is actually composed of two muscles, the
iliacus and the psoas, which lie deep in the back of the abdomen.
If you looked at the front of a body with the internal organs
removed, you would see the psoas lying alongside the spine, attached
to the sides of the lumbar vertebrae. The iliacus originates on
the inner bowl of the pelvis. Both muscles cross the floor of
the pelvis, emerge at the outer edges of the pubic bones, and
finally insert on the inner upper femur (thighbone). Because the
muscles are buried so deep, we can't see or touch them,
so it's easy to understand why there is much confusion about
their location and action.
If
you are standing, the hip flexors lift your leg when you step
up on a stool. If you are lying flat on your back, the hip flexors
can either lift your leg or lift your torso into a sit-up. In
yoga, Navasana (Boat Pose) is especially good at strengthening
the iliopsoas because it demands that the muscle isometrically
contract to hold up the weight of the legs and torso.
Use
it or lose it
Most problems with the hip flexors, however, don't originate
in a lack of strength but in a lack of flexibility. To understand
how these muscles lose their flexibility, imagine someone with
a broken arm, her bent elbow encased in a plaster cast. When the
cast is removed after six or eight weeks, the soft tissues around
the elbow (muscles, tendons, ligaments, and even skin) will have
shortened, and the elbow won't straighten out. It will take
the patient stretching over several weeks to restore the range
of motion. Similarly, if the hip is constantly kept in a flexed
position – like sitting – for hours every day, day
after day, the hip flexors will shorten and shrink, limiting your
ability to fully extend (straighten) the hip.
If
the iliopsoas and other hip flexors are tight, they pull down
and forward on the pelvis, which tilts the pelvis forward and
compresses the lower back. Picture a man standing with the front
of his pelvis tilting forward and his tailbone lifting. To stand
upright, he has to overarch his lower back. Anatomically, this
is called hyperextension; commonly, it's called "swayback."
Prolonged standing or sitting in this position increases pressure
on the facet joints of the lower spine, which can contribute to
arthritis in those joints.
With
the best of intentions, yoga students sometimes create a muscle
imbalance between the hamstrings and the hip flexors that contributes
to an anterior (forward) pelvic tilt. Most yoga practitioners
work long and hard to improve their hamstring flexibility but
spend much less time stretching their hip flexors. Eventually,
the hamstrings lengthen significantly, while the hip flexors improve
only slightly. The result: The relatively tighter hip flexors
tip the pelvis forward because the relatively longer hamstrings
no longer exert an equal counter-pull on the sitting bones of
the pelvis.
If
the hip flexors are tight, the resulting anterior pelvic tilt
and lumbar hyper-extension will cause problems in many yoga poses,
including standing poses like Virabhadrasana II (Warrior Pose
II) and Trikonasana (Triangle Pose), in which the primary leg
action is opening to the sides instead of flexing forward or extending
back. The real problems begin, however, in poses requiring full
extension (straightening) of the hip joint. These poses include
backbends such as Setu Bandha Sarvangasana (Bridge Pose) and Urdhva
Dhanurasana (Upward-Facing Bow Pose), where both hips are extended,
and standing poses like Virabhadrasana I (Warrior Pose I) and
Virabhadrasana III (Warrior Pose III), in which the legs open
forward and backward (front leg hip flexed, back leg hip extended).
In all these poses, tight hip flexors can cause painful compression
in the lower back, a fairly common problem in backbends.
Save
your back
For people in a sedentary society, daily hip flexor stretches
are important to help counterbalance the prolonged hip flexion
of sitting for hours. They are also an important preparation for
backbends, allowing the hips to extend fully so we can avoid compression
in the lower back.
If
done with proper alignment, Virabhadrasana I (Warrior Pose I)
can be a wonderful hip flexor stretch. Stand with one leg forward
and one leg back, ready for Warrior I. Put your fingers on the
front pelvis bones: You should be able to feel a small, round
protuberance on each side, called the anterior superior iliac
spine, or ASIS.
The
ASISes are good indicators of the tilt of the pelvis. On the side
of the pelvis with the extended hip (the back leg), the iliopsoas
will try to pull the pelvis and lumbar spine down and forward
into an anterior tilt. To counter this, use your fingers to show
the ASISes how to lift up. Hold this posterior tilt as you bend
the front knee, keeping the back knee straight and the back heel
grounded. Feel the iliopsoas lengthen and visualize the spine
lifting out of the pelvis.
You
can also work with the pelvic alignment in Warrior I by bringing
your awareness to the lower back and back of the pelvis. Hold
or tie a belt around your waist. As you move into Warrior I, don't
let your ASISes drop down and forward and your tailbone lift up.
Instead,
move your back waist into the belt, move your tailbone down away
from the belt, and lift the spine up out of the belt. The belt
becomes a point of orientation to help you align your pelvis and
get a deep iliopsoas stretch. Another muscle, the rectus femoris,
can also limit hip flexion and cause problems in yoga poses. Part
of the quadriceps muscle on the front of the thigh, it originates
near the ASIS, runs down the center of the thigh, and inserts
on the shinbone (tibia) just below the knee. When the rectus femoris
contracts and shortens, it not only extends or straightens the
knee, it also flexes the hip.
To
stretch the rectus femoris, we need a pose that flexes the knee
and extends the hip, like Supta Virasana (Reclining Hero Pose).
As you sit down between your heels and lie back in this pose,
the rectus femoris lengthens.
If
it isn't long enough to allow the pelvis to tilt all the
way back, compression and discomfort in the lower back can occur.
To stretch the rectus femoris without compressing the lower back,
place a bolster or folded blankets comfortably under your back
in Supta Virasana, with enough height to keep some length in the
lower back.
Alternately,
try this stretch: Starting on hands and knees with your feet near
a wall, put your right shin straight up the wall and bring your
left foot forward so it's under the left knee. Place your
hands on your knee and lift your spine straight up while taking
your tailbone down. You should feel a strong stretch on the front
part of your thigh.
If
you tend to stand with a "swayback," developing awareness
of the opening at the front of your hips is especially important.
In Tadasana (Mountain Pose), practice lifting the ASISes, moving
the tailbone down, and lifting the lumbar spine. Putting a belt
around your waist, as you did in Warrior I, may help you increase
your awareness of your pelvic alignment in this pose too.
Often
people try to correct a forward tilt of the pelvis by gripping
with the abdominal muscles. But besides limiting your breathing
and being counterproductive in backbends, gripping the abdominals
won't control the anterior pelvic tilt if you have tight
hip flexors – not even in simple standing postures. That's
why it's so important to make hip flexor stretches part
of your daily practice, especially after a long day of sitting.
These poses will let you enjoy a new sense of space in your pelvis
– and help protect you from compression and pain in your
lower back.
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