my name is Andrea Furlan and I'm a
specialist in physical medicine and rehabilitation. Today I'm going to
talk about osteoporosis. Osteoporosis is the silent thief. It's a thief because
it steals the calcium from our bones and makes the bones weaker and weaker,
without causing any symptom. It doesn't have any symptom until one day the person
falls and have a fracture. Then they find out that they have advanced, severe
osteoporosis. We don't know what causes osteoporosis but we do know that there
are some medications that help keep the calcium in the bones. And we also know that there are exercises that are helpful to keep the calcium in the bones, to make
the muscles stronger, to increase our balance to reduce the risk of falls. We are going to talk about those exercises today. We know that osteoporosis affects men and women. It affects women 1 in 3 above the age of 50, and one in five
men. The most common sites of fracture in osteoporosis include the hips, the spine,
the shoulders, and the wrists. So the exercises that I'm going to teach today
are basically four types of exercise balance exercises,
aerobic exercises, strengthening exercises, and endurance exercises. And to remember this B.A.S.E . We're going to talk about the BASE exercises. My mother
is in her seventies and she has osteoporosis. And she does these exercises regularly. So I'm going to demonstrate those for you. You don't need to do all
of these exercises at once. You can break them. If you do all of those it may take
between 30 and 60 minutes, depending on how many repetitions you do. But you can
also break them towards a couple of days during the week. At the end I'm going to
show you how you can do them, so you do all of them in a week. So in order to do
this routine of exercise you're going to need very little
equipment. I'm going to show you what you need, and you can do this at home, and
especially this days that a lot of people can't get out of your home, and
you are isolated at home, you can do this easily if you have a strong chair, you're
going to need a chair that is strong, sturdy, because we're going to use this
for our exercises. You're also going to need some weights, and if you don't have
professional weights at home, these are very good.These are like, you know, this
bags of beans, they weight 900 grams, so anything that is equivalent to about one
kilogram, at home, that will be helpful. If you have at home ankle
weights, so if you have something that you can wrap around your ankles to
increase the weights of your legs, that would be good, but if you don't have,
don't worry about it. These ones have one point one kilogram each, so they make my
legs very heavy, which is good because then I'll be doing more strengthening
exercises because of this ankle weights. Also if you have at home any resistance
band, that would be excellent. but if you don't have. any elastic band would work,
because we're going to use this for some of the exercises we are going to do. You
also need a room or a corridor that you will be able to walk, especially,
preferably without any carpet because we don't want to trip and fall, and we also
going to need a wall to do some of the exercises. So that's all. Let's get
started. I'm going to follow a routine of 26 exercises and at the end you can
print this routine from the description of the video below, or you can also take
a picture of this video. So the first
exercise we're going to do is with the chair. We're going to hold in the back of
the chair and we're going to stand in place, and we're going to raise our heels
up and down, up and down, so usually we start with eight repetitions, three, four,
five, six, seven, eight. and as you get stronger you are going to
increase the repetitions, and then you can increase to twelve, to fifteen, or
twenty. So that's the exercise number 1. The exercise number 2 is we're going
to stand on one foot, and raise the other one, and you're going to do this for
eight times, each leg and if that's too easy, this is exercise for balance, you
can let go your hands, and you're going to see that that's harder because if
you're not used to do this, you're going to lose your balance. So here we're doing
in strengthening exercises for our hamstrings, and we are also doing balance
exercises, and the longer you stay on one foot, and you let your hands go the
better, and you're going to see that you're trying to balance on one foot,
you're going to feel the muscles of your calf, the muscles of your chin, acting to
increase your balance, not let your fall always remember to hold on the chair.
Then the exercise number 3 is walking exercise. So we're going to walk,
on a normal pace, so walk. If you have a corridor you can go back and forth, back
and forth, and do this for about one minute. The 4th exercise is walking with
one feet, one foot, in front of the other one. Walking in tandem.You'll see that
this is hard on your balance, if this is too hard for you, you can just walk with
your feet close to each other, with a narrow base, and do this for about one
minute. The exercise number 5 is walking
backwards. Walk backwards is also important because you need a good
balance to walk backwards, walk backwards for about one minute. The
exercise number 6 is walking sideways, and this is really important because if
we remember, that one of the sites of fracture, osteoporosis fracture, is the
hip, and that's usually because the muscles that sustain our hips are the
glutes muscles, and they are weak so walking sideways is important to
strengthen the gluteus muscles that are important to hold our hips in place, so
doing like this, and do this for about one minute. The exercise number 7 is
walking doing lunges, and lunges are basically you put one foot in front of
you, you lower, and the other one, you lower, and the other one, and your lower.
Be careful not to fall, it's important that you give a big step in front of you. The exercise number 8 is walking like a ballerina, walking on your tippy
toes and coming back on your heels, so go forward on your tiptoes, and come
backwards on your heels, and do this a couple times. Now the next
exercises, we're going to do all of these walking exercises but now adding the
beans, the bags of beans, and doing exercises with our arms. The exercise
number 9 is walking normal, but now we are going to do, opening your arms, you
don't need to go above the level of your shoulders, here is enough, and you're
going to walk normal and opening your arms like if you are flying. Open your
wings like you're flying. As walking right, ok? And do this for another 1 minute. And now we are going to walk in tandem,
with the beans, holding the beans. Open there, So walking in tandem and turn. The exercise number 11 is walking
backwards, with the beans in your hands, around, The exercise number 12 is walking
sideways, and now we are going to do with the beans, to the level of our shoulders, you can do this for one minute. Now we are going to do lunges with the
beans, and for these ones, you can just hold them on the side of your body. So, front, lower, Front, lower. So now we're going to walk
with the beans, and on our tiptoes. Go forward on the trip toes. And
backwards on the heels. Now, if you have stairs at home, we're
going to do some step exercises. So the first important thing is that if you
have railing. Always hold on to the railings. And we're going to do one step
first. And what you're going to do is left and the left. Left. So left up left down. Left up, left down. Left up, left down. We're going to do this
for one minute. If you don't have stairs at home, you can get a stepping
board and do this at home. Make sure that you have some railing,
something for you to hold on. So left down, left up, do this for one
minute. Now you're going to do the right up, and
right down. So right up, right down. Right up, right down, right up, right up, right down.
and do this for one minute. Now the other exercise is to go all the
way up, and all the way down, if you can do this make sure that you have the
railing. And we are going to do one with all the left foot, left foot up, and left
foot down. We're going to do left foot first, and then the right foot. The exercise 19 is to strengthen
your quads, and the muscles in the back of your thighs. So we're going to do a
sit to stand. So you can start with a sitting position coming to the edge of
the chair, and then you stand up, and sit again. You can do this eight times.
And when this becomes easy, what you are going to do is you're not going to sit
anymore. You're going to stand and you're going to squat, touch the chair, and stand.
Touch the chair and stand, touch the chair and stand. And if you feel you're
going to lose your balance or you're getting tired, you can sit and stand. The exercise number 20 is the same thing
but now with the bags in front of you. Sit and stand, touch the chair and stand.
Touch the chair and stand. Touch the chair. So, if you have resistance bands ,you're
going to do this exercise. Keep the elbows close to your body, and your hands
in the horizontal position like this. And you're going to pull apart and come back. 3, 4, 5, 6, 7 This is exercise for our shoulders
the back of our shoulders, also for the hands. Keep your wrists aligned. Don't do
this with the wrists. Keep them straight. The other exercise with the resistance
band: you're going to put the resistance band behind you, under your arms, and
you're going to pull down this direction here. Again don't move your wrists. You're
going to pull them forward. You're going to bend your elbows and straight your
elbows. This is exercise for the triceps. So straight, bend in front of you.
And do this eight times, and then you can increase to 12, to 15, and 20. As
your muscles get stronger and stronger, you're going to notice that it's going
to be easy to do this, and then, you can do more repetitions, that's when we are
going to start doing the endurance exercise. Endurance means you're building
more muscle mass, and you can do more repetitions. The other exercise with the
resistance band, you're going to put them under your thighs. You are going to hold like this.And this will be for the biceps here. We're going to pull up, Again,
don't move your wrists too much. Keep them straight and fixed. You're going to
move only your elbow, just the elbows are bending. Aand do this eight times, and when this is
easy you repeat 12, and then 15, and then 20.So this exercise is push-ups. But
we're going to do push-ups on the wall. So you go apart from the wall, and you're
going to go forward. It's important that your spine is aligned with your hips.
That it's like a straight line, so don't do this because puts too much pressure
on your spine, what you have to do is this, and bring the face. Now this exercise is to align your spine
so you're going to find a wall, and you try to put your the back of your head
touching the wall. The back of your shoulders touching the wall. And your
hips touching the wall. And your feet is about one feet apart from the wall. And
you're going to do this: inhale, try to do this. And touch all of your spine on the
wall, and you're going to go down, down, down, down, down, down, you stay there in
this position touching. See if you can touch all of the spine on the wall. If possible keep your head touching the wall and stay in this
position. You're going to feel some strength here.
Stay there for three seconds and then come up. So now you're going to do this
exercise with the beanbags in front of you. So touch the back of your head
shoulders hips and go down, and stay there. Three seconds, but with the bag,
the bags of beans, in your hands and go up. So you have noticed that all the
exercise that we did with the shoulders, we didn't go beyond more, higher than
this, the shoulder levels. Now we are going to do. We are going to go higher.
And to do this we're going to use the wall. Here. And we're going to go up
whenever possible. If you can do this, and then come back. That's called the wall
angels. You're going to do the a angel's wings. Here on the wall, and this is an
exercise for the shoulders, called the wall angels. So now another exercise for the
shoulders, is the fingers walking on the wall. So you find a wall.And the
fingers start going up, and up, stretch. When you get there, stretch, and come down, and do this eight repetitions, or as
many as you can do. So fingers go in the wall. When you get there, stretch, stretch,
stretch. You can do one arm at a time, if you can't do both, but if you feel you
can do both arms, just do both at the same time. So it's important that you do
this routine every week, and what I recommend is that you do the balance
exercises every day. You do the aerobic exercises maybe three, four times a week.As long as you do, maybe a hundred and fifty minutes every week, that's good. The
strengthening exercises, is good also to do three times a week, and the endurance
exercise, is just increasing the amount of repetitions you can do. So every time
you do the exercises try to do them for longer than you did before. And do more
repetitions. So, it's important that you keep a diary, that you keep in a paper,
that you take notes, how many repetitions you did, how many minutes you were able
to do. So then, the next time you can increase the amount of exercise that you
were doing. Please remember that this video is not intended to provide medical
advice. If you think that you have osteoporosis and you need medication or
treatment, please consult with your physician, and if you think you need
exercises, please consult with a professional ,with an expert in exercise,
such as a physiotherapist or a kinesiologist. And they can help you to
modify this routine for you. This video is only for educational purposes. If you
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comments to this videos. Thank you for watching. Bye