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How You Can Prevent Painful Bodybuilding Injuries
http://www.5authors.com/articles/29000/1/How-You-Can-Prevent-Painful-Bodybuilding-Injuries/Page1.html
Dane Fletcher
Dane Fletcher is the most innovative and prominent steroid guru in the world. To read more of his work on steroids visit http://www.SteroidsToday.com
By Dane Fletcher
Published on Friday 10th 2008
 
In bodybuilding, you lift a lot of heavy weight. Even though that weight is a necessity of training and building muscle, the risks involved can often seem daunting. Preventing injury to those core areas used during exercises is one of the most important aspects of bodybuilding though, and you need to know how to take care of yourself.

Before you start on bodybuilding training regimens you should be aware that there is an inherent risk of suffering painful or debilitating injuries that may be temporary or permanent. These injuries are inflicted as the prospective or even the quite seasoned bodybuilder uses the various weightlifting machines in the wrong way. Gym injuries are potentially harmful and they may bring your bodybuilding career to a quick halt. You would think that bodybuilders will be the last persons to complain about a painful back despite the fact that they are muscularly built to support heavy weights in the gym. This is quite the opposite.

As many people join gyms to begin weightlifting they inflict injuries on themselves sometimes without noticing that they are actually injured. It is foolhardy to think that when you don't feel pain even as you lift up weights you are not injured. This couldn't be further from the truth. Gym injuries particularly from weightlifting have been known to be sustained over prolonged periods.

The long-term injuries that are being described in this scenario are those that are caused by wrongly executed repeated motions. These cause the wear and tear of the tendons, ligaments, joints, muscles, and cartilages. So as you can now realize, there are long and short term injuries. The short term injuries may include dropping weights on your feet and toes. The long-term injuries are really the ones to watch out for. This can be done by taking care and paying greater attention to the manner in which you handle weightlifting apparatus. So, what can cause these injuries? Some of the prime causes of these injuries include lifting weights that are too heavy for you, weightlifting when you are ill or when you are not fully recovered.

In these cases the body is usually very weak and weightlifting will definitely lead to strain. When these weights are too heavy for you or in instances when you are too weak to lift up the weights one is tempted to handle the weights using swinging techniques. During the upward motions one uses swinging momentums to raise the weights. On the downward motion the person allows the weight to fall through the pull of gravity. These swinging techniques are not only ineffective for muscular development but they are the catalysts of disaster in terms of the infliction of injury.

Perhaps the most wrongly executed exercise has to be the barbell biceps curl. As you observe people in many gyms using the barbells you will realize that the majority of these people are allowing their bodies to rock to and fro following the swinging weights. The fact of the matter is that these rocking motions are placing excessive strain and stress on the shoulder joints and the lower part of the back. For your information, the former happens to be the body's most unstable joint.

These injuries are particularly harmful since their effects are felt into the long term. Other training exercises to be done with caution are the leg extensions, the lat pull downs, the military presses and the bench presses. Exercise caution in the gym so as not to cast jeopardy on the very body you were trying to improve in the first place.