BBC
Sitting up straight is not the best position
for office workers, a study has suggested.
Scottish and Canadian researchers used a new
form of magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) to show it places an unnecessary
strain on your back.
They told the Radiological Society of North
America that the best position in which to sit at your desk is leaning back, at
about 135 degrees, reports the BBC.
Experts
said sitting was known to contribute to lower back pain.
Data from the British Chiropractic Association
says 32% of the population spends more than 10 hours a day seated.
Half do not leave their desks, even to have
lunch.
Two thirds of people also sit down at home
when they get home from work.
The research was carried out at Woodend Hospital in Aberdeen.
Twenty two volunteers with healthy backs were
scanned using a positional MRI machine, which allows patients the freedom to
move - so they can sit or stand - during the test.
Traditional scanners mean patients have to lie
flat, which may mask causes of pain that stem from different movements or
postures.
In this study, the patients assumed three
different sitting positions: a slouching position, in which the body is hunched
forward as if they were leaning over a desk or a video game console, an upright
90-degree sitting position; and a "relaxed" position where they
leaned back at 135 degrees while their feet remained on the floor.
The researchers then took measurements of
spinal angles and spinal disk height and movement across the different
positions.
Spinal disk movement occurs when
weight-bearing strain is placed on the spine, causing the disk to move out of
place.
Disk movement was found to be most pronounced
with a 90-degree upright sitting posture.
It was least pronounced with the 135-degree
posture, suggesting less strain is placed on the spinal disks and associated
muscles and tendons in a more relaxed sitting position.
The "slouch" position revealed a
reduction in spinal disk height, signifying a high rate of wear and tear on the
lowest two spinal levels.
When they looked at all test results, the
researchers said the 135-degree position was the best for backs, and say this
is how people should sit.
Dr Waseem Bashir of the Department of
Radiology and Diagnostic Imaging at the University of Alberta Hospital, Canada,
who led the study, said: "Sitting in a sound anatomic position is
essential, since the strain put on the spine and its associated ligaments over
time can lead to pain, deformity and chronic illness."
Rishi Loatey of the British Chiropractic
Association said: "One in three people suffer from lower back pain and to
sit for long periods of time certainly contributes to this, as our bodies are
not designed to be so sedentary."
Levent Caglar from the charity BackCare,
added: "In general, opening up the angle between the trunk and the thighs
in a seated posture is a good idea and it will improve the shape of the spine,
making it more like the natural S-shape in a standing posture.
"As to what is the best angle between
thigh and torso when seated, reclining at 135 degrees can make sitting more
difficult as there is a tendency to slide off the seat: 120 degrees or less may
be better."
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