
Remember that the body loves motion. Lack of motion for long periods of time (ie 6-8 hours of sleep) can affect blood flow and puts pressure on spinal joints which cause them to seize up. When the body was previously injured or the person was experiencing a previous episode of back pain, this scenario is especially possible. Poor mattress choice or sleeping position make this deep achy back discomfort even more noticeable. The solution? Get your body moving, get adjusted and try yoga or a reasonable stretching routine.
Dear Dr. Michael, how are you? I hope this email finds you well! I wanted to ask you a question about my back as it is still bugging me from before. it seems that it's fine during the day, but when I wake up in the morning, I'm in a lot of pain. it's more of an ache vs a sharp pain. when I start moving around, I feel better, however it takes a few hours. I'm trying to avoid taking meds, but sometimes I need to in order to feel better. do you think that my mattress is exacerbating the issue? or do you think it's my muscles that are really tight and needing to exercise/ stretch more right now? I had started feeling better... but the aches have come back and I'm trying to figure out what to do. i'd love any feedback that you have. take care, (friend)

Dr. Michael
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