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Scientist who developed a “hump” almost overnight claims bellringing has cured her chronic back ache

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Scientist who developed a “hump” almost overnight claims bellringing has cured her chronic back ache
News

News

Scientist who developed a “hump” almost overnight claims bellringing has cured her chronic back ache

2019-04-25 11:35 Last Updated At:11:36

Natalie says her chronic back pain has vanished after taking up the unusual hobby.

A clinical scientist who suffers from scoliosis – or curvature of the spine – claims bell ringing at her local church has cured the chronic back pain which has plagued her since childhood.

Mum-of-two Natalie Bleackley, 49, had spinal fusion surgery, aged 12 – like Masters winning golfer Tiger Woods – to stabilise her back after it developed a “hump” almost overnight, due to a rapid growth spurt.

Sadly, despite the operation to fuse together two or more vertebrae, she was still plagued by constant aches, which prevented her from pursuing hobbies such as rock-climbing and canoeing.

But a few months after taking up bell ringing following a ‘taster session’ at the Anglican Church of St Mary and St Nicholas in Leatherhead, Surrey, near the home she shares in Ashtead, with her chartered engineer husband, John, 53, and their daughters, Jemima, 15, and Maddie, 13, the pain magically vanished.

Natalie, who works at the Royal Marsden Hospital in Sutton, explained: “After the operation that I had as a child, I was left with an occasional niggle in my lower back, which gradually over the years got worse and worse until, by my early 30s, a dull, painful ache was always there.

“Then, after a few months of bell ringing, I was walking down the street one day and I realised that the pain had completely vanished.”

Putting the transformation down to the slow stretching of her spine when she is pulling up and down on the bell ropes, Natalie, who enjoys the pastime twice a week, describes her change of fortune as being like a “cloud lifting”.

She continued: “It never occurred to me before I decided to give bell ringing a go that this might have a benefit for my back. I just saw it as a social activity.

“The fact that it has helped to cure a lifelong health problem has been both amazing and unexpected.”

A healthy child, Natalie’s back problems began aged 12, when she suddenly realised she had developed a “hump” at the top of her spine while one day looking at her hair in the mirror.

Diagnosed with adolescent idiopathic scoliosis – when the spine curves to one side as a result of a growth spurt – she had a five-hour operation, during which surgeons fused some of her vertebrae together by placing an additional section of bone in the space between them, helping to strengthen her back and realign the spine.

During a lengthy recovery, Natalie was starting at secondary school wearing a plaster cast around her entire torso for nine months, to help stabilise her spine as she grew.

“It was a little daunting, starting at a new school having just had this big operation,” she recalled, explaining that her spine was stabilised, rather than completely straightened by the operation, leaving her with a still-visible bend and a lopsided ribcage, with the right side protruding more than the left.

“Thankfully everyone was really lovely and I never felt at all embarrassed by my condition.”

Unable to take part in sport for a year while her back healed, to her relief, Natalie began her second year at the school cast-free and able to join in with the same activities as her classmates.

Reaching her mid-teens, however, she began to feel an intermittent sharp pain at the nape of her neck and at the base of her spine – claiming that a doctor told her this was not unusual.

Apparently, it resulted from the non-fused parts of her spine overcompensating for the movement lost by those which had been effectively welded together.

But the odd twinges she suffered at first began to worsen until, by the time she reached her 30s, she was in constant pain in the lumbar – or lower – spine.

She also experienced stiffness, which made her uneasy about going on walking holidays, rock climbing and canoeing – all activities she had enjoyed before.

“I would go and see the doctors to complain about having back ache, but they said it was normal for people who had had spinal fusion and that there was nothing they could do for it,” she said.

Then in June 2014, she took up bell ringing or campanology after her daughter Jemima spotted an advert for a ‘taster day’ at the Church of St Mary and St Nicholas in Leatherhead, two-and-a-half miles from their Surrey home, and expressed an interest in trying it.

Thinking at first that she would simply be accompanying Jemima, who was too young at the time to take part without parental supervision, instead Natalie decided to join in and loved it, later signing up for a six-week course throughout the summer.

“It can be quite scary at first because these bells – of which there are 10 at St Mary and St Nicholas – are extremely heavy, with the smallest weighing around 400kg,” she said.

“It’s a real physical challenge being able to control the bells, as well as a mental one, playing in a band with nine other people.”

She added: “I really took to that, along with the social aspect of playing as a group.”

By the end of the summer, Natalie and Jemima were bell ringing twice a week – once for midweek practice and once on Sunday – and agreed to carry on as part of the church campanology team, only for her to realise that November that the pain in her back had gone.

Natalie, who will be bell ringing this Easter Sunday, continued: “The ache has been such a constant feature of my life.”

She continued: “But I think the regular action of pulling down on the bell ropes and then being pulled up by them has stretched out my back and somehow fixed whatever it was that was causing me the pain for all those years.”

Although she still has a visible curvature, causing her ribcage, shoulders and hips to appear slightly lopsided, Natalie still gives campanology a ringing endorsement, saying she remains virtually pain free.

“I have a few twinges and niggles every now and then, but nothing like I used to suffer,” she said.

She continued: “My back problem was always something I thought I would simply have to put up with, but now it’s gone it’s such a relief to realise that you don’t have to live in pain.”

Commenting on Natalie’s case, John Sutcliffe, lead clinician at the London Spine Clinic, said: “Most back problems can be improved by undertaking appropriate exercises, to strengthen the muscles and give better support to the damaged areas.

“Normally these exercises are prescribed by physiotherapists with experience in managing such conditions and who understand the complex biomechanics of the spine.”

John added: “Bell ringing does exactly this; it gives cyclical stretching against resistance, traction, which in this particular case is exactly what this spine needed.

“Serendipity has always played a role in medicine, from development of antibiotics and other drugs, through now to the use of a community service, bell ringing, to treat the pain of scoliosis!

“It would not be right for everyone with a back problem and the expert physio therapy route is more consistently beneficial, but good for this patient.”

ORLANDO, Fla. (AP) — The NFL has implemented new rules, banned another type of tackle and introduced equipment aimed toward improving player safety.

Keeping players healthy has been a priority for a league that had so many star players suffer significant injuries in 2023. Aaron Rodgers, Joe Burrow, Kirk Cousins and Justin Herbert — four franchise quarterbacks — combined to miss 36 games. They were just a handful of the high-profile players to finish the season on injured reserve, though overall, NFL players missed a combined total of 700 fewer games in 2023 than in 2022.

Figuring out the best ways to help players stay on the field is a collaborative effort for the league and its teams, so the NFL last month held a combined medical summit believed to be the first of its kind in any sport.

While owners, general managers and coaches gathered for the league’s annual spring meeting at a resort 18 miles away, more than 400 athletic trainers, equipment managers, strength and conditioning coaches, nutrition experts and sports science directors came together to learn from each other and from the league’s research partners.

“It’s not just team doctors or athletic trainers, all these different disciplines really see themselves as part of our health and safety effort,” Dr. Allen Sills, the NFL’s chief medical officer, told the AP. “Clubs see themselves very holistically and nowadays, as coaches start to plan practice schedules and start to plan training camp, they really engage these different disciplines and they do it through the lens of what might be driving injury.

“Obviously, coaches want to get their teams ready to play, but they also want to make sure they’re as healthy as possible. And so that’s really where we’re looking at these interventions. How can we collectively, whether it’s through our medical care or equipment or nutrition or strength and conditioning efforts, what do we do collectively that increases player availability and reliability?”

Injury prevention was a major focus of the four-day summit that featured members of the Professional Football Athletic Trainers Society, the Professional Football Equipment Managers Society, the Professional Football Performance Coaches Association and the Professional Football Registered Dietitian Society.

The groups met for a series of workshops, seminars and combined education sessions. They visited with various vendors and heard from guest speakers that included Hall of Fame coach Tony Dungy and former player Andrew Whitworth.

“There’s a certain maturity to the work that’s been going on in the sports, medical and innovation space that requires information sharing with all the clubs with greater frequency and more depth than I think we ever have before,” NFL executive Jeff Miller said.

Miller, the league’s executive vice president overseeing player health and safety, emphasized the importance of having the various groups in the same room, giving teams an opportunity to share ideas with each other.

The NFL plans to make this summit an annual event.

“While everything at the league is competitive, the health and safety of the players really isn’t,” Miller said. “That is a place where we are able to share and the clubs are able to share with one another because everybody has that specific goal as a high priority.”

The various medical departments have gathered as individual groups at the NFL scouting combine for a long time but the idea to bring them all together started a couple years ago, said Tyler Williams, executive director of player health and performance for the Minnesota Vikings.

“As the combine continues to get bigger and as disciplines become more subspecialty, how do we increase our level of interdisciplinary collaboration so if an athlete comes in and wants to wear these cleats, when you look at the injury history of the foot and ankle and you look at how they train with the sports medicine and how they fuel from the dietitian, all those components should have a say at the table," Williams said.

The groups sat down together for six hours of educational and breakout sessions on Day 2 of the summit. Tendon health was the theme of the morning session. The afternoon chats featured five workshops led by subject-matter experts in each discipline. Attendees were encouraged to step outside their scope to understand the expertise of performance counterparts and hold conversations among the staffs.

“We’re talking about injury and return to play, equipment’s role in that to get the athlete back on the field and our approach to another team’s approach could be totally different so we are able to take some stuff away from each other to bring back to our own club, which was the point of it all,” said Brendan Burger, the director of equipment for the Los Angeles Rams. “When it comes to an athlete’s health and safety, it isn’t a top-secret thing. We’re here for our athletes, and the more we can help them, the better."

Since 2002, the NFL has made over 50 rules changes intended to eliminate potentially dangerous tactics and reduce the risk of injuries.

During the latest league meetings, team owners unanimously approved a rule that bans players from using a swivel technique to tackle an opponent. Miller said the hip-drop tackle was used 230 times last season and resulted in 15 players missing time with injuries.

The horse-collar tackle, chop blocks and more were banned years ago. Helmet-to-helmet hits became illegal in 1996. Protecting quarterbacks has been a focal point for many rule changes, including one that prohibits low hits.

Last week, the NFL and the NFL Players Association approved eight new position-specific helmets for quarterbacks and linemen designed to help reduce impact that can cause concussions.

AP NFL: https://apnews.com/hub/nfl

FILE - New York Jets quarterback Aaron Rodgers warms up before playing against the Buffalo Bills in an NFL football game, Sept. 11, 2023, in East Rutherford, N.J. On Tuesday, April 9, 2024, Aaron Rodgers acknowledged during a podcast interview this week he briefly thought his playing career could be over after he tore his left Achilles tendon in the New York Jets’ season opener. (AP Photo/Adam Hunger, File)

FILE - New York Jets quarterback Aaron Rodgers warms up before playing against the Buffalo Bills in an NFL football game, Sept. 11, 2023, in East Rutherford, N.J. On Tuesday, April 9, 2024, Aaron Rodgers acknowledged during a podcast interview this week he briefly thought his playing career could be over after he tore his left Achilles tendon in the New York Jets’ season opener. (AP Photo/Adam Hunger, File)

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