Williams' Flexion Versus McKenzie 
Extension Exercises For 
Low Back Pain        
              In general, extension exercises may cause further damage in people with       spondylolysis, spondylolisthesis and facet joint dysfunction       (Harvey 1991), not to mention the possibility of       crushing the interspinous ligament (McGill       1998).  While flexion       exercises should be avoided in persons with acute disc herniation       (Harvey 1991). 
              Brief History of Williams' Flexion Exercises
Dr. Paul Williams first published his exercise program in 1937 for patients with chronic low back pain in response to his clinical observation that the majority of patients who experienced low back pain had degenerative vertebrae secondary to degenerative disk disease (Williams 1937).
 These exercises were developed for men under 50       and women under 40 years of age who had exaggerated lumbar lordosis, whose       x-ray films showed decreased disc space between lumbar spine segments (L1-S1),       and whose symptoms were chronic but low grade.  The goals of performing       these exercises were to reduce pain and provide lower trunk stability       by actively developing the "abdominal, gluteus maximus, and hamstring muscles       as well as..." passively stretching the hip flexors and lower back       (sacrospinalis) muscles.  Williams said: "The exercises outlined will       accomplish a proper balance between the flexor and the extensor groups of       postural muscles..." (Williams 1965, Williams 1937, Blackburn       1981, Ponte et al.). 
              Williams’ flexion exercises have been a cornerstone in the management       of lower back pain for many years for treating a wide variety of back problems,       regardless of diagnosis or chief complaint.  In many cases they are       used when the disorder’s cause or characteristics were not fully understood       by the physician or physical therapist.  Also, physical therapists often       teach these exercises with their own modifications.  Williams suggested       that a posterior pelvic-tilt position was necessary to obtain best results       (Williams 1937).
              Examples of Williams' Flexion Exercises
              2. Single Knee to chest.  Lie on your back with knees bent       and feet flat on the floor.  Slowly pull your right knee toward your       shoulder and hold 5 to 10 seconds.  Lower the knee and repeat with the       other knee.        
Brief History of McKenzie Back Exercises
The McKenzie back extension exercises have been order by physicians and prescribed by physical therapists for at least two decades (McKenzie 1981). Robin McKenzie noted that some of his patients reported lower back pain relief while in an extended position. This went against the predominant thinking of Williams Flexion biased exercises at this period of time.
              Physical therapists can become "McKenzie certified", but the vast majority       of physical therapists who treat low back pain are not.  McKenzie       has developed diagnostic categories that assign patient to specific treatments.        Patients evaluated by McKenzie certified therapists are most likely       to be placed into an extension biased exercise program.  This is probably       why most people think of extension when talking about McKenzie exercises,       or because the original exercises were in opposition to Williams' flexion       exercises.
              The goal of McKenzie exercises is to centralized pain.  If       a patient has pain in the lower back, right buttock, right posterior thigh,       and right calf, then the goal would be to "centralize" the pain to the lower       back, buttock, and posterior thigh.  Then, "centralize" the pain to       the lower back and buttock, and finally just the lower back.                    
              Typical McKenzie Back Extension Exercises
              What Does Recent Research Suggest About William Flexion or McKenzie       Back Exercises?
A. Adams, et al. found that "extension can reduce stresses in the posterior annulus of those discs that are most protected by the neural arch. This protection may be related to disc height loss, to the morphology of the neural arch, or both....
              Discogenic pain is associated with stress concentrations in the posterior       annulus.  That backward bending can reduce such stress peaks in some       discs could explain pain relief in some back pain patients undergoing extension       exercises...  Pain relief would be anticipated only in those patients       whose painful discs can be stress shielded by the neural arch in extension,       and this may depend on factors such as disc height, and the precise shape       of the neural arch....  
              Backward bending may also correct any posteriorly displaced intradiscal       mass, which is presumably an embryonic stage of disc herniation.  This       dynamic internal disc model may provide an explanation for the commonly noted       phenomenon of "centralization", in which distal pain is abolished and symptoms       move proximally, often in response to extension exercises (Adams       2000).
              B.  When rehabilitating patients with back dysfunction,       extension exercises that are presumably "passive" for the erector spinae       muscles are frequently used.  The results of a study demonstrated that       "passive" extension exercises were not truly passive for lumbar back extensor       muscles.  From a clinical perspective, if the performance of passive       back extension is important, extension in lying prone may not be the exercise       of choice and having patients lying prone may be the most beneficial       (Fiebert 1994 ). 
              C.   In one of the more carefully conducted randomized trials       of nonsurgical back pain treatments undertaken in recent years, researchers       conclude that McKenzie back exercises provide slightly greater pain relief       than a placebo--the control group received a patient education booklet on       low back pain.  Neither chiropractic manipulation nor McKenzie back       exercises provided a significant functional benefit.
              One of the most important tests of a therapy's efficacy is how it affects       back problems over the long term.  McKenzie proponents have argued that       their protocol reduces recurrences of back pain and decreases utilization       of services.  This study showed evidence that McKenzie back exercises       do not reduce low back pain recurrence.
              "This casts doubt on the ability of the self-care-oriented McKenzie       (back exercises) to reduce the utilization of services," suggest the researchers.        "There was no evidence that the higher initial costs of the physical       treatments were offset by later savings," they add (Cherkin       1998).
              D.   Nachemson arguably discredited Williams flexion back       exercises when his study showed that these exercises may significantly increased       the pressure within intervertebral discs of the lumbar spine       (Nachemson 1963).
              E.   Two studies have shown that lower back stiffness may       only be a symptom of lower back pain and not the cause of it.       (Johannsen 1995, Mellin 1985)  Johannsen,       et al. conclude that "...increased spinal mobility does not necessarily lead       to LBP (low back pain) improvement, and mobilizing exercises alone cannot       be recommended to LBP patients               (Johannsen       1995).
              F.   Is there another explanation for symptom       relief resulting from McKenzie?  What about tight iliopsoas muscles?        Isn't it more likely that the effectiveness of McKenzie extension       exercises is associated with the elongation of the iliopsoas muscles secondary       to the stretch positions.  The truth is that there is no              reproducible       data that shows that the exercise effect has anything to do with the       nucleus pulposis "moving"... (Jorgensson 1993, Ingber       1989).
       References
Adams MA, May S, Freeman BJ, Morrison HP, Dolan P. Effects of backward bending on lumbar intervertebral discs. Relevance to physical therapy treatments for low back pain. Spine 2000 Feb 15;25(4):431-7.
       Blackburn SE, Portney LG. Electromyographic activity of back musculature       during Williams' flexion exercises. Phys Ther  1981;61:878-885.
       Cherkin DC et al., A comparison of physical therapy, chiropractic       manipulation, and provision of an educational booklet for the treatment of       patients with low back pain, New England Journal of Medicine, 1998;       339:1021-9.
       Fiebert I, Keller CD. Are "passive" extension exercises really passive?        J Orthop Sports Phys Ther 1994 Feb;19(2):111-6.
       Harvey J, Tanner S. Low back pain in young athletes: a practical approach.       Sports Med 1991;12:394-406.
       Ingber R. Iliopsoas myofascial dysfunction: A treatable cause of "failed"       low back syndrome. Arch Phys Med Rehab (70): 382-386 (1989).
       Johannsen F, et al. Exercises for chronic low back pain:  A clinical       trial. J Ortop Sports Phys Ther. 1995;22:52-59.
       Jorgensson A. The iliopsoas muscle and the lumbar spine. Australian       Physiotherapy 39(2): 125-132 (1993).
       McGill SM. Low back exercises: evidence for improving exercise       regimens. Phys Ther. 1998;78:754-765.
       Mellin G: Physical therapy for chronic low back pain:  Correlations       between spinal mobility and treatment outcome. Scand J Rehabil Med       1985;17:163-166.
       Nachemson AL. the influence of spinal movements on the lumbar intradiscal       pressure and on the tensile stresses in the annulus fibrosus.  Acta       Orthop Scand 1963;33:183-207
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       Ponte DJ, Jensen GJ, Kent BE. A preliminary report on the use of the       McKenzie protocol versus Williams protocol in the treatment of low back pain.        J Orthop Sports Phys Ther 1984;6:130-9
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       Williams PC: Lesions of the lumbosacral spine:  chronic traumatic       (postural) destruction of the intervertebral disc, J Bone Joint Surg 1937;29:       690-703.
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