Sitting in this posture for hours at a time can lead to
chronic back pain say the researchers.
Lead author Dr. Waseem Amir Bashir, of the Department of
Radiology and Diagnostic Imaging at the University of ALberta
Hospital, Canada says "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".
The researchers say the best position in which to sit at
your desk is leaning slightly back, at about 135 degrees.
Back pain is the most common cause of work-related
disability in much of the developed world and is a leading
cause of job-related absenteeism.
The study was conducted at Woodend Hospital in Aberdeen,
Scotland, and by using a positional MRI machine, the team were
able to scan the backs of twenty two volunteers with healthy
backs as the patients moved sitting positions during the test.
Traditional scanners have required patients to lie flat,
which may mask causes of pain that stem from different
movements or postures.
Dr. Bashir says a 135-degree body-thigh sitting posture was
seen to be the best biomechanical sitting position, as opposed
to a 90-degree posture, which most people consider normal.
Back pain is the most common cause of work-related
disability in much of the developed world and is a leading
cause of job-related absenteeism.
Dr. Bashir and colleagues hope that by identifying bad
seating postures and allowing people to take preventative
measures to protect the spine, back strain will be reduced and
fewer work days will be lost.
Dr. Bashir says man was not created to sit down for long
hours, but somehow modern life requires the vast majority of
the global population to do so and the search for the best
sitting position was all the more important.
The patients were asked to adopt three different sitting
positions: a slouching position, in which the body is hunched
forward (e.g., hunched over a desk or slouched over in front
of a video game console); an upright 90-degree sitting
position; and a "relaxed" position where the patient reclines
backward 135 degrees while the feet remain on the floor.
Measurements were taken 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 internal disk material to
misalign.
The team saw that disk movement was most pronounced with a
90-degree upright sitting posture and was least pronounced
with the 135-degree posture.
This they say indicates that 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.
Across all measurements, the researchers concluded that the
135-degree position fared the best, and as a result, Dr.
Bashir and colleagues advise patients to ward off future back
problems by correcting their sitting posture and finding a
chair that allows them to sit in an optimal position of 135
degrees.
They suggest this may be all that is necessary to prevent
back pain, rather than trying to cure pain that has occurred
over the long term due to bad posture.
Dr. Bashir says employers could also reduce problems by
providing their staff with more appropriate seating, thereby
saving on the cost of lost work hours