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Hoots : Deadlifting yesterday gave me pain in my lats. What is the proper posture for deadlifting to avoid this? Yesterday I did deadlifts in my workout, then I got pain in my lat muscles and also in the thigh. I think this was - freshhoot.com

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Deadlifting yesterday gave me pain in my lats. What is the proper posture for deadlifting to avoid this?
Yesterday I did deadlifts in my workout, then I got pain in my lat muscles and also in the thigh.

I think this was caused by wrong posture which also can lead to back problems. But I don't know the exact posture for deadlift techniques and why we need to do Deadlift.

So my questions are:

Is Deadlift is only for gaining muscles in legs or shaping the legs?
Why do we need to wear a belt? I searched the Internet and it seems like they prefer wearing a belt while performing deadlifts as it reduces the risk of back muscle injuries.


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Technique is important for the deadlift. My personal experience is that it is too easy to add weights and once you get above your body weight, small errors increase the chance of back injuries.

For the correct posture and technique, see this OP Physcial Fitness: What is the correct form for deadlift? and this two videos: Deadlift set-up and Deadlift back angle

Deadlift is an excellent exercise for the whole "Posterior chain" (i.e. the whole system of back, glutes and legs), see picture below.

I find it easier to understand it in terms of the wholeness instead of individual muscles. So, it is not an exercise only for the legs or the back which is why you sometimes see people having problems with fitting it in a "upper body" and "lower body" workout routine.

Whether you should wear a belt or not seems to be a hot topic of debate, see Google: belt or no belt deadlift and Dead lift - belt or no belt. It seems to boil down to "depends on.." where ".." relates to your specific context (age, skills, goals..).

Personally, I don't use a belt since it is one more item to bring to the gym and if you have to lift something heavy off the floor in real life, the belt will not be there.


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The latissimus dorsi extends the shoulder joint - meaning it brings the elbows from overhead to near the body. When you're deadlifting, the lats work really hard because you need to keep the bar close to your body. If your form is correct, the lats will be hit hard.

If the pain you felt was muscle burn and not anything related to injury, that's ok. But, maybe the bar is a bit too much away from you at the beginning of the movement. Try getting in position so the part of your feet where your shoelaces are is under the bar, and your shin touches it a bit. Make sure your back is straight and your upper back is tight. You don't "need" to do any exercise, but the deadlift is a great one because it works a huge amount of muscle.

To answer your questions:

The deadlift is usually classified as a back exercise, although I'd say it's literally a "back exercise" because it works every muscle on the back of your body from your feet to your neck! Everything there gets a good beating.
But I'd never say it's a leg exercise, or for shaping the legs. The reason is, the main movers are the spinal erectors (lower back), the glutes and the hamstrings. Only the hamstrings are really a part of the leg, and they could be better hit with the romanian deadlift, for example. There's no doubt the deadlift will give you powerful hamstrings, but it will mainly give you a big back.
You don't. The belt is here to keep your entire core tight - but you can do that on your own. If your core isn't tight you could get hernia. But you'd need to lift really really heavy weights for that to happen. I never use the belt myself.


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It might have nothing to do with "good" form, your muscles can get injured from the most perfect and beautiful form.

It's called muscle strain...you can get one simply by being too fatigued and trying to lift a chair. Obviously the stronger you become the harder it is to reach certain levels of fatigue.

But really, any exercise with any form can injure you, even simply walking can be dangerous when critical levels of fatigue are obtained.

That's how kids and old people get injured continuously.


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