GeneralJune 18, 2026 · 4:00 AM3 min read

    Your head may be putting 22 kilograms of pressure on your neck right now: Spine specialist explains the hidden damage of desk jobs

    Most of us spend eight to ten hours a day hunched over a screen. A spine specialist explains what that’s doing to your back and what you can realistically do about it.Ravi, 31, thought the stiffness in his neck was just stress. He’d been working from home for three years, his laptop propped on a din

    By Timesofindia.com

    Your head may be putting 22 kilograms of pressure on your neck right now: Spine specialist explains the hidden damage of desk jobs

    Most of us spend eight to ten hours a day hunched over a screen.

    A spine specialist explains what that’s doing to your back and what you can realistically do about it.Ravi, 31, thought the stiffness in his neck was just stress.

    He’d been working from home for three years, his laptop propped on a dining table, his posture getting worse by the month.

    By the time he walked into an orthopaedic clinic, he had what doctors call “text neck”, a forward head posture that had added the equivalent of 15 kilograms of pressure on his cervical spine.

    He hadn’t lifted a single heavy object.“This is the new normal,” says Dr Naveen Kumar LV, Chief of Institute of Orthopedics & Sports Medicine - Senior Consultant - Orthopaedics, Sports Injury Specialist, Arthroscopy and Robotic Joint Replacement Surgery, Orthopaedic Spine Specialist from Manipal Hospital Sarjapur. “I’m seeing patients in their late twenties and early thirties with disc complaints that I used to see in people who were fifty.

    The desk is the culprit nobody talks about.”The silent load your neck carriesThe human head weighs roughly five to six kilograms when held in a neutral position.

    Tilt it forward by just 15 degrees, which is the angle most of us adopt when looking at a phone or laptop and the effective load on the cervical spine nearly triples.

    At 45 degrees of forward tilt, it feels like carrying a 22-kilogram weight on your neck.

    Do that for eight hours a day, five days a week, and the cumulative damage is staggering.“Disc degeneration doesn’t happen overnight,” Dr.

    Naveen explains. “It’s a slow erosion.

    Patients come in and say, ‘I just woke up with neck pain.’ But what they mean is, they finally noticed the pain that had been building for years.”What to actually watch forThe early warning signs are easy to dismiss, a dull ache at the base of the skull, tightness across the shoulders, the need to crack your neck frequently, headaches that start at the back and travel forward.

    Many people treat these with a painkiller and move on.

    That, says Dr.

    Naveen, is a mistake.“The moment you start compensating by tilting your head to one side, hunching one shoulder, you’re creating an asymmetry.

    Now your muscles, your discs, your facet joints are all working unevenly.

    That’s where long-term problems begin.”Small fixes, serious impactThe good news is that early intervention works well.

    Dr.

    Naveen recommends starting with the basics: monitor at eye level, feet flat on the floor, a short break every 45 minutes where you stand up and walk even if just to get a glass of water.“The 20-20-20 rule is popular for eye strain, but I tell my patients to do a 45-5 rule for the spine.

    Every 45 minutes, five minutes of movement.

    Not a stretch routine, just movement.

    Walk to the balcony.

    Roll your shoulders.

    That’s enough.”Strengthening the deep neck flexors and the muscles between the shoulder blades matters too, but consistency matters more than intensity. “You don’t need a gym.

    You need a habit,” he says.The spine, he adds, is remarkably resilient — if you give it a chance.

    Source: Times Of India · General
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