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45 Degree Twisting Hyperextension
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HomeLower Back › 45 Degree Twisting Hyperextension
45 Degree Twisting Hyperextension
Lower Back Hyperextension Bench Rotation Strength
Your Goal General Fitness
Sets
2–3
Reps
10–15
Rest
60s
How To Perform
1
Position yourself on the bench with your hips on the pad and feet secured.
2
Lower your upper body toward the floor in a controlled arc.
3
Drive back up by contracting your glutes and lower back together.
4
Stop when your body forms a straight line — don't hyperextend beyond neutral.
5
Keep your neck in line with your spine throughout.
Pro Tips
Focus on feeling the target muscle working rather than just moving the weight.
The last 2-3 reps of a set are where growth happens — push through them with good form.
Rest 60-90 seconds between sets for hypertrophy, 2-3 minutes for strength work.
Overview

The 45 Degree Twisting Hyperextension targets the abdominals, with Obliques picking up the supporting work, performed using a 45 degree hyperextension bench. It hits the muscle through a natural movement arc that allows good loading without excessive joint stress.

Muscles Worked
Abdominals
75%
Obliques
42%
Hip Flexors
32%
Common Mistakes
Using too much weight and sacrificing form to complete the movement.
Rushing through reps — speed kills the time under tension that drives results.
Neglecting the eccentric phase — lowering with control is where a lot of the growth happens.
About Training Your Lower Back

The lower back — chiefly the erector spinae running along the spine — keeps you upright, stabilises the trunk under load, and works alongside the glutes and hamstrings to extend the hips. A strong, resilient lower back underpins nearly every heavy lift and protects against everyday injury.

The deadlift and its variations are the primary builders, loading the entire posterior chain. Back extensions, good mornings, and rack pulls add targeted strengthening, while bracing during squats and carries trains the spinal stabilisers.

Technique is paramount: maintain a neutral spine, brace the core hard, and hinge from the hips rather than rounding the back. Build load gradually and never sacrifice form for weight.

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