Categories
ACL Chiropractor Health Hong Kong Joint Health Sport Videos

ACL Exercises for tears 2

ACL exercises for recovery and prevention


Here is part 2 of the Q and A I had with Coachbase regarding ACL tears and knee problems in sports. Part 2 discusses some knee recovery and prevention tactics. I demonstrate simple hamstring and glute strengthing exercises. As well, I review a GREAT hamstring stretch that can really help target the belly of the hamstring. (for part 1 click here)

 

 

 
ENJOY!
Categories
ACL Chiropractor Hong Kong Injury prevention Sport

ACL tear problems part 1

ACL tear or sprain?

I was asked to answer some questions regarding ACL tears in sports by the people at Coachbase. Below is part 1, which is some knee anatomy review, symptoms and initial treatment.

 

Enjoy 🙂

Categories
Chiropractor Hong Kong Spine Sport Videos

Champion has Chiropractor as part of his team

Champion Athlete and his Chiropractor

UFC lightweight champion (Jiu Jitsu, Muay Thai, MMA) athlete,

Anthony “Showtime” Pettis, was able to defend his title for the first time last Saturday night. Anthony was experiencing pinching in his back and buttock with kicking. “Showtime” is known for his kickboxing.
Visiting a Chiropractor allowed him some relief and improvement and allowed him to compete to his full potential. 
Do you have problems with your hip or back flexibility in your sport, activity or everyday life? Add a Chiropractor to your healthcare team and improve your health and functioning.

Congrats Champ!

 
 
Categories
Chiropractor Hong Kong Injury prevention Joint Health Sport

Is stretching safe?

Is Stretching Safe?

Many personal trainers, coaches and manual therapists give static stretching programs to their clients as a way increase range of motion, decrease pain and improve performance.
Stretching can be either beneficial or detrimental to one’s health and performance depending on when and how it is prescribed. Stretching prescriptions also differ between practitioners.

 

How do injuries occur?

Injuries that occur are most likely the result from the tissues such as muscle and tendons, inability to absorb forces required of them. Injuries most usually occur within the normal range of motion and during eccentric (lengthening a muscle under load) portion of a movement. Therefore, stretching tissues in order to increase their ability to bend or deform, will not allow them to be more resilient to injury.

 

Benefits of stretching

1) Injury preventionPre-exercise static stretching does not prevent injury and may actually cause injury due the decreased ability to produce force by the muscles and their absorption capability. Long term regular static stretching (>3 to 4 weeks) is beneficial and can improve force, jump height and speed.

2) Decreasing painstretching can have an analgesic effect by increasing pain tolerance. PNF (proprioceptive neuromuscular facilitation) stretching has been shown to increase the range of motion (ROM) of both the stretched and unstretched limb. This indicates that there are effects on the brain itself.

3) Muscle Hypertrophy (muscle enlargement)- some studies have shown that there can be an increase in the muscles ability to contract (MVC), thus affecting the muscles ability to grow.

What happens during stretching?

ROM may improve in one of two ways: changing shape properties of the muscle cell AND/OR changing your stretch tolerance.

Acute, short term static stretching can have an immediate effect on ROM by changing the cell shape, but the effect is short lived and the tissues return to their normal resting length.

Long term stretching (>3 to 4 wks) allows change in ROM but no change in cell properties. Change is due to central nervous system (brain) stretch tolerance. Your brain allows for this. You are altering the stretch reflex. The stretch reflex is a safe guard mechanism at prevents over stretching. If your CNS decides you cannot control the ROM the stretch reflex is turned on and your ROM becomes limited.

To reduce potential injury during a particular activity, talk to your Chiropractor or health professional about how to expand and strengthen your ROM and reduce your change of injury.

 

-if you would like get a copy of some of the research articles used, do not hesitate to contact me 🙂 –

Disclaimer: Remember that any information on this blog should not be a substitute to your healthcare professionals examination. I have not examined you; therefore, the above should not serve as medical advice. Research is also changing constantly and some information may change at a later date due to new available science.

Categories
Chiropractor Football Health Hong Kong Injury prevention Sport

Football Injury Prevention

Football injuries and Chiropractors

As nerve-muscle-bone experts, chiropractors can play an important role in Hong Kong in terms of injury prevention in both amateur and professional athletics. Chiropractors frequently see these individuals as health care providers on-and-off the field. Football organizations across the world now recommend that teams collaborate with a qualified health professional to ensure the long term health of their players.  

Common football injuries

The most common football player injuries occur below the waist; hips, thigh, knee, ankles and feet. These injuries can take place during practices, games or even in the weight room.  The worst of the knee injuries would be to the anterior cruciate ligament or, ACL. ACL injuries typically occur when an athlete lands from a jump, makes a hard cut, or is hit by an opposing player. FIFA (Fédération Internationale de Football Association), world football’s governing body, recommends players go through an ACL injury prevention program
 
 
 
 

 

Football injury prevention

The program, FIFA 11+, is a 20 minute program that consisting of 15 exercises, broken into (1) running, (2) strength, plyometrics, and balance and (3) additional running components. FIFA11+ is one of many programs available that will address injury prevention to the lower body.
 
FIFA research has shown that teams who completed the FIFA11+ warm up had a SIGNIFICANT LOWER RISK OF INJURY than other teams that warmed up as usual. Teams that performed the exercises at least twice per week had 37% FEWER TRAINING INJURIES AND 29% FEWER MATCH INJURIES. SEVERE INJURIES WERE ALSO REDUCED BY ALMOST 50%.
Football, Injury, Prevention, Hong Kong
— Sample exercises from the FIFA11+ Program
 
Has your team or organization implemented this program?
 

In order to accomplish this, FIFA also recommended that teams should work with medical staff such as Chiropractors, to help implement the program and address the physical health of their players.

Speak with your Chiropractor or Coach regarding the implementation of the program or check out http://f-marc.com/11plus/home/ for more information regarding FIFA11+.
Play Safe!