knee pain
Nordic1 said:
Patrick W said:
b) with knee pain....don't always look at the knee. we have been fixing a lot of knee pain by evaluating hip strength (especially glute med. firing) and ankle mobility (if ankle mobility is poor and movement is restricted there, then the individual will get movement at other joints...ie, the knee).
c) look at overal movement. what is the gait pattern like, etc....do some manual muscle testing and look at muscle length of specific muscles, etc....figure out WHY it is hurting.
Patrick
Last week I did some deep tissue work on a former college athlete who has been having a lot of knee pain lately. She recently moved and had been carrying boxes up and down stairs quite a bit. While in college she had suffered from injuries in both knees (torn meniscus in both knees about 7-8 years ago).
During our first session I did most of my deep work on her her gluts, hip rotators, and hamstrings and did a little work on the lower legs too, but avoided working too close to her knees. I also recommended that she do some icing on her knees several times a day.
I thought the session went really well and I'm looking forward to having another opportunity to work with her again later this week. I'm interested in Patrick's comments about "evaluating hip strength" and "ankle mobility" and was wondering if someone could comment further about this and/or suggest some sources of information for me so that I could learn about doing this.
Thanks in advance.
If you think about the joint-by-joint approach to the body/movement, the basic format would be that the ankle joint seeks mobility, while the knee joint seeks stability (we don't want to much radical movement here) and the hip joint seeks mobility. And of course this thought process can be carried up the body further.
Really, you are just looking at putting together the puzzle. With knee pain, there is a good chance that movement isn't happening where it needs to happen (perhaps a lack of ankle dorsiflexion, creating more pronation, and translating to great valgus force on the knee), or maybe the individual has poor hip mobility (an excessive anterior pelvic tilt creates creater hip internal rotation, which can affect the knee...or, perhaps a lack of internal hip rotation is creating a need for great hip adduction during movement), or maybe poor hip strength is creating greater movement at the knee, as stability is compromised.
Obviously there are a number of things you can look at, and a number of ways to take it. Having some sort of fully body table assessment to help connect the dots is always helpful. Somethings I'd look at would be:
- Great toe extension
- Ankle dorsiflexion (are we dealing with soft tissue or joint restrictions?)
- Ankle eversion/inversion
- patella mobility (in all directions)
- hip mobility
- hip strength (extension, abduction, etc...)
- breathing patterns
You can learn a lot about the individual from those few basic things.
Hope that helps give you more ideas.
Patrick