Running and hip strength - my response to the Toronto Star

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Comments: 2 Comments
Published on: April 1, 2020

Audience: Runners and therapists

Purpose: advocate hip strengthening exercises

 

The “core” gets all the press.    But when it comes to running research and injury prevention I would sooner extol the virtues the butt.  The side of the butt to be most specific.

 

These muscles (gluteus medius/minimus and gluteus maximus) are huge in the relationship to injuries to the knee, hip and spine.  If you want to split hairs you can call them part of the core (you should, but most people don’t).

 

For a decade, I swear its been that long, researchers (and their readers like me) have advocated that runners should train these muscles and forgo stretching if they had to pick between the two exercise possibilities (I’ve softened my stance on stretching, more posts to follow).  The exercises are easy to do and can be fit in after a good run.

 

To support these views the Toronto Star just published a summary of a paper by Reed Ferber out of Calgary.  He runs a great lab and worked with Irene Davis (a superstar researcher in running biomechics), before starting his lab in Calgary.  His research publications are quite exceptional and if I were still a researcher they would make me envious.

See the Star article here: http://www.healthzone.ca/health/dietfitness/fitness/article/960175-researchers-get-hip-to-the-root-of-knee-pain-for-runners

 

For those interested in training their hips here are a slew of exercise programs (click on the links):

 

1. Patellofemoral pain treatment

2. Neuromuscular control of hip and knee function

3. Hip airplanes

4. Side Bridge variations - the best exercise to work the gluteus medius

One of my favorites is below.  The one leg squat with leg raise.  Most Toronto Physiotherapy places advise that you do the clamshell or side lying leg raise.  The problem (click here for a detailed review) is that the exercises only work the hip stabilizing muscles about 40% of their max.  This is not enough.  Muscles get stronger when you stress them. Unless you just had a hip replacement forget about these remedial exercises - unless maybe you truly are super weak here, then  you need them.

 

Otherwise, train harder.  You are an athlete and a runner.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Have fun,

 

Your Toronto Physiotherapy snob,

 

Greg Lehman

2 Comments
  1. Stephanie says:

    Greg,
    Do you have your patients perform this exercise regardless of whether or not they can hold correct form? It is at best 50% of the time, in my experience, to have enough time with a patient to get them to that point. Thoughts?
    Thanks!

    • Greg Lehman says:

      Hi Stephanie,

      I try to have the patient perform the exercise with ideal form.

      If they can’t perform it perfectly I will break it down to its components and have them perform those components.

      1. Standing on one leg with a slight knee bend - have them abduct their opposite leg. This is almost the same as the picture just with no significant knee flexion in the stance limb.

      2. Single leg squat with the other leg bent at the knee and slightly extend at the hip. Try to mimic the same form as if you were doing a standard hip hinge squat.

      3. I would also train the standard hip hinge squat with a band around the knees and the patient actively abducting and externally rotating at the hips.

      4. I always add the side bridge. With the side bridge one can reach 70-80% of maximum activation for the hip abductors. This doubles what is seen during the sidelying hip abduction.

      Hope this helps,

      Greg


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