Guest guest Posted February 11, 2004 Report Share Posted February 11, 2004 Re: Isolating the VMO (inner quad) >To mix metaphors, I did VMO exercises until the cows came home before >reaching the conclusion that I was beating a dead horse. Love it! Keep on mixing! <snip> >Also take a look at the abstracts on the link I posted yesterday. >Seems weak hip abductors and hip rotators can be a real factor. I >don't know any exercises to strengthen the rotators but the abductors >can be strengthened by http://www.physsportsmed.com/issues/1996/01_96/hip.htm or http://www.exrx.net/WeightExercises/HipAbductor/LVStandHipAbduction.ht ml Before I left my previous clinic, I was seeing a good PT guy, who had me doing hip rotator exercises, thusly (all of these are 10-20 times, 3 reps): 1. Anchor a Theraband (I started out w/yellow & quickly moved to red) to something near the floor and attach the other end to the distal (we're all amateur doctors here, aren't we?) end of your shoelaces (I know this sounds like the beginning of a joke, but read on). Stand far enough back to put tension on the Theraband. MAKING SURE THAT YOU DON'T ROTATE YOUR TORSO OR PELVIS, do the following all in one movement: keeping your knee striaght, pull your leg straight back and rotate your foot outward. You don't have to pull your leg back REAL far -- you'll know. NOTE: This exercise can irritate your other knee if it's got things wrong with it. You can accomplish the same thing by lying on your front & lifting the leg up while turning the foot out. 2. Sit in a chair that's perpendicular to the Theraband (which is lying on the floor perdendicular to the wall -- or, if you prefer a simpler picture, sit in a chair parallel to the wall your Theraband is attached to). The chair should be high enough that your feet barely touch the floor (I put a pillow in mine). Loop the Theraband around the ball of your foot (I highly recommend wearing shoes for this). Put your foot a little more forward than the other one (or alternatively, put the other one a little more back than the one you're going to work with). WITHOUT RAISING YOUR THIGH OFF THE CHAIR, rotate your leg so that your foot pulls the T-band away from the anchor point and kinda up toward the knee of the other leg (not that far, though). The purpose of this exercise is to use one of the rotator muscles in the hip joint (I don't know which one), NOT to strengthen the adductors, so concentrate on feeling the work in the hip joint. 3. This exercise was Rx'd by a previous very good PT: No Theraband required. Lie on your side (the one opposite the " bad " leg) with both legs bent so hips and knees are bent 90 degrees and feet line up with butt. Your torso should be perpendicular to the floor and stay that way during the exercise (it'll tend to lean forward or back, I forget which). Keeping the heels togethers, lift your " bad " knee. This strengthens the gluteus minimus. 4. I don't know what this exercise strengthens, but it's somewhere in the hip area. Stand with your " bad " foot on the NYC Yellow Pages (or equivalent) and your good foot in the air to the side of it, alongside your " bad " foot. Making sure you don't bend your body over to the side, lower your good foot by tilting your pelvis down on the " good " side, then, using the muscles in the hip area of the " bad " leg, raise your good foot back to where you started. This could irritate your lower back. Seems like there's more, but I can't think of any right now. Ann Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted February 11, 2004 Report Share Posted February 11, 2004 Re: Isolating the VMO (inner quad) Ann, Thanks for the exercises! A couple of questions in brackets down below. (Interpreting verbal descriptions of exercises is always hard **And then there's than thousand-word picture I can't draw with x's and o's!! (8-) > > > Before I left my previous clinic, I was seeing a good PT guy, who had me doing hip rotator exercises, thusly (all of these are 10-20 times, 3 reps): > > 1. Anchor a Theraband (I started out w/yellow & quickly moved to red) to something near the floor and attach the other end to the distal (we're all amateur doctors here, aren't we?) end of your shoelaces (I know this sounds like the beginning of a joke, but read on). Stand far enough back to put tension on the Theraband. MAKING SURE THAT YOU DON'T ROTATE YOUR TORSO OR PELVIS, do the following all in one movement: keeping your knee striaght, pull your leg straight back and rotate your foot outward. You don't have to pull your leg back REAL far -- you'll know. NOTE: This exercise can irritate your other knee if it's got things wrong with it. You can accomplish the same thing by lying on your front & lifting the leg up while turning the foot out. [You stand facing the the theraband anchor, correct?] **Yes. Sorry I left that out. > 3. This exercise was Rx'd by a previous very good PT: No Theraband required. Lie on your side (the one opposite the " bad " leg) with both legs bent so hips and knees are bent 90 degrees and feet line up with butt. Your torso should be perpendicular to the floor and stay that way during the exercise (it'll tend to lean forward or back, I forget which). Keeping the heels togethers, lift your " bad " knee. This strengthens the gluteus minimus. [so you lift both legs at the same time??? I'm having trouble visualizing this...] **No. You only lift the " bad " leg. You're lying on your " good " side, knees bent, heels together, and all you lift is the " bad " knee, keeping the heels together. The " good " leg stays on the floor. Any problems visualizing the torso perpendicular to the floor? I thought that might give some people a bad time. Your body is resting on the floor, on your side. I just meant don't lean forward or backward. Hope this helps. If not, ask. Ann Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted February 12, 2004 Report Share Posted February 12, 2004 Verrrrrrrry interesting! Depending on how much you want to pay, OPTP (www.optp.com) has one for $39.95. Ann Proprioception & Patella Tracking? Over the last few months I have been rehab for plantar fascitus and some irritation it has caused to the knee joint of the same leg. Among the many exercises they have given me for my heel and knee they have given me several proprioception exercises. These involve free hand balance exercises, balancing on weeble boards, wobble boards, and using wobble boards while doing leg presses. A serendiptious effect for me has been massively improved knee tracking which I get trouble with every now and then. What amazed me is how much faster, more effective, and more fun the proprioception exercises straighten out knee tracking. Has anyone heard of using this kind of therapy for knee tracking issues? Some of the balance boards look like equipment that has been around for awhile. Is this a new theory/regime behind old equipment? Steve ===== Completely anecdotal but also completely in line with my expectations. I also found this: http://www.pubmedcentral.nih.gov/articlerender.fcgi?artid=164303 Note this in the conclusion: " Subjects with good proprioception did not benefit from patellar taping. However, in those healthy subjects with poor proprioceptive ability as measured by active and passive ankle reproduction, patellar taping provided proprioceptive enhancement. " Good proprioeption would seem to be a good thing to have... > Also take a look at the abstracts on the link I posted yesterday. > Seems weak hip abductors and hip rotators can be a real factor. I > don't know any exercises to strengthen the rotators but the abductors > can be strengthened by > http://www.physsportsmed.com/issues/1996/01_96/hip.htm or > http://www.exrx.net/WeightExercises/HipAbductor/LVStandHipAbduction.ht > ml > > A personal note: intially I was using ankle weights to exercise my > abductors, adductors, extenders, and flexors as these are the > exercises that staples to virtually all comprehensive knee > rehabilitation programs. But after I decided that a stronger VMO > was " The Answer, " all I did were the straight leg lifts (which target > the VMO). From this same logic, hip abductor exercises seemed bad and > something to be avoided, as they target the lateral (outside) muscles > of the leg. And now, it seems that weak hip abductors are probably > more of a factor then a weak VMO! Oops! > ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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