Guest guest Posted August 23, 2004 Report Share Posted August 23, 2004 Hi Jim, I found the abstract interesting. Since childhood I have had tight hamstrings - recollections of being unable to touch my toes at school. Over the years my flexibility has improved but I still have the occasional bout of stiffness. I am in such a period now and the unilateral tightness of the right hamstring has put strain on my lower back giving an effect like sciatica. After exercise pre-warm, standing quad stretches with the right leg produce a series of deep 'clicks' which seem to realign the spine after the muscular distortions it has been subject to. I then follow this through with static hamstring stretches, and finally PNF hamstring stretching. [ passive stretch - contract muscle - stretch against contraction - relax - passive stretch ] Unfortunately over the last few days the PNF stretching has not produced the desired results and my right hamstring is virtually solid. Therefore I'll try a 'softer' approach to PNF with CR added in. If you know of web links that demonstrate the technique in more detail than the description already given below I'd be grateful. PS - I found this link http://www.stmc.ab.ca/lecture92003.htm good basic stuff and this to say about CRPNF [ It even looks like it describes a glute / hamstring stretch ] : Contract-Relax - Begins with passive pre-stretch (10s) - Stretchee then extends hip against resistance (to ground) thru full ROM - Partner then passively moves leg into further stretch; 30 sec So .. what am I doing wrong ???? Cheers, Sammy Bates Leicester, England Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 25, 2004 Report Share Posted August 25, 2004 Sammy Bates <sammy_bates@b...> wrote: > I found the abstract interesting. Since childhood I have had tight > hamstrings - recollections of being unable to touch my toes at > school. ***Touching one's toes is an extremely difficult task, if performed correctly i.e., ensure `normal' curvature of the back, bending at the hips and pushing the hips backwards. > Over the years my flexibility has improved but I still have the > occasional bout of stiffness. ***Stiffness refers to the mechanical resistance to deformation; one can be extremely flexible whilst your muscles and other soft tissues exhibit a certain mechanical stiffness under specific conditions of loading. A muscle complex with higher mechanical stiffness is not necessarily " tight. " (Refer to Dr Siff's work for more info) > I am in such a period now and the unilateral tightness of > the right hamstring has put strain on my lower back giving an effect > like sciatica. After exercise pre-warm, standing quad stretches with > the right leg produce a series of deep 'clicks' which seem to > realign the spine after the muscular distortions it has been subject > to. I then follow this through with static hamstring stretches, and > finally PNF hamstring stretching. [passive stretch - contract muscle - > stretch against contraction - relax -passive stretch ] > > Unfortunately over the last few days the PNF stretching has not > produced the desired results and my right hamstring is virtually > solid. Therefore I'll try a 'softer' approach to PNF with CR added > in. ***Could the muscle " tightness " be a symptom not the cause (speculating?)? Review the following material: http://nsca.allenpress.com/nscaonline/?request=index-html http://www.physsportsmed.com/issues/2000/08_00/shrier.htm http://galway.informatik.uni- kl.de/staff/weidmann/pages/stretch/stretching_toc.html Search the archives as well. All the best Carruthers Wakefield, UK Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 25, 2004 Report Share Posted August 25, 2004 Sammy, If we look at the science, we could make a good case that you may not need to stretch to allow greater ROM of your hip (I'll explain in a minute). Since passive stretching and PNF have only worked modestly well and intermittently for you, I would suggest trying something else. One alternative is to look at muscle tightness as secondary to antagonist neural inhibition. For example, your " hamstrings " are responsible for hip extension, knee flexion, hip rotation and knee rotation (to name a few). If they are " tight " , any muscle which preforms the opposite action is potentially inhibited. One way to look at the science is to note that if a muscle is not receiving proper neural input, its antagonists will not receive the proper reciprocal inhibition response, hence, they will tighten: i.e. the Tensor Fascia Latae (a hip flexor, abductor and external rotator) is inhibited, potentially, the medial hamstrings, semitentonosis/semimembranosis (hip extensor, adductor and internal rotator) may " tighten " /guard. I hope that makes sense, I know that it is quite different from traditional thinking. One of the ways to help bring proper neural input back to a muscle is via isometric contraction. What I would do if I were in your position would be to lie supine and bring your hip into flexion as far as is comfortable, knee extended. Once you get there, have something/someone stabilize your leg in that position as you apply a force into more flexion, while the stabilizing person does not allow you to move (isometric). Start out pushing very easy, then gradually ramp up how much force you apply. Do this several times for several seconds and in several positions of rotation (internal, neutral, external). Then see if you can go into more hip flexion and start all over again. These are some of the principals behind Muscle Activation Techniques (MAT). Let me know how it goes. If you start to see some progress, you may want to see an MAT therapist. Hope that helps. Joe DeAntonis, RTSM, MAT Therapist Pittsburgh, PA Sammy Bates <sammy_bates@b...> wrote: > Over the years my flexibility has improved but I still have the > occasional bout of stiffness. I am in such a period now and the unilateral > tightness of the right hamstring has put strain on my lower back giving an > effect like sciatica. After exercise pre-warm, standing quad stretches with > the right leg produce a series of deep 'clicks' which seem to realign the > spine after the muscular distortions it has been subject to. I then follow > this through with static hamstring stretches, and finally PNF hamstring > stretching. [passive stretch - contract muscle - stretch against > contraction - relax - passive stretch ] Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 28, 2004 Report Share Posted August 28, 2004 Carruthers wrote: > Could the muscle " tightness " be a symptom not the cause (speculating?)? Yes, I think it is probably a childhood injury that comes back to haunt me. I had a broken wrist as well that gives me twinges now and then. Even old scar tissue may be more active or susceptible to stresses than surrounding tissue. The present bout of muscle tightness started three weeks ago: I was up a ladder in the rain trying to lower a punchbag -- keeping my centre of gravity over the ladder was an effort requiring some fancy balancing that did not quite come off. My glutes and lower back were the first to feel the stress - an instantaneous case of sciatica. After the worst of the sciatica wore off in a few days I noticed that residual tightness in my hamstring was triggering pain in my sciatic region: Warming and stretching the hamstring (and glute) reduced the sciatic pain, but not completely. Actually, I did find the PNF stretching techniques very useful to get over the first level of injury, but there seemed to be a limit to their use, hence my initial enquiry. By the end of the second week I was running and skipping again, albeit limited. An extended walk (up Mount Snowden) just recently has proven to me there is residual injury that needs something more than stretching. I like Joe DeAntonis' ideas about muscle activation techniques so will be trying that out over the next week or so to see what happens. I don't suppose there are any MAT therapists in this neck of the woods ? http://www.muscleactivation.com/therapists.html is US based. Cheers, Sammy Bates Leicester, England. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted September 1, 2004 Report Share Posted September 1, 2004 I was going to respond to this earlier but I'll just add a little bit here. If you have chronic hamstring tightness I would suggest evaluating your low back flexibility, it may be poor or you may be hypermobile in the low back to compensate. I would also check your strength in leg flexion, alone and relative to leg extension strength. There is some room for argument but flex. to ext. should be about 75-100%. I have found most tight hamstrings to be relatively weak. Deadlifts, Straight legged or Romanian DL will help strengthen them and you will probably find more flexibility, leg curls also, although I don't advocate them. For stretching, you might consider switching to dynamic or active stretching rather than static/PNF stretching. I have read some studies that show no advantage of PNF over static. That is just a point of interest,not a recommendation. A dynamic stretch is as simple as a controlled kicking of your leg keeping it straight. Don't let the pelvis tilt with it or you will likely stretch more low back than hamstring. Also, as has been mentioned you can use antagonistic inhibition, which is performing a strong knee extension exercise, even isometrically, before doing your knee flexion stretches. A variant of this is to tap on your kneecaps, like a doctor checking your reflexes, before stretching. This has a similar effect but acts on the reflexive level. Hope this helps, Randy Dixon Harlingen, TX USA Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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