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Pro-active Approach to Common Cycling Injuries Chad Eldridge,DC The Movement Mechanic
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Objectives Common causes of injury. Brief description of joint by joint approach to movement. Importance of proper breathing mechanics and core stability. Make it clear that training for injury prevention and performance are not mutually exclusive. Introduce a few exercises that you can incorporate into daily routine/warm up.
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Common Injuries Traumatic injuries Nontraumatic Nearly 85% of injuries Asymmetric variants of the human body collide with the symmetric design of the bicycle, producing high stress loads on the muscles, tendons, and joints Constrained posture leads to repetitive stress loads of the knees, cervical spine, scapulo-thoracic region, hands and gluteal region Neck and back pain occurs in up to 60% of riders Due to a loss of adequate stability and mobility throughout the body.
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Stability Defined as the ability to control movement at a joint. Control in the presence of change Necessary for force transfer.
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Mobility The ability for a joint to express the full range of motion. Takes into account joint, muscle, fascia, neural, and intra-articular restriction.
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Joint by Joint Approach We are all alternating series of mobile joints on stable segments. All joints should have both mobility and stability, but each need more of one than the other. Guiding tenet for quality movement.
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Why You Have Joint/Soft Tissue Pain We tend to sacrifice mobility at a joint when the neighboring joint has lost stability. We have to move, so our body finds the path of least resistance. When CORE stability isn’t present your body will create tension above and below to make up for it. This will translate into dysfunctional movement and overuse of surrounding structures. End result will be injury and/or decrease in performance.
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Breathing Perhaps the single most important human function with huge musculoskeletal implications. “If breathing is not normalized, no other movement patterns can be.” –Karl Lewit, Czech neurologist Without proper breathing techniques you are unable to have core stability or quality movement.
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Faulty Breathing Increases neck muscle, pectoralis, and thoracolumbar muscle activation. Destabilizes the core. Cause of early fatigue in sports.
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Restore Proper Breathing
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Improve CORE STABILITY
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Improve Controlled Hip Mobility
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Chad Eldridge,DC The Movement Mechanic 310-895-3085 chad.eldridgedc@gmail.com
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