|
| |||
![]() |
|||
|
|
dynamicchiropractic.com >> Physiotherapy & Rehab Reprogramming Movement Efficiency: The Dowel-Assisted Hip Hinge for LBPBy Perry Nickelston, DC, FMS, SFMA Watch a toddler pick up a ball and then ask an adult to do the same task. What's the most obvious difference you notice? The toddler hinges at the hips, sitting back and down into a deep squat to grasp the ball, pulling it close to the body. The toddler powers through the hips, glutes and thighs in returning to the starting position. It's all in the hips! The adult flexes forward at the waist and lumbar spine with little to no involvement of the hips, glutes and thighs. The altered mechanics of bending at the waist, as opposed to the hips, places extreme vector loads on the lumbar spine, leading to microtrauma, dysfunctional movement patterning, and eventually pain. Optimal movement patterning and proper lifting techniques never had to be taught to the toddler. They simply lifted without thinking. Functional movement is innate to the nervous system in pre-programmed stages of development. So, what happens during the time frame from toddler to adulthood that contributes to lifting technique going horribly wrong? Quite simply: We forget how to move. Add to that the laziness factor and countless hours people spend sitting in our culture, and you have a recipe for inefficient movement. Essentially, our rear-ends have now become our feet! Dysfunctional movement patterning leads to compensations throughout the kinetic chain of movement. Mobility and stability balance of joints are impacted, leading to altered mechanics of joint centration. Soft-tissue extensibility dysfunction (tightness, stiffness, tonicity, adhesions) now contribute to lack of proper mobility. The brain follows the path of least resistance to avoid pain and threat, so it falls back on faulty movement patterns to accomplish a task. Toddlers have to yet experience these outside contributors to movement dysfunction, otherwise known as life, and therefore move efficiently. The problem is adults don't' know they move wrong! They have crossed over to subconscious dysfunction; their brain perceives the abnormal movement patterning as normal. This inefficient movement leads to microtrauma, pain and injury. Correcting Dysfunction With Reprogramming Exercises: The Hip Hinge
Teaching the hip hinge is a fundamental part of this reprogramming. The hip hinge, generally speaking, is any flexion / extension movement originating at the hips where there is a posterior weight shift. The hip hinge allows a person to maintain a neutral spine by moving at their hips instead of their low back. It most cases, you'll see it in a closed kinetic chain movement during which the torso is loaded, as in lifting something off the floor. If you learn how to hip hinge properly and become proficient at the pattern, you'll be able to engage the pattern with progressive overloading with integrity and precision of execution. This is critical because strength of the posterior chain, mobility and stability balance at the hips form the basis for all ground-based movements. Developing the skill to efficiently perform the hip hinge will carry over to improved quality of life. Most people will find it difficult to do the hip hinge correctly. You can coach and cue them until you are blue in the face; however, it will not help restore the patterning because their brain cannot sequence the movements properly. The most effective coaching cue is proprioceptive input. Using a dowel rod for neural feedback during the hinge allows a client to "feel" the movement and re-establish proper patterning without overloading the nervous system. Too much sensory and motor input into correctives will overload the "neural circuits" and the client will default back to faulty patterning. So, the rule is to regress to progress. Hip hinge with smaller precision movements so the brain can harness the sequencing. How to Perform the Dowel-Rod-Assisted Hip Hinge
Research has shown that previous injury is the number-one risk factor for future injury. Motor control limitations such as balance, stabilization and basic coordination, right-to-left asymmetries in muscle activity and flexibility are the next highest indicators associated with risk of future injury. Since previous injury is unavoidable, we should focus on motor-control limitations and asymmetries as priorities for prevention or reduction of risk factors. Assume your clients move poorly and take steps to help master fundamental movements like the hip hinge; then watch the magic start to happen. References
Click here for more information about Perry Nickelston, DC, FMS, SFMA.
|
|
|
|
||