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Clinical Pearls For Effective Exercise Progression
Manage episode 413139573 series 1532296
In this episode, Erica speaks about prescribing specific exercises based on the difficulty level relative to the region of the body driving the patient's symptoms.
NOT the pain generator.
NOT the area of symptoms.
If someone has knee pain, and their driver is their foot, then the exercise program is geared towards the foot, NOT the knee. SLR's and quad sets won't work here.
She also explores the significance of personalized exercise prescriptions in optimizing recovery outcomes. There are many clinical pearls in this episode, one of which is, "Why would a side-to-side deep squat be harder for the foot than the thorax?" Both are lateral movement patterns.
She also discusses the clinical reasoning behind a well-thought-out exercise plan. Remember: we are trying to give our patients options for movement and variability across many activities. Building volume of exercise at low levels is key to this outcome as is challenging the driver across many planes.
A glance at this episode:
[3:38] Prescribing specific exercises based on the patient's main driver, not the symptom
[8:02] Identifying the level of difficulty for a specific exercise using regional analysis
[14:02] How to dose exercise based on what is meaningful for the patient
[17:58] Exercises for improving lower body control and center of mass
Related links:
213 episodes
Manage episode 413139573 series 1532296
In this episode, Erica speaks about prescribing specific exercises based on the difficulty level relative to the region of the body driving the patient's symptoms.
NOT the pain generator.
NOT the area of symptoms.
If someone has knee pain, and their driver is their foot, then the exercise program is geared towards the foot, NOT the knee. SLR's and quad sets won't work here.
She also explores the significance of personalized exercise prescriptions in optimizing recovery outcomes. There are many clinical pearls in this episode, one of which is, "Why would a side-to-side deep squat be harder for the foot than the thorax?" Both are lateral movement patterns.
She also discusses the clinical reasoning behind a well-thought-out exercise plan. Remember: we are trying to give our patients options for movement and variability across many activities. Building volume of exercise at low levels is key to this outcome as is challenging the driver across many planes.
A glance at this episode:
[3:38] Prescribing specific exercises based on the patient's main driver, not the symptom
[8:02] Identifying the level of difficulty for a specific exercise using regional analysis
[14:02] How to dose exercise based on what is meaningful for the patient
[17:58] Exercises for improving lower body control and center of mass
Related links:
213 episodes
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