Sport Articles | Total Care Podiatry

7 Steps for running injury Prevention

The best approach to preventing running injuries is to be proactive and not ignore the warning signs of an injury. By taking steps to treat pain in its early stages rather than waiting until you have a full-blown running injury, you can limit your pain and reduce the amount of time you need to take off from running.

Here are some ways you can be proactive in your approach to running injuries:

1. Don’t assume you’re invincible.

If you run on a regular basis, you’re most likely going to get at least one running injury this year. It’s better to assume that you will get injured so you’ll be more aware when your body is signaling that something is wrong. Runners who think they won’t get injured will often ignore injury warning signs, push through pain, and end up making injuries far worse.

2. Use R.I.C.E. treatment.

As soon as you feel something that’s not quite right during or after a run, use R.I.C.E (Rest Ice Compression Elevation) self-treatment. Rest is the most important and often most effective of those components. Take a couple of days off from running — it may be all you need to heal your injury. Ice the area where you’re feeling pain for 10-15 minutes every 3-4 hours. Compression limits swelling and can provide minor pain relief. You can wrap the affected area with an Ace bandage (you can do that to hold the ice pack on), but don’t make it too tight. Elevate the injured body part – you can prop it up on pillows while you’re resting and icing.

3. Have a supply of injury prevention tools.

Having tools at your fingertips means you’re more likely to use them. Make sure you have an ice pack in the freezer for after your runs. If you’re feeling pain on the bottom of your foot, freeze a water bottle and roll your foot on top of it.

4. Be aware that injuries are caused.

Running injuries don’t just happen on their own – there’s always a cause. If you can figure out why you’re experiencing pain and treat the cause, not just the symptoms, you can prevent the injury from coming back.

5. Remember that being injury-free is more important than getting your miles done.

Don’t push through a hard workout if you’re feeling pain because you think missing a workout means you won’t reach your race goal. And don’t try to get your weekly mileage done no matter what. I always like to tell runners I coach, “You can’t get to the finish line if you don’t get to the starting line.” Resting when an injury is in its early stages will prevent more time off later. If you push through it, the injury will most likely get worse.

6. Incorporate strength-training into your routine.

Core  exercises are particularly important when it comes to preventing injuries. Many running injuries, especially knee and hip-related problems, develop because of muscle weaknesses or imbalances.

7. Get help from the professionals.

A doctor or a podiatrist.

 

WARNING : This information is for educational purposes only and is not intended to replace professional podiatric advice. Treatment will vary between individuals depending upon your diagnosis and presenting complaint. An accurate diagnosis can only be made following personal consultation with a Podiatrist.  

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Why barefoot runners have the edge on shoe-wearing rivals

Article written by Evan Hobbs – Tuesday 18th May 2010

Your foot is a marvel of 26 bones, 33 joints, 3 arches, and over a hundred muscles, tendons, and ligaments. For millions of years humans went their entire lives barefoot. Runners competed in marathons and even broke the 4-minute mile barrier wearing only leather slippers.

And then sometime at the end of the 1960s the modern running shoe was invented and suddenly our foot became deficient and could not function without arch support and heel cushioning. How did this happen?

 

 

 

Normal feet vs. Shoed feet

The first point is that, though shoes are great for protecting us against rocks, broken glass, and other dangers, they substantially alter the way our feet operate.

Have you ever seen the foot of someone who has never worn shoes? Most people haven’t. Check out these pictures from a 1905 study in the American Journal of Orthopedic Surgery of native populations in the Philippines and Central Africa. The first images show the feet of a person who has never worn shoes. Note the wide forefoot with well separated toes and metatarsals providing a stable base for walking.

The next image shows a European foot for comparison. The foot’s shape has altered drastically in order to conform to the shape of the shoe. The base of the foot is narrow and the toes have little space between them.

Incidentally, the afflictions of the foot that are so prevalent in modern societies (hammertoe, bunions, plantar fasciitis, neuromas, etc.) are largely unheard of in populations that habitually walk barefoot.

Barefoot gait vs. Shoed gait?

Now take out your running shoes and take a look at them. Note how the heel is built up in the back raising the heel of the foot several centimeters above the forefoot.

This particular invention can be traced to Bill Bowerman, one of the founders of Nike and the man who invented the term jogging, in the 1960s. He himself was not much of runner but he reasoned that a thick bit of rubber underneath the heel would force the runner to land on their heel, shift their weight forward, and improve efficiency.

This is a very important point. The natural human running gait is not to land on the heel when running but rather on the mid-to-forefoot. Prove this to yourself by running down the street barefoot landing on your heels—you won’t get far before the pain stops you.

Before Bowerman’s invention, runners ran in thin-soled slippers with no difference in elevation between the heel and forefoot and little cushioning. Now the modern running shoe has become so ubiquitous that most people assume that landing on the heel must be the natural way of running.

But surely running shoes have lessened injuries?

All this would fine if there was evidence that these new shoes resulted in fewer injuries. And yet, running injuries are still common and possibly becoming more common. Every year runners—elite athletes and weekend warriors alike—suffer from plantar fasciitis, stress fractures, knee and back pain, etc. Running is actually a very dangerous sport in terms of per capita injuries.

A 2008 review of literature in the British Journal Sports Medicine looked for any evidence that the prescription of elevated cushioned heels and pronation control resulted in fewer injuries. The review was not able to identify a single study. The lead author of the review, Dr. Craig Richards, was shocked. He issued the following challenge:
“Is any running-shoe company prepared to claim that wearing their distance running shoes will decrease your risk of suffering musculoskeletal running injuries? Is any shoe manufacturer prepared to claim that wearing their running shoes will improve your distance running performance? If you are prepared to make these claims, where is your peer-reviewed data to back it up?” As of yet, none of the major manufacturers have taken up the challenge.

Other studies have shown a connection between injury rates and running shoes, but perhaps not the one that shoe makers would like to highlight. For instance multiple studies have suggested that runners wearing the most expensive shoes are significantly more likely to be injured than runners wearing cheap shoes.

How could this be? 

All this seems somewhat counter-intuitive. Surely adding cushioning and support could only lessen the impact on the joints? In fact the opposite may be true. Your feet rival your hands and face for the amount of nerve endings they contain. They are finely equipped to register the slightest variations in the ground surface below and relay the signals to the central nervous system prompting constant and precise changes in the muscles controlling the foot, ankle, knee, hips, back, and torso. As such the foot needs to feel the ground to determine how to react and may in fact land harder when wearing a cushioned shoe.

Tests of gymnasts have shown that the softer the landing mat, the harder the gymnasts land as their body is searching for a stable landing platform. The same may be true of runners.

 

 

 

Shoes weaken feet 

A supportive running shoe acts a bit like a cast or a crutch. The foot is encased in a protective environment where it is not allowed to move naturally, i.e. motion control shoes which are so expensive. The arch, which under normal circumstances is designed help absorb the impact of landing, is supported and thus weakens over time. The effect is similar to a joint that has been immobilized following an injury and when the immobilization is removed there is typically a substantial loss in muscle tone.

But wouldn’t barefoot running cause more stress on the joints? 

This is a common and understandable thought but after adapting to running barefoot my perception is that running barefoot feels softer and less jarring than running with shoes rather than the opposite.

And a recent Harvard University study published in the prestigious journal Nature supports this idea. Runners who habitually ran with shoes and ones that habitually ran barefoot were asked to run across a force plate which would register the force of their impact upon landing.

The study found that shoed runners landed with a greater impact whereas barefoot runners absorbed the impact more gradually. If you examine the graph on the left you can see the force curve for the shoed runner is steep. On the right the force curve is more gradual as the runner more gently absorbs the impact of landing.

 

Postural Effects of Shoes 

Looking at the postural effects of shoes with heels (i.e. most shoes including modern running shoes) we can see another way they can lead to lower back, hip and knee pain.

The figure on the left represents a woman standing barefoot and erect. In the middle, the woman’s heels have been elevated. If she maintained this same posture she would fall forward. And on the right, the woman has compensated to avoid falling over by excessively curving her spine (lordosis of the lower back), tilting her hips forward and down, and bending her knees slightly. Additionally, the Achilles tendon is shortened in this position.
This unnatural posture is a big part about of why wearing high heels excessively can lead to problems. And yet precisely the same dynamic exists in the design on the modern running shoe.

 

 

My own story

I came to barefoot running after exhausting traditional medical treatments. By age 27, my feet were killing me. I had Morton’s neuromas in both feet that made it seem as if I was walking on marbles; unexplained heel pain; and recurring plantar fasciitis. Walking had become painful and unpleasant. I went the normal route seeing specialists, receiving orthotics from multiple different podiatrists, buying expensive running shoes with video gait analysis, cortisone shots, etc. Nothing helped.

Then I stumbled upon information that suggested that the sophisticated, expensive running shoes might actually be the problem and not the solution. I implemented more and more barefoot activities into my life. Though it was painful at first it seemed to help. It was a slow process and I might have given up if I had not been thoroughly convinced of the logic behind it.

Now a couple years later I can report that my problems have almost completely cleared up. The only time I experience pain is if I push too far (like try to run a couple hours barefoot) and then it’s not serious and only requires that I back off a little bit.

Conclusion

It must be stressed that as of yet there is not enough proof to say for certain that running barefoot is better or will result in fewer injuries.

But consider that for a second. The production of running shoes has turned into a multibillion dollar industry creating ever more complicated and expensive shoes with roll ball bars, thrust enhancers, microchips, etc. and yet no one can show that these running shoes actually reduce injuries and there is some evidence that they may actually cause injuries.

It’s as if someone designed a drug and then set about trying to make better and more expensive versions of it and never stopped to ask the question if we should be taking it in the first place.
Thankfully, in the past years there has been a surge of interest in using our feet as nature intended. Barefoot.

Starting out with barefoot running

A few points if you are intrigued about barefoot:

1. Start slow

If you have been wearing shoes for all your life (which most of us have) realize that your feet are going to be weak and inflexible. You are going to need time to rebuild the natural strength and flexibility in your feet, ankles, and calves. Going out your first day and trying to run several kilometers barefoot could lead to injury.

2. Don’t see it as all or nothing proposition.

Not everyone wants to look like a weirdo running around barefoot. You can still incorporate some of the benefits of barefoot without going all out. Try to spend as much of your time barefoot as possible by taking off your shoes whenever you’re in your house or at the park.

Also, when buying shoes look for ones without an elevated heel or arch support and a wide toebox allowing your feet to move as naturally as possible when walking.

3. Check out Vibrams or other minimalist footwear.

I don’t personally run fully barefoot. I use Vibram Fivefingers shoes which mimic the feeling of running barefoot while still providing a measure of protection from rocks and glass. Currently they can be quite hard to find but a range of new styles are slated to hit the market here in New Zealand towards the end of May 2010.
Ironically, Nike, the company that invented and popularized modern running shoes, has now gotten into the game of providing minimalist footwear with the Nike Free. This is a step in the right direction (no pun intended) but I don’t recommend them since they still have an elevated heel.

If you have questions or want help experimenting with barefooting let me know! I’m happy to share information and tips. You can contact me at evan@corefitnesswellington.co.nz or check out my website: www.corefitnesswellington.co.nz

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Tom Hawkins has no fears over foot injury

Courtsey of Geelong Advertiser -  Nick Wade

June 30th, 2010

GEELONG forward Tom Hawkins has been reassured his imminent return from a delicate foot injury poses little long-term threat to his career.

Hawkins last week made the call to take a punt and play on this season, ending weeks of speculation about when, or if, he would return this year.

The 21-year-old yesterday revealed he had just started kicking again on his troublesome right foot for the first time since discovering the hot spot a month ago.

Hawkins has not yet set a comeback date, but Cats coach Mark Thompson yesterday declared the youngster in line to return as early as next week.

The emerging forward maintained he was “not too worried” about any threat of further or long-term damage, after a series of meetings with Geelong’s medical staff who placed all future ramifications on the table.

Even if he is to suffer a relapse of the injury upon his return, Hawkins said he has been assured it would not be career threatening.

Hawkins said the acid test for his recovering foot was how it responded to an increased training workload over the coming days.

“It’s not too far away, I don’t quite know yet how far away it will be, but I’m just monitoring it and seeing how it responds to running on the track,” Hawkins said.

“Hopefully I get out there soon, but I haven’t yet put a deadline on when I’ll come back.”

Once the problem was isolated, Hawkins was given the power to make the final call based on the best available information the club could provide.

He said he no longer feels pain in his foot and will build his running and training over the next week in an attempt to return as soon as possible.

“It’s been a pretty well-judged decision in the end (to play on this season) and obviously we’ve got great people at the club giving me all the options,” he said.

“It’s not like it’s this great big risk or if something happens I’ll never play again, it’s a pretty well-educated decision, so I think we’ve done the right thing so far.

“(The injury) can happen to anyone, the foot’s healing well, I’ve been pretty happy with how it’s gone.”

“It’s now just a matter of getting out there and seeing how it responds to training, so hopefully I’m not too far away.”

Hawkins admitted his latest foot injury had been a frustrating hurdle to overcome, given he was just starting to assert his influence on matches through a rotating ruck role.

But he remains upbeat, despite suffering a similar injury two years ago that short-circuited his second year of AFL football.

“But that’s what happens in footy, you can get struck down pretty quickly,” he said.

“I’m not too worried about it really, I’m pretty happy.”

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Cats’ reign not yet over

  • Jay Clark
  • From: Sunday Herald Sun
  • June 13, 2010 12:00AM

Mark Thompson

Geelong could extend its premiership window under coach Mark Thompson. Source: Herald Sun

GEELONG has grown more confident its premiership window could stretch a few more years more after the strongest show of depth in Mark Thompson’s reign as coach.

Thompson admits even he was blown away by the class of its young troupe as it annihilated Essendon by 71 points at Etihad Stadium last night without five of its biggest stars.

“Very happy with our game. To have 41 shots at goal and win so comfortably was a really pleasing result,” he said.

“We sort of pretty much can’t believe it. And watching our VFL team play today, there is a lot of talent there, too.

“Today is one of our better days we’ve had for a while, yeah, it was pretty amazing.”

While much has been made of Nick Riewoldt’s absence at St Kilda, Geelong has played down the challenge it has faced without some of its biggest names.

Thompson said key forward Cameron Mooney (ankle), Matthew Scarlett (back) and Joel Corey (knee) were all on track to return to play the Saints in a Grand Final rematch in a fortnight.

Thompson said the players would review the game today then have a full week off.

Corey was rumoured to have suffered a setback with his knee but Thompson said he was progressing well.

“Joel is coming back nicely I saw him running 200s yesterday,” he said. “He wants to come back through the VFL but I’m not so sure.”

Ruckman Brad Ottens should be available the week after, while Max Rooke was no longer feeling pain in his troublesome knee, but is still out indefinitely.

Essendon coach Matthew Knights said the Cats’ embarrassment of riches dispelled any suggestion their premiership window was closing.

Knights was disappointed by his team’s lack of spark and dare, and described the clash against fierce rival Hawthorn at the MCG on Friday night as crucial to their prospects this season.

Essendon last night sunk outside the eight, one win behind Hawthorn.

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Roos hang on

Roos hang on

NORTH Melbourne has shown great courage to hang on for a nail-biting one-point win over the Brisbane Lions at Etihad Stadium on Saturday night.

The Lions, who had not led all evening, reeled in a 44-point deficit they faced early in the third term to hit the front with just over two minutes remaining after a free kick was paid against Scott Thompson in the Lions’ attacking arc.

But less than a minute later, Levi Greenwood marked on the boundary deep in the forward pocket and kicked the goal that gave the Kangaroos a one-point lead.

The ball rebounded, but the Roos were able to repel another Lions’ surge and put two weeks of disappointment behind them, winning 12.18 (90) to 13.11 (89).

North Melbourne coach Brad Scott said it would have been terribly hard to lose the match after leading for 118 minutes and after the side’s best first quarter in almost three years.

“It was incredibly frustrating because we really set the game up really well in the first half,” he said.

“It was a bit of déjà vu from the Adelaide game, really, where we set the game up; but we deserved to win the game, I felt, and to lose it would’ve been heartbreaking.”

He also praised Greenwood for having the composure to kick the tricky sealer.

“We had a player in Levi who stood up really well under pressure and kicked it, so it was a fantastic effort,” he said.

Brent Harvey was brilliant for his side with 30 touches while Andrew Swallow was tough all evening with seven tackles and six clearances. Lachie Hansen was also instrumental with 2.3 and four contested marks.

The Roos were out to a 34-point lead by quarter time, and had restricted the flow to the Lions’ key forwards Brendan Fevola and Jonathan Brown, leaving them largely ineffective.

By half time, the Roos led by 36 points and the Lions were a man down after losing Ash McGrath to a hamstring injury.

But the visitors were a different side after the main break, working and tackling much harder, and they were served well by strong performances from Travis Johnstone, Simon Black and Luke Power.

Fevola kicked three goals and Brown two in the third term and the Lions had the momentum heading into the final quarter with just a 13-point deficit to reel in.

With an animated Michael Voss coaching from the bench, the Lions pushed hard and managed to get their nose in front for two minutes of the final stanza. But unfortunately for them, those two minutes did not include the final siren.

If the Roos’ legs were tired after their trip to Perth last week, they didn’t show it. They stuck with the more experienced Lions and managed to steal back a win that looked all but gone.

Voss said afterwards he took responsibility for his players’ first-half performance, lack of composure and inability to “fight through” a challenging period.

“It’s up to me to be able to teach them and ensure that when they get in those positions, they can think through it,” he said.

“At this point in time, we’re not executing that. I have to be able to sit here and say that’s not good enough from my end. I’ve got to be better than that.”

Voss also said McGrath’s injury looked to be on the severe side and could put him out for more than six weeks.

He also said defender Matt Maguire would have a scan after complaining about pain on the outside of his foot.

By Jennifer Witham 9:50 PM Sat 05 June, 2010

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