A
very common and acceptable pre exercise or athletic event activity is
stretching. Stretching has long been widely recognized as a necessity
for fitness, flexibility and above all injury prevention. However over
the last couple of years this popular activity has been questioned on
whether it really does indeed prevent injury. In 2004 The Centers of
Disease Control (CDC) reported that static stretching does not prevent
injury. Now as a licensed Physical Therapist and Certified Athletic
Trainer I have been telling my patients for years that stretching
“prevents” injury. And then the CDC came out with that one and I thought
about all the inaccurate advice I had been promoting over the years.
Well like anything else you have to not believe everything you read
until you critically evaluated the information. After I read the CDC’s
review of the literature it was concluded that STATIC STRETCHING did not
prevent injury in most populations. It did show that it did prevent
injury in older folks and young athletes who require extreme ranges of
motion such as ballet or dance. But for the average Joe or Jane who goes
out and runs 10-15 miles per week and does a little static calf or
quadriceps stretching you cannot state that those stretches will PREVENT
injury. Bottom line with all of this is that static (no bouncing)
stretching held for 15-20 seconds for 3 repetitions is not going to hurt
you but it is not going to prevent injury or improve athletic
performance.
The reason being is that sports and weekend warrior activities are
performed in a dynamic fashion. The muscles, tendons and joints are
pulled through many different single and multi-planar movements with
varying degrees of contraction types. Injuries such as hamstring or
achilles strains are the result of that muscle or tendon not being able
to control the violent lengthening or stretch required of the activity.
The key component here is control. Control requires balance and the
ability of that muscle or tendon to be trained to lengthen (mobility)
while having adequate stability.
One of the most neglected areas to train in rehabilitation or fitness
routines is balance and controlled mobility activities. Most of our
traditional exercise equipments and stretching routines are performed in
one plane of movement. Examples of this are traditional cardiovascular
machines like treadmills, stair steppers, and stationary bikes. Examples
of single plane stretches are your typical toe touch hamstring or wall
calf stretches. The problem with this is that movements of activities of
daily living and sports are multi-planar and multi contractions. So if
you only stretch statically and then do a multi plane activity then yes
I can see how the CDC concluded that STATIC stretching does not prevent
injury. Remember that not many activities are static and isometric.
RECOMMENDATIONS FOR INJURY PREVENTION AND PERFORMANCE ENHANCEMENT
-
Warm-up your body first by a light jog
or stationary bike 5-7 minutes
-
Perform some gentle conventional
stretching- may perform stretches that you are currently doing
- Incorporate
multi-planar and add a little more dynamic stretching to your
routine moving your muscles and joints through the ranges of motion
that are required of your sport or activity- 2-3 sets 20-30 seconds
Summary
Remember that if you would like to take your activity to another level
and put yourself in a better position to prevent injuries controlled
dynamic multi-planar stretching may be your answer. If you have any
questions or would like to schedule an appointment to discuss or review
your current program please contact me at (336) 235-4501