Joint Injuries
How Joints Get Injured And How To Treat Them by Ken Kinakin, D.C.,
C.S.C.S.
This article will discuss two types of injuries that can happen
to joints when powerlifting.
These injuries are either a compression or shearing injury that
can happen to joints that can cause pain and multiple muscle weakness
patterns.
In the compression type of injury, the trauma is directed mostly
to the joint itself. This type of injury has little or no tearing
of the tissues and swelling, if present, is limited to the joint
capsule. The stress of the weight effects mechanoreceptors and nociceptors
(little receptors that give the body information about position,
load and pain) in the joint structure. This type of injury appears
to affect the internal structures of the joint that can exhibit
a common finding of multiple muscle weaknesses, especially muscles
that cross that joint. Joints that can be affected by this is the
ankle, knee, lumbar, thoracic, cervical joints. The exercises that
can affect these joints are usually ones with heavy axial loading
such as heavy squats, deadlifts, shoulder presses, etc. These heavy
loads can compress the joints enough to create an abnormal firing
of joint receptors and change the normal tone and strength of the
muscles that surround that joint. Repeated joint traction of these
joints can normalize the firing of the joint receptors and reestablish
the normal tone and strength of the muscles.
The second type of joint injury can occur from a shearing - tearing
action that can injure multiple structures. This the most common
type of joint injury and occurs when joints and related structures
are strained and twisted causing injury to muscles, ligaments, skin
and receptors of the joints. Any joint in the body can be affected
by a shearing - tearing injury by virtually any exercise. The shearing
type of joint injury will cause a muscle weakness of the muscles
that cross the joint. The weakness muscle pattern will cause a strain
on ligaments which will cause residual pain over the ligaments.
Ligaments are the structures that cross and stabilize the joint
and when stressed abnormally, will cause a weakness in the muscles
that cross that joint. There are certain receptors in ligaments
that when they are overloaded will cause a reflex muscle weakness.
This is because the muscles will not function properly or with full
strength in a unstable joint. This is a protective mechanism that
keeps the muscle weak preventing further damage to the joint. Depending
on the severity of the injury and the length of time before initiation
of treatment, the patient will adapt to their injury and require
treatment for muscle incoordination and imbalances. This will cause
a secondary reason for pain and weakness in the muscle when doing
the exercise, long after the initial injury. Limitation of range
of motion can indicate an imbalance of the prime movers and synergistics
and antagonists. An example of this would be doing the squat improperly
and inducing an injury to the knee. This will cause a abnormal stress
on the knee ligaments and reflexly cause a weakness of the muscles
that cross that joint such as the quadriceps and hamstrings. If
the injury to the knee is not treated and rehabilitated immediately
and properly, this can cause an imbalance between the quadriceps
and hamstrings and create more pain and weakness. If the imbalance
is severe enough or been for a long period of time, this can also
cause a stress in other joints and can cause weaknesses in other
muscles unrelated to the original injury. This can affect your training
and can hamper your gains.
Again it is the usually the feeling that if you take a week or
two off training or training the body part, that the injury will
go away. In mild injuries, you can heal and restore normal function
and muscle strength. But in larger injuries, it is important to
get treatment as soon as possible to speed healing and prevent abnormal
muscle weaknesses and patterns.
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