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Sean McCawley, Fit for Life in Napa Valley: Exercise adherence to mitigate hip pain

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Sean McCawley, Fit for Life in Napa Valley: Exercise adherence to mitigate hip pain





Sean McCawley

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Relatively simple movements one would think we should be able to do every day without even thinking about it include squatting down to pick objects off from the ground, standing up from a seated position, or ascending stairs. These everyday functional movements depend on optimally conditioned hip joints. Consisting of a ball and socket joint granting the ability to move forward, backward, side-to-side, and rotate close to a full circular range of motion, the hip joint allows the body to execute advanced functions throughout our everyday lives. The ability to decrease the elevation of the hips throughout squatting movements, hinge over from the hip joint to pick up objects, go up and down stairs, walk, hike, or jog rely on a structurally sound and strong infrastructure of the hip. Impediments to our normal functionality can become significantly threatened if there is a disruption to the hip’s structural integrity. For the readers who experience hip pain, one could appreciate how a seemingly simple movement such as walking, getting in and out of the car, or stepping up onto a curb can seem like gearing up to walk over 10 yards of hot coals while barefoot. Discomfort and pain are a part of life that we don’t wish upon anyone. However, while hip pain conditions might appear like a plague that lingers like the scent of a dog freshly sprayed by a skunk, we can practice consistent exercise to support hip health.

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To understand how to alleviate hip pain, it’s worthwhile to enlighten ourselves on the composition of the hip and a few basic functions. Centrally located in the body next to the spine and abdomen, the hip joint consists of the head of the femur, which inserts into a concave-shaped socket of fused pelvic bones. The head of the femur is a rounded, convex-shaped portion of bone that fits congruently into the hip socket. The labrum is a large suction-cup-like ligament originating from the inside of the hip socket. It articulates around the head of the femur, providing significant structural support that keeps the hip from traveling out of the socket and allows for a substantial rotational range of motion. An intricate yet organized network of muscles originating from the sacrum, pelvic bones, anterior portion of the spine, and tendonous sheaths of the abdomen assist in adhering the hip fit snuggly into the hip socket. Depending on the message the human in charge of the hip joints sends from the brain, through the spinal cord, out toward the motor nerves, and to the muscles. Each muscle has a unique function that abducts, adducts, flexes, extends, and rotates the hip joint. Furthermore, along the bony prominence of bones include bursae, which are fluid-filled sacks that allow for the smooth gliding of tendons over the pointier portion of bones during muscle contraction.

Inflamed, strained, and stressed hip muscles occur from multiple presentations, including prolonged sedentary periods, overuse injuries, traumatic physical injuries, or the advancement of age-related degenerative bone disease. Connective tissue absent of sufficient physical activity and exercise is threatened by inadequate supplies of blood to the site of muscles, tendons, and ligaments that produce large movements and endure substantial stress. As a result, inflammation can occur in the bursae sacks, ligaments, and tendons, leading to tendonitis, bursitis, and the potential for arthritis at the end of the hip bone. If lack of exercise is causing a decrease of oxygenated blood flow to the muscles, tendon, and ligaments holding the hip joint together, a solution to relieving pain and decreasing the likelihood of future pain increasing is to practice consistent adherence to hip injury prevention exercises.

A few exercises we conduct with our personal training clients every time they arrive for their training sessions include a hip movement preparation routine. No matter what specific exercises we have in line for them, they will always rehearse a hip movement prep. routine that activates the hip muscles before entering into any compound and compressive resistance training tactics. Here is an example of an exercise we include to activate the gluteal muscles, adductors, and abductors of the hip:

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Supine Isometric Single Leg Hip Extension: To perform the supine isometric single leg hip extension, start by positioning yourself flat on the ground with your arms extended and your knees bent. Keep one leg bent and the foot of the supporting leg flat on the ground, and extend the opposite knee toward the front of the body. Press your stabilizing foot into the ground and lift the hips upward until a brief muscular sensation is experienced in the hamstrings and glutes. Once your hips are extended upward, hold this position utilizing your glutes and hamstrings to stabilize the hips in an extended position for 10 to 30 seconds. Repeat this movement on the opposite leg.

Similar to taking your vitamins every morning to improve the immune system and fend off illness, movement prep. exercises for the hip should be rehearsed in a similar ritual when preparing the body for exercise. Not only will movement prep. exercises prevent injuries to the hip, but the compounding effects of practicing these tactics before every training session have the potential to significantly impact avoiding hip strains, decreasing the onset of arthritis, and alleviating nagging hip pain.

Sean McCawley, the founder and owner of Napa Tenacious Fitness in Napa, welcomes questions and comments. Reach him at 707-287-2727, napatenacious@gmail.com, or visit the website napatenaciousfitness.com.

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Skip the 10,000 Steps: The One Exercise That Matches a Full Day of Walking, according to a Fitness Coach

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Skip the 10,000 Steps: The One Exercise That Matches a Full Day of Walking, according to a Fitness Coach

On Instagram, Zarina Manaenkova advised taking short intervals of squats could deliver the same impact as a full day of walking. “Ten squats instead of 10 thousand steps,” Zarina’s post read, referencing a study that equated ten squats every 45 minutes with 10,000 steps. Manaenkova explained the science behind her claim, stating, “When your muscles actively contract, they produce very important compounds that influence your brain, metabolism, and even your fat-burning processes. Meanwhile, a simple walk does not have this effect. So, if you want to stay young, squat.”

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A deload week over Christmas will help you hit your goals, experts say – here’s how

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A deload week over Christmas will help you hit your goals, experts say – here’s how

Has the idea of taking a break from your fitness routine this Christmas left you with more fear than cheer? Good news. Rest days are a legitimate cornerstone of muscle recovery – a hard-earned chance to kick back and allow the past week’s gains to catch up with you, and never has there been more reason to do so than now, when Christmas is here, and, TBH, we deserve a bloomin’ break.

Besides letting up on any mental stress you may have amassed over the year, extended breaks from training help keep you motivated and, plot twist, there are also physical benefits that come from switching the squat rack for the sofa. They trigger powerful physical and biochemical changes that help increase your muscle mass over time.

Your body needs regular breaks to adapt to sustained training. It’s not the work itself that brings your goals into fruition – like enhanced muscle mass and a deadlift PB – but the time you spend recovering. The training is just the stimulus; during rest periods you experience a cascade of biochemical, neural and hormonal changes that cement those changes in your body as it’s the time for your muscles to repair and grow back stronger.

If you don’t regularly take time to recharge and regenerate, you simply won’t cash in on the results you’ve already paid for. Play the hero long enough and you could even suffer overtraining syndrome (OTS), the result of excessive muscular, skeletal and joint trauma.

This could cause a rise in circulating monocytes – a type of white blood cell linked to immune function – which leads to:

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  • Low energy;
  • Reduced protein synthesis;
  • Poor sleep;
  • Reduced performance;
  • A drop in hormone production

Pretty much everything you need to ensure muscle growth and energy production get shut down.

You keep training because you want to achieve your goals. But by overtraining you force your body into survival and protection mode instead. To some, a week away from the gym might seem counterintuitive. Two weeks might seem like heresy. However, in reality, it could be your key to success. When you take a week or two off from the gym every 12 weeks or so, your muscles, tendons and ligaments repair themselves, and the glycogen energy stores in your muscles and liver are replenished.

Best of all, you won’t lose any of your hard-won gains: studies show it takes four to six weeks of pure inactivity – we’re talking proper bed/boxset rest here – to see severe catabolic breakdown. After one or two weeks off, you won’t suffer a significant drop in strength, power, body mass or size – or witness a noticeable gain in body fat.

And it takes even longer to see any decline in aerobic capacity, stamina or VO2 max (the maximum amount of oxygen your body can use during exercise, according to BUPA). A week without loud, crowded gyms and rushing to get to spin class will also do wonders for your mental freshness.

You’ll feel sharper, your enthusiasm to return to your workouts come January will surge, and you will have neutralised all the tiredness and irritability associated with overdoing it. So cut yourself some slack and plan in a week of (COVID-friendly) festive fun. Truth be told, you’ll do a lot worse by overtraining than you ever could by taking time off.

Expert source: Ian Aylward, lead strength and conditioning coach at Perform St George’s Park

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 As Women’s Health UK’s fitness director and a qualified Pilates and yoga instructor, Bridie Wilkins has been passionately reporting on exercise, health and nutrition since the start of her decade-long career in journalism. She secured her first role at Look Magazine, where her obsession with fitness began and she launched the magazine’s health and fitness column, Look Fit, before going on to become Health and Fitness writer at HELLO!. Since, she has written for Stylist, Glamour, Cosmopolitan, Marie Claire, Elle, The Metro, Runner’s World and Red.Now, she oversees all fitness content across womenshealthmag.com.uk and the print magazine, spearheading leading cross-platform franchises, such as ‘Fit At Any Age’, where we showcase the women proving that age is no barrier to exercise. She has also represented the brand on BBC Radio London, plus various podcasts and Substacks – all with the aim to encourage more women to exercise and show them how.Outside of work, find her trying the latest Pilates studio, testing her VO2 max for fun (TY, Oura), or posting workouts on Instagram.  

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