The Joint by Joint Approach and What This Means for Bboys

Earlier this year I dove into the joint by joint approach and how it affects the ankles and knees. While my intentions were good natured, focusing purely on one aspect of a single joint and all of its intricacies may have been too intense for a simple blog post.

However, it is still foolhardy to not appreciate the simplicity of this approach.

JointByJointApproach
Photo Credit: KevinNeeld.com

Most recently I had the pleasure of discussing this approach and helping the Temple Bboys understand this idea better, that if you lose requisite mobility (or don’t maintain mobility) in certain joints, there will be a loss of motion above or below the affected joint.

The process is simple…

-Lose ankle mobility, get knee pain

-Lose hip mobility, get low back pain

-Lose thoracic mobility, get neck and shoulder pain, or low back pain

-Looking at the body on a joint-by-joint basis beginning with the ankle, this makes sense.” Advances in Functional Training, Mike Boyle)

While pain might not be the immediate conclusion in those with limited ankle mobility, over time if there is enough of a repetitive load placed on an immobile or restricted joint, one must wonder what kind of structural parts of the joint (or those surrounding it) are being overused and/or being underused at the same time.

The interesting thing is – how does this apply to dancing? And how does this apply to injuries?

While what dancers do can be described as magical and transformative, this is merely a metaphorical definition of what they can do and how they can make others feel. Dancers are human, and until they develop a third arm that can functionally change the game, I will approach every dancer the same!

With this being said, dancers may have a lack of stability in certain joints, while displaying larger degrees of mobility at varying joints (everyone is different).

So if a dancer presents with excessive lumbar mobility, expect issues with the hips and/or thoracic junction (which can affect the scapula, shoulder joint, and even neck).

Likewise, if they do not have control of that excess lumbar mobility, I do not expect rotation at the hips to be controlled to the degree that they need to be controlled at while performing movements such as the windmill, flares, or even a simple move such as swipes.

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iieTCVhr4As]

Where stability meets mobility.

While this issue of a lack of stability/mobility may be present throughout the body, it won’t be present until a full body movement assessment is performed on said individual dancer. This is merely one blog post glossing over the idea of the JBJA.

One person can have mobility issues because they perform coindrops to only one side. Or another person can have a lack of stability at the shoulder joint due to a lack of mobility in the scapula, which can affect their ability to perform airchairs or one handed freezes.

Breakdancing

So what does this mean to
bboys across the board?

So with regards to injuries, the stability and mobility overlap described above can certainly interface with injuries, due to movement being acquired from elsewhere in the kinetic chain (prime muscle movers not working as efficiently due to a lack of stabilization pattern, and thus recruiting other synergistic or accessory muscle groups to pick up the slack).

First of all, my first order of business is the restoration of a limited movement pattern, which can be identified through a formal movement assessment (whether you like FMS, PRI, or other orthopedic tests is up to you).

Secondly, my next goal is to solidify these movement patterns that have been restored through strength training while keeping this approach in mind. This reconfirms and should solidify for you as well the notion that isolation training (in the gym) is not the most ideal scenario for dancers.

My ideal situation involves:

  1. Full Body Movement Assessment (To discover potential or problematic areas)
  2. Breathing Pattern Repositioning
  3. Inhibition of Tonic Musculature (Self-Myofascial Release or Foam Rolling)
  4. Dynamic Warm-Up (Full body warm-up abiding by the JBJA)
  5. Strength Training in a Variety of Healthy Movement Patterns
    …and if possible
  6. Soft Tissue Management/Treatment by Licensed Professional
  7. Nutritional Guidance and Supplemental Choices (aka not drinking beer everyday)

This approach should be notified as remarkably different than what many bboys (or even dancers in general) may be accustomed to, primarily because there is no mention of physical therapy practice or otherwise to restoring movement. (I don’t claim to be a physical therapist.)

The reason being that I push this approach, besides the fact that I get to work with bboys more intimately, is that there is a large lack of health insurance that bboys do not get the pleasure of receiving. (While this discussion can easily take a dive down the socio-economic problems that affect a certain population of athletes and dancers, I will avoid that discussion for now.) This means bboys won’t necessarily get access to the cream of the crop of physical therapists out there.

Many of these soft tissue problems can be resolved via appropriate self-maintenance utilizing the generalized tools above, and understanding what your specific body needs. If you can manage that, or let a competent coach see how your body moves, there is no reason why you cannot continue to dance longer, faster, and harder than you are currently dancing utilizing these principles of basic human movement.

As always…

Keep it funky.

MA

Fitness Reads & Updates – 11.11.13

This recent month has been relatively busy for me. Classes are just a bit past their mid-term status, I’m working in multiple locations, and with studying some information from the Postural Restoration Institute and other goodies, I think it is safe to say I know how to keep busy.

On top of all that, I’ve had the blessing to stay busy through online writing along with prepping information for a workshop I’ll be hosting in Philadelphia.

stacklogoInterview with STACK.com on
Time Under Tension

In late October I was asked to provide some input on a time under tension over at STACK.com. You can find out what the deal is with regards to muscle gaining and eccentrically loading the tissue HERE.

Utilizing Jumping Progressions in an Exercise Program

I was asked to provide some awesome input on jumping progressions for my buddy Rich Thaw’s blog Inner Athlete HQ, based in Canada. I gladly obliged, since you know, dunking is one of my lifetime goals, and I’d love to help anyone who is interested in jumping higher. (I believe I estimated that I’d need a 36″+ vertical to get there… in the last 3 months I put 3″ on my current vertical to achieve a lifetime max vertical of 34″. Pretty excited for the future to say the least!)

Workshop for Temple Bboys – Injury Prevention for Bboys & BGirls

The one item I’ve been working on most recently is prepping info for a workshop at my alma mater Temple University for an organization I’ve helped to set up from the get-go. It is awesome to see them grow as an org, seeing as how we started as simply an organization to fight for room space since we started out dancing in the hallways of TU.

TempleBboys

This workshop will cover the factors that contribute to an injury, and what you can do to reduce the incidence of injury to keep you dancing longer, and harder. (Hold your jokes please).

The time and date for the workshop is next week, Monday, November 18th 2013 – located at Mitten Hall in Temple University.

Register HERE.

In the meantime…

Keep it funky.

MA

You Want Me to What? Why You Should Foam Roll

There are generally three goals within the fitness industry: improve athletic performance, reset or inhibit neurological dysfunction, or reduce fat throughout your body. All of these approaches may require many many many different types of techniques and methods. One common bond that unites all of these goals can involve some sort of exercise.

Admittedly, using a foam roller may not be necessary in order to progress towards these goals. So from the get-go, you don’t need to utilize this tool in order to benefit towards your goals. But if you plan on doing something involving exercise, it can possibly benefit you. Or it might not. It is up to you to use it! :)

If I can increase core activation, increase blood flow to local muscle beds, and increase proprioceptive receptor input before even getting into the meat of any training program, it’s likely that I’m going to achieve it with foam rolling.

On a related note, I think that foam rolling is not a substitute to the work that a smart manual therapist can provide – my opinion entails that foam rolling is nothing more than superficially rolling on muscle and fascia. Whether or not I’m affecting what is happening within the bed of the muscle is not my aim – it is to achieve all of the above!

Here are links to videos going through the process of self-myofascial release with other implements such as the Back Knobber, medicine balls, and lacrosse (LAX) balls for various parts of the body. The following are specific areas that bboys and other dancers may find to be particularly “knotted up” when initially rolling.

Keep in mind, this is not a substitute for pain relief. I’m very careful with my verbiage around the word pain – my aim is not reduce or get rid of pain, but rather to help reduce tight musculature through various methods, and to eventually clear movement patterns found in the initial movement assessment.

Glute Max & Med - Anterior View (Funny Face)

My first time on a foam roller was in 2010, and it was relatively uncomfortable to say the least. After a few years of rolling around before a training session, it is still relatively uncomfortable – depending of course on how much soreness was induced from the previous training session.

They See Me Rollin’…

With new clients and trainees overall, there is a learning curve with understanding the use of a foam roller, and I’d rather take my time teaching someone how to do it correctly for 5-10 minutes, as opposed to them fumbling around on the floor aimlessly.

My initial impression upon using the foam roller has been that “We are manipulating the fascia that surrounds the muscle.” Now, my tune has changed – I’m not sure we can measure or view how the fascia changes after a bout of foam rolling, and maybe even trigger point adaptation was something that I thought foam rolling could alter, as well.

It is more likely that we are changing perception of mechanoreceptors from the superficial surface of the skin on down.

So with that in mind, here are some benefits towards foam rolling…

  • Superficial fascial rolling: Fascia is a sheath that surrounds muscle. Fascia can get relatively “gunked” up through chronic and overuse movement patterns. Think of foam rolling as an act that serves to decrease the “gunkiness” of the parts of the muscle that are accessible superficially.
  • Inhibition of “tight” muscles: When a muscle such as your hamstrings presents as “tight” there could be a few reasons for this: 1. Position of pelvis, 2. Soft Tissue Quality, and 3. Protective Mechanisms. When I’m looking to reduce someone’s “tight” muscle groups, it is important to take these considerations into account. Inhibiting targeted area will help to reduce these feelings of tightness.

If you are still convinced that foam rolling is not up to snuff, here are logistical and extrapolated benefits:

  • Ischemic effect: Sit on a foam roller on your quad for longer than 5 seconds, and perhaps you’ll feel something similar to a “warm sensation” going down your leg. No, you didn’t accidentally relieve yourself. Instead, the idea is that through the “release” of the tight muscles, blood flow could acutely be restored at the local site of the foam rolling. This in turn could restore nutrients to the muscle bed, and good things happen when you restore blood flow to your muscles.
  • Crawling effects: While the idea of rolling around and crawling on the ground is actually not new to me at all since I’ve been bboying since I was 14, I merely did it to look cool at a high school dance. Low and behold there are theoretical concepts involving increased feedback to proprioceptive receptors. So when you roll on a foam roller, half of your body is often on the ground just feeding into these receptors. Also, you can increase core activation if done in the correct position, because you essentially have to hold yourself up while rolling around!
  • Research indicates that there is an acute increase in range of motion (think flexibility) due to a bout of self-myofascial release. No stretching… but an increase in range of motion…? I’m all about saving ligaments, so let’s do it.

With all of these in mind, I’m probably going to continue foam rolling for quite some time. It simply has too many benefits to ignore, and the only drawback that I can see is if the method is pursued with incorrect intentions (foam rolling to get rid of pain for more than 2+ weeks).

As always…

Keep it funky.

MAsymbollogo