Run for Your Life

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Run for Your Life Page 20

by Mark Cucuzzella


  I find this heartbreaking. It’s too easy a progression for an injured runner to become a former runner. When we are offered only drugs, cumbersome interventions, and ineffective treatment for pain or injury, quitting running is a logical response.

  SHIFTING THE KINETIC CHAIN OF COMMAND

  Runners are at fault, too, though not intentionally. When we feel pain or an incipient injury, we tend to shift our gait or posture. But a compensation like this (along with the drugs or orthotics) can hide the original condition or trigger another injury in a different area of the body. Sometimes a domino effect of injury works its way up (or down) the body’s kinetic chain.

  Injuries seldom happen in isolation, and never without cause. I often see runners suffering from a cascade of injuries; finding the root cause requires tracing back through the series of accommodations the runner has made. Not uncommonly, a debilitating injury starts with something seemingly benign, such as a single ill-fitting shoe. Over time, this can progress to weakness and lack of control of the foot, which can cause or contribute to lower back pain.

  As I work with a runner, I try to determine which tissues feel pain, and when and where onset of pain occurs. Some areas are more sensitive than others, such as the fascia of the feet, the small tendon insertions, and the lumbar fascia of the back. Pain in the joints and bones tends to appear later, as a delayed response, and it’s not unusual to develop knee or hip arthritis, for instance, before the area becomes painful. In the case of stress fractures (especially in the foot), pain might arise only after the injury has progressed—and sometimes when bone scans or MRIs show multiple asymptomatic (painless) stress on the opposite side, distant from the affected, painful area. In other words, runners can injure themselves without feeling pain. Unaware of a developing injury, they run themselves into a fully injured state.

  Too often, the sports medicine industry is inadvertently (or intentionally) complicit in all this pain and injury. Sports medicine responds efficiently to dramatic, gladiator-style trauma and orthopedic injuries. For a blown-out knee from a football tackle, for example, repair teams can rebuild you. But for injuries suffered from thousands of slightly misaligned micromovements, or repetitive stress, we are way behind. And, as we saw in chapter 11, standard treatments such as ibuprofen, naproxen, and other NSAIDs actually inhibit healing.

  All of this underscores how essential it is for us to maintain—on our own, without too much intervention—the delicate relationship between our interconnected moving parts. It’s mainly up to each of us to build the ability to respond to and prevent injuries. Running should not cause injury. It should make us injury-resistant, and injury-resilient. We run so we don’t get hurt.

  AVOID THE LOADING ZONE

  Fortunately, progressive-minded physical therapists and biomechanists have begun to teach running technique as part of their treatment for injured runners. In one study, Irene Davis, director of the Spaulding National Running Center, had subjects run in minimal shoes and bare feet on a specially configured treadmill that could measure ground impact forces. The runners were told to land softly and quietly, to increase their step count, and to listen to their own real-time feedback on landing patterns. She found that these subtle adjustments helped them to significantly lower impact forces on their lower legs, reduce pain, and (in some cases) resolve chronic injuries. This technique for modifying gait is called impact moderating behavior (IMB)—an important term that I hope will gain currency among everyone who runs.

  Elite athletes mostly know this. Those who don’t have short careers. The wise ones learn that whenever they sense pain or discomfort, they need to understand the cause, address it, and encode IMB into their landings—not treat it symptomatically or surgically or rely on a shoe or insert to correct it.

  I learned this the hard way myself. Earlier in my running years, I suffered a condition called hallux rigidus, in which I couldn’t dorsiflex (bend upward) either big toe—a result of degenerative changes likely caused by running too hard, with poor form, in overdesigned and poorly fitting shoes. Surgery relieved some of the pain, and some mobility returned, but the joint remained mostly fused. Doctors suggested that I quit running.

  CHANGE MUST COME FROM WITHIN

  Inexplicably, after surgery on my feet, no one prescribed foot strengthening exercises or physical therapy, which is the treatment for other sports injuries. I knew that I needed exercise, and I found nothing as convenient or relaxing as running. (My dog missed it, too.) So rather than quit running, I set out to retool the way I ran.

  At the time, I lived in Denver near a wooded park that featured a 2.5-mile running loop with a forgiving crushed rock surface. Initially, I harbored only one objective: to get out and enjoy myself. I now believe this to be the most meaningful and sustainable goal that any runner can have.

  Running at slow speeds gave me the space to breathe, and the time to explore commonsense techniques of impact moderating behavior. I tried shorter strides (with a quicker cadence), and landed with knees bent and feet closer to my center of mass. I began to understand what not to do, such as land hard on my heels. I experimented with running methods. ChiRunning helped me learn new things: it stressed biomechanics, not workouts, and taught me to approach running as a complete practice, not as a sequence of disconnected movements.

  PREHAB, NOT REHAB

  Running injuries aren’t inevitable. Most injuries are a product of too much, too soon, too hard, or too fast. Or a combination of these. We can prevent injuries in the first place by doing prehab: realigning the body’s symmetry, maintaining posture, strengthening the feet, expanding the range of movement, learning gentle rhythm and relaxation, and remodeling movement patterns. Treat the position, not the condition. The time to fix the roof, as JFK said, is when the sun is shining.

  A low volume of high-intensity exertion can move someone above the injury threshold. Likewise, so can large doses of low-intensity work.

  The goal is to gradually elevate the injury threshold, with workouts of low to medium intensity and duration.

  We can also deter injury by unbinding and loosening physical restrictions, and building mobility—through careful mobility work and foam rolling. (Too much stretching, however, can be counterproductive. Picture trying to undo the knot of a rope by pulling it tighter.)

  Your level of exertion affects vulnerability to injury, too. When you’re not overexerting (i.e., when you’re running within the comfortable, aerobic zone), you can better feel discomfort and sense incorrect form, and better judge when to stop. High-intensity running, by contrast, allows the hormones produced during the sympathetic, fight-or-flight response to mask structural pain. If you are running above your maximum aerobic heart rate, you may wake up surprisingly sore the next morning, or even find that you have an injury.

  The prescription for healthy running, when starting from an injury-free state, is reasonably easy to fill: as you begin an exercise routine, progress gradually. Walking injuries are rare, so don’t be afraid to start by walking. Then progress to a walk/jog mix, and graduate to running.

  WHAT ARE THE MOST COMMON RUNNING INJURIES WE SEE?

  There isn’t room here to discuss every running injury. Our attention, anyway, should remain on turning off the faucet, not on mopping up the mess. Medical counsel can appear contradictory: on the one hand, most injuries are curable without medical intervention. But on the other, if you are severely injured and in pain you should seek help from a medical professional who understands running.

  Let’s take a look at the typical running injuries physicians see, and what can be done to treat them “post-actively” (for those of us who fell behind the prevention curve and exceeded the injury threshold). If you highlight a map of the body with common running injury hot spots (this page), you’ll see that the feet, lower legs, knees, and back light up most vividly.

  Problem knees account for a large percentage of running injuries every y
ear. Common knee and upper leg conditions include:

  Iliotibial band syndrome (ITBS)—pain on the lateral (outside) aspect of the knee.

  Patellofemoral pain syndrome (PFPS)—pain on the underside of the patella.

  Hamstring sprains/strains—injury is usually where the hamstring crosses joints (knee and hip); most injuries occur high in the hamstring.

  Foot, ankle, and lower leg problems account for another large percentage of running injuries. The four most common of these conditions are:

  Achilles tendinosis—chronic inflammation and degeneration of the Achilles tendon.

  Plantar fasciosis—degeneration and microtears of the plantar fascia of the foot.

  Medial-tibial stress syndrome (commonly referred to as shin splints)—usually early stage microfractures that occur along the inside edge of the tibia.

  Stress fractures—progressed microfractures that most commonly occur in the tibia, metatarsals, or calcaneus.

  Generally, muscle injuries occur when one’s range of motion is exceeded, and when tissues are abnormally stressed. Bone and joint injuries tend to result from high or repetitive impact (abnormal loading).

  Knee valgus is the motive force behind the epidemic of noncontact anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) injuries in jumping and explosive sports such as basketball, volleyball, and skiing. Less commonly, ACL injuries can also occur from lower-impact, highrepetition movements, such as running.

  Assessing the foundation: at Two Rivers Treads we use a plantar pressure map to assess and retrain the foot to proper shape, strength, and balance.

  The relatively new regimen of core and hip training is designed to deal with valgus movement, by stabilizing the stance and preventing the femur from rotating inward on landing. Despite a decade of experience in the athletic community with this core and hip training, however, valgus-related injury rates are still high. Curiously, in the early days of running, these injuries were rare—most people simply ran correctly. Little attention was given to accessory core training, and if runners wanted to build strength, they ran and bounded up hills.

  Dynamic knee valgus, it turns out, typically begins with the foot. The knee is more like the kid caught in the middle: it’s only doing what the hip and the foot tell it to. A weak and unstable foot—one that can’t control impact loads, then collapses—takes the knee along with it.

  The image above illustrates “dynamic knee valgus,” in which the knee dives inward in an “L” shape, commonly seen during high-impact movements such as jumping and landing. Movement sequence A ? B ? C can lead to anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) and medial collateral ligament (MCL) tears.

  If the hip is strong and the foot is weak, the knee will collapse. This is one reason why I don’t recommend shoes with excessive support or marshmallow-soft cushioning. The foot is your foundation, and it needs to be strong and solidly planted on the ground.

  PLANTAR FASCIOSIS—A LIFESTYLE INJURY

  Plantar fasciosis is not primarily a running injury—it’s a common malady. But every week or so, the Natural Running Center receives a query from a reader desperate for relief from chronic plantar fasciosis pain. Fortunately, the approach to treating it is fairly straightforward, and can be applied to other injuries. (Technically, fasciosis refers to a degeneration of the tissue, which is far more common than fasciitis—the conventionally used term. Fasciitis implies true inflammation, and occurs in situations such as infection or autoimmine attack. Similarly, Achilles tendonosis is more common than tendonitis.)

  The strong, springy plantar fascia tendon maintains the arch of the foot. It creates tension between the calcaneus (heel) and the metatarsal heads, forming the depressable arch that acts as the foot’s primary spring, like a leaf spring on a car.

  The plantar fascia is designed to manage a limited amount of stress. The intrinsic muscles (those solely in the foot) and extrinsic muscles (those attaching the foot to the lower leg) receive signals from the nerves and fascia, and it’s these muscles that should absorb and manage most of the load. When those muscles become dysfunctional or weak, the load is transferred to the plantar fascia, where repetitive stress causes microtrauma, and eventually plantar fasciosis.

  Plantar fasciosis tends to recur, for the simple reason that sports medicine does little to prevent it. I suffered from it for years, such that even walking became a miserable, painful experience. Injections, night splints, over-the-counter arches, rigid custom arches, stable shoes, stretching—nothing helped. If shock wave therapy had been in vogue, I’m sure I would have tried it.

  For sufferers like me, typical first treatments include arch supports or NSAIDs, neither of which are effective in the long term. Arch supports may provide some relief, but they only serve to brace and weaken the arch. (Some structural foot deformities can benefit from supports.) Always, the goal is improvement in function and strength. Anti-inflammatories only circumvent the natural repair process, and pain recurs as soon as the stress is reapplied.

  The only way to sustainably fix plantar fasciosis is to address the root causes. Is the runner suffering from fallen arches, or is it failing arches? Gradually reducing and removing arch supports, while building foot strength and moderating impact, is the best place to begin. Paradoxically, shoes that offer lots of support weaken the foot, causing more foot instability.

  Other factors can contribute to plantar fasciosis, such as a misaligned and weak big toe, tight and shortened calf muscles, obesity, or transitioning too quickly from supportive footwear to flat shoes or bare feet.

  Treatment for plantar fasciosis varies, depending on the cause, but as a general guideline:

  Orthotics such as arch supports or taping should be used only as a temporary modality while you strengthen and lengthen tissues. (You don’t leave a broken arm in a cast forever; muscles begin to atrophy from disuse within a week.) Don’t wear heels, and find shoes with wide toe boxes.

  Place your forefeet on a stair, and lower your heels, then raise them. It’s fine to feel a bit of discomfort while doing this, as long as you are progressively increasing strength and control of the feet. This is great for the Achilles tendon, and the tibialis posterior muscle and tendon, too.

  Do some soft tissue work to loosen the plantar fascia if it is thickened, tight, and tender. Forcibly work the soles of your feet with your thumbs, rollers, or even golf balls, to release the fascia knots. Healthy fascia slides and glides.

  Work the intrinsic muscles of the feet. Pick things up with your feet. Walk barefoot. As often as you can, strengthen the muscles of the big toes by dorsiflexing them, then pressing them into the ground—toe yoga. This will awaken the foot muscles and help re-create the arch. The short foot posture exercises can be done throughout the day, too, even inside your (flexible) shoes. (Barefoot Science insoles can stimulate these muscles all day.)

  If your big toes are misaligned and bent inward (hallux valgus), which is common, consider using a product to straighten them, such as Correct Toes.

  Practice slow jogging, with lighter ground contact and loading rates. Relearn how to land and spring. Easy jump-roping teaches this, too.

  Avoid NSAIDs (naproxen, ibuprofen, etc.). These drugs interfere with natural healing processes, and can cause medical complications. In college, I suffered a bleeding ulcer from these meds, and lost over half my blood volume.

  Consult a health care provider who understands natural running and walking.

  A collapsed foot creates strain and microtears of the plantar fascia.

  HANDIATRY?

  Why have our feet become such a problem, and why are there so many podiatrists? Look at your hands, and ponder why we don’t have “handiatrists.” It’s because we utilize our hands daily for a wide variety of tasks. We run them t
hrough an extraordinary range of healthful motions—unencumbered by heavy, confining, posture-altering gear of the sort that we routinely wear on our feet. Remove the shoes or wear minimal ones, and many foot problems will go away (with time and patience).

  RESET, NOT REST

  Misperceptions abound. Some injuries require rest and rehabilitation, but many don’t.

  One runner, Natalee Maxfield, played on sports teams in high school, then picked up running in college, married, and ran throughout her pregnancies. In her thirties, she developed foot pain, which podiatrists variously ascribed to Morton’s neuroma, plantar plate injury, and capsulitis. They prescribed rest and orthotics. But she didn’t want to stop running.

  Natalee sensed that she would need to find lasting relief on her own, and that the best therapy would be to simply not get injured in the first place. She adjusted her running style, switched to shoes with a more minimal profile, and hasn’t been injured since. As Natalee and others have learned on their own, many running injuries require correct remodeling, not medical intervention or rest.

  Any time a tissue endures strain (in which it is stretched and lengthened), it is deformed. Picture what happens when you bend a ski pole: under stress, it flexes and springs back to its original shape—up to a point. When strained or overstressed, it becomes stuck in a new, bent position, requiring that it be forcibly restraightened in order to be useful. This is what happens when a shoulder, for instance, is secured in a sling. In as little as three days it freezes in that position. The process of remodeling it correctly—getting it to work again through its full range of motion—is painful and difficult.

 

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