Subject: RE: IT Band Stretches? A physical therapist (DPT ) who owns several physical therapy clinics recently sent me an article about ITB syndrome. He has told me that the foam roller therapy is not the best. So I've pressed him to send the exercises to go with the article and why the foam roller is not. I'm still trying to translate the article into English since it has a lot of intense medical terminology. Trying to get the right information from healthcare providers does take a while. From reading this article, there are clearly many reasons you get the syndrome including biomechanical issues such as pronation or being knock kneed. I can see now from reading it that you have to know the cause of yours before you can treat it effectively since that muscle runs down the side of your hip and the fact that it attaches to so many other muscles. Some quotes from the article from the Physical Therapist: "One position alone only stretches one section of one of these muscles and does not adequately affect the many areas that need to be addressed." In the article he mentions, "Strategies may include: ice, anti-inflammatory medication, modalities such as iontophoresis, phonophoresis, are effective. Typically a cortisone injection into the area will be a very rapid source of relief and should be a first line consideration for the ardent and addicted runner. Stretching and manual soft tissue mobilization should be a consideration but the professional treating you needs to understand well which stage of inflammation and recovery you are in so as not to promote worsening inflammation with manual soft tissue massage or mobilization techniques or with stretching." The phonophoresis and ionophoresis are interesting. One thing is for sure, it is a lot more complicated than I had thought previously. |