Biceps Femoris

General discussions about getting and staying fit that don't relate directly to your indoor rower
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kayakr
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Biceps Femoris

Post by kayakr » December 13th, 2014, 7:29 pm

Hi, I'm a middle aged somewhat sporadic rower (depends on the seasons). I seem to get trouble with one of my biceps femoralis with rowing at the bone insertion on the back and side slightly below the knee. I row strapless and am working on being careful with some warmup and avoiding extremes of flexion and extension (past shins straight or totally straightening the knees).

I'm looking for further suggestions on how to avoid aggravating or rehabing this area. The "Standing High-leg Bent Knee Hamstring Stretch" looks like good start when combined with glute and quad stretches. http://injuryfix.com/archives/stretches-rowing.php Perhaps I should try to further limit flexion or try slides, but I hate taking up that much room. I'm thinking about whether I should try to avoid as much hip flexion on the catch (my shins are straight but I keep my back straight and usually it halts my catch as my chest is on my quads) but I'm afraid of rounding my back.

heroesfitness
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Re: Biceps Femoris

Post by heroesfitness » December 23rd, 2014, 10:46 am

kayakr wrote:Hi, I'm a middle aged somewhat sporadic rower (depends on the seasons). I seem to get trouble with one of my biceps femoralis with rowing at the bone insertion on the back and side slightly below the knee. I row strapless and am working on being careful with some warmup and avoiding extremes of flexion and extension (past shins straight or totally straightening the knees).

I'm looking for further suggestions on how to avoid aggravating or rehabing this area. The "Standing High-leg Bent Knee Hamstring Stretch" looks like good start when combined with glute and quad stretches. http://injuryfix.com/archives/stretches-rowing.php Perhaps I should try to further limit flexion or try slides, but I hate taking up that much room. I'm thinking about whether I should try to avoid as much hip flexion on the catch (my shins are straight but I keep my back straight and usually it halts my catch as my chest is on my quads) but I'm afraid of rounding my back.
Maybe tproblem is with your adductor and not your hamstring ??? Go and see a physio to get more accurate information for rehab
Hi I am Spencer. I have a black belt in kung fu and a qualified sports nutritionist, I enjoy core fitness training, golf, cricket and snooker.http://www.heroesfitness.co.uk/

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