Core Muscle Strengthening in The Athlete
Core Muscle Strengthening in The Athlete
Core Muscle Strengthening in The Athlete
In the Athlete
Rotators-Global
External Rotators
Piriformis, super/inf gemellus, Obturator
internus and externus, quadratus femoris
Gluteus Max in terminal swing
Iliopsoas, sartorius, pectineus, biceps femoris
Internal Rotators
Medial hamstrings, anterior portion of gluteus
medius and tensor fascia
Pelvic Myofascial System
Three Myofascial Systems and Muscles
Thoracolumbar Lats, internal abdominal
obliques, transverse abdominus, Gluteus
max. erector spinae, multifidus
Abdominal Fascia external oblique ,
transverse abdominus. Pect major, serratus,
rectus abdominus
Fascia lata gluteus max, tensor fascia,
quads, hamstings, and hip adductors
Low Back Pain
Delayed on set of muscle activity of the
transverse abdominus with movement of a limb
in all directions
Change in transverse abdominus control occurs
irrespective of the specific pathology (motor
control not endurance or strength)
Fatigue of the paraspinal muscles is more
prevalent in low back pain patients. Elite and
highly trained athletes dysfunction of the
multifidus
Assessment of Muscle
Multifidus palpation of
asymmetry
Paraspinal muscle
strength and pelvic
stability
Bridge and single knee
extension
All fours extending
opposite arm and leg
Side lying hip raise with
knees extended
Multifidus
Quadratus/Paraspinalis
Testing Global Muscles
Manual muscle testing for hip
Abductors (leg drop test)
Extensors (knee flexed hip extended)
Adductors (eccentric loading)
Rotation of the femur (isokinetic testing or
manual muscle testing for int/ext rotn)
Joint Stability Linked thru Co-
Contraction and Co-activation
Protection of the joint from unexpected loads
Maximizing joint congruency
Equalizing pressure distribution over articular
surfaces Centering the joint
Stress absorption
Decreased reciprocal inhibition and allows
antagonistic muscles to increase tension at the
same time. Snyder-Mackle et al JBJS 1991
Exercise for active joint
stabilization
Co-contraction closed chain exercises
Use slow controlled CKC exercises
Focus on joint position rather than
control of force
Use unstable base for exercise, neutral
joint position, low force levels
No not over train co-contraction of large
torque-producing muscles
Warnings of Co-contraction