Recently alot runner injury, and they think they are doctor tat can diagnostic themself from all the date they found from internet....Maybe the information that we get is correct, but the injury at our body is different. Because Computer dint had and scanner that scan our body. So i came across this articles from runnerworld.com
What hurts? Shins
You think: Shinsplints
But it could be: A Stress Fracture
The Difference: The pain strikes the same lower-leg area.
However, shinsplints pain lessens as you warm up, while stress-fracture
pain continues through the end of a run, says John DiFiori, M.D., team
physician at UCLA. Stress-fracture pain often feels deep and radiates
over a wide area, and weight-bearing activities increase the discomfort,
says Clint Verran, a 2:14-marathoner and physical therapist in Lake
Orion, Michigan. "If you're unsure, or if symptoms don't go away in
three weeks, get a bone scan to rule out a stress fracture," Verran
says.
What hurts? Knees
You think: "Runner's Knee"
But it could be: Iliotibial Band Syndrome
The Difference: The iliotibial band (ITB) is connective tissue
that runs from your hip to your knee. "A tight IT band can cause
friction along the outside of your knee, which is why it feels like a
knee problem," Verran says. "I've seen people get surgery for a meniscus
tear and the doctor gets in there and realizes there's no tear." If
it's ITB syndrome, then running downhill, lengthening your stride, and
keeping your knee in a bent position for extended periods will
exacerbate your symptoms. Stretching to loosen the band can help resolve
the problem.
What hurts? Lower Back
You think: Back Injury
But it could be: A Piriformis Strain
The Difference: "The piriformis muscle is deep in the hip region,
next to the sciatic nerve," Verran says. "If it becomes strained and
goes into spasm, it can mimic a lower-back injury." Often piriformis
strains happen when you're putting in a lot of mileage on hard surfaces.
The pain usually centers around the gluteal region and gets worse with
prolonged sitting. A doctor or physical therapist can differentiate
between sciatica and piriformis syndrome by stretching your piriformis
muscle and conducting range-of-motion tests. The good news: Piriformis
injuries tend to respond well to physical therapy.
What hurts? Sinuses, neck, random body parts
You think: A persistent cold or a few nagging injuries
But it could be: Overtraining Syndrome
The Difference: Push your body beyond its ability to recover, and
it will start to break down, a phenomena that exercise physiologists
call overtraining syndrome. The problem is that every runner's body has
its own breaking point, and the warning signs are easy to brush aside.
Look for a cascading effect, says Kristen Dieffenbach, Ph.D., an
exercise scientist and athletic coaching education professor at West
Virginia University. "It's a chain of events," she says. "You had one
thing and now it's two and then three." Overtraining actually results
from too little recovery, which can happen even at low mileage. "You're
run down, so you keep getting colds and little aches and pains,"
Dieffenbach says. Other symptoms include moodiness, depression, a dip in
performance, trouble sleeping, and persistent fatigue. The cure: rest
and recovery.
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