Don’t Delay Your Recovery
Traditional Rehabilitation Leverage Methods Explained
Muscles in Your Own Leg (Leg slide) -This is probably one of the most well known knee replacement physical therapy exercises-sitting in a chair and attempting to slide your leg back as far as possible. This is the poorest leverage available secondary to the weakness that usually exists in the leg prior to surgery. Limitations: need for slick flooring surface.
Self-Assist Other Leg-This is similar to the stretch above except that it uses the non-surgical leg to assist the bend . Legs do not have as much fine motor control as the arms, and some people have trouble controlling the amount of force applied. Limitations: non-surgical leg is bad, bilateral surgery.
Sheet/Strap on your Stomach or Back-Lying on your back or stomach and using a sheet or strap to help pull the leg into flexion is another exercise after total knee replacement. Limitations: need a bed or ability to get up/down off the floor easily and safely, measurement.
Stool/Staircase-Stepping up onto a stool or a staircase and leaning forward will force a bend in the knee. Limitations: need equipment, staircase with a railing that is safe, balance, measurement.
Another Person-A physical therapist applies force to bend the knee for you or with your assistance. Limitations: very easy to over-do with resulting setback, availability vente de viagra sur internet.
Gym Equipment (Nu-step)-Equipment used in a physical therapy rehab setting that allows for a gradual increase of range that can be dialed out. Limitations: access.
Self-Assist Arms-Lying face up on the floor or bed and using your arms to assist the bending movement of your knee. Limitations: not for early stages of recovery, measurement.
Bike-Using a bike pedal and other leg to force a knee bend on the post-surgical side. Limitations: difficult to control force applied, easy to over-do.
The following infographic is a pictorial representation showing the weaknesses and strengths of each technique. The rating system is my own, developed over 20 years of practice.
As you can see, The F.L.EX bar is rated the highest of all the stretching techniques because it solves the majority of the problems associated with the other methods. The F.L.EX bar was designed specifically with your needs in mind. (Click on image to enlarge)
Feel free to share this infographic with friends and neighbors as well as on Facebook, Twitter and other websites.
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The F.L.EX Bar is everything needed in a leverage system.
• Portable
• Convenient to Use
• Safe
• Measurable
• Precision Control
I hope you can see how a portable leverage tool that is easy to use in any room in the house or in any office in an upright position can offer massive value to the post-op surgical patient!
Traditional Feedback Methods Explained
The physical therapist uses a tool called a goniometer to measure your progress at regular intervals. As we learned from part II of this series, not having access to your own feedback system can case massive delays and wasted time and effort. Fortunately there is a better way.
Tune in next to find out whether the rehab industry is really being honest about the effectiveness of their treatment programs?
If you missed the first two articles in the series you can find them here
Already know you want a fast start on your recovery?
Watch Part One of the Video Series: How To Speed Up Recovery After a Knee Replacement
Watch Part Two of the Video Series: The Number 1 Reason for Slow Recovery
Watch Part Four of the Video Series: Is the Rehab Industry Being Honest About the Effectiveness of Their Treatment Methods
4 replies to "Traditional Stretching Methods Could Prolong Your Knee Replacement Recovery!"
I am 10 months in on tkr, and still have 110 degrees at most. Still stretching several times daily…. Knee is constantly stiff and sore, Am I stretching too much?
One PT stretched me three times per week till I had to scream out loud and beg him to stop. is this acceptable?
Thank you.
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Hi Paul,
Stretching into pain is couterproductive. There are three levels of stretching mild, medium and spicy. After spicy comes pain. The trick is to get into spicy so that you make progress but not into pain. The way this is accomoplished is to use some sort of a marking system that can track your progress. I explain this in the book. It is very easy to think you are stretching into new range but in fact you are just regaining the old range over and over again. This will tend to happen especially if you are experiencing swelling. You do the stretching, drive the swelling out but are only back to where you started before the swelling crept in. This is why people feel like they are on a treadmill. I would stretch 4 x a day and mark your progress whether you are measuring the feet of the flex bar or toe with heel slides etc. This way there is no doubt about getting into new range. If you don’t make progress with that there may be some other issue.
I had my knee replacement 3 weeks ago and I was doing my stretching and did not feel anything abnormal, but a couple hours later the top of the knee swelled up now I can’t even do anything. Help, could I have wrecked my knee
Daniel
In my experience, most cases such as you describe eventually resolve themselves and do not result in lasting harm to the knee, though they are very scary and frustrating because your progress is really slowed down and recovery stalls. Most issues do resolve with only anti-inflammatories, ice and relative rest (some activities may need to avoided or restricted, others can be continued in some cases, that all depends on the injury)