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A Kettlebell Approach to Physiotherapy
by Keith Weber, RKC
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I guess one of the things I like most
about being a physiotherapist or physical therapist is the wide
variety of treatment techniques that I have at my disposal to help
people recover from injury and optimize their performance. The true
essences of physical therapy is combining manual therapy (myofascial
release/joint manipulation) with modalities such as ultrasound and
increasingly acupuncture to create the optimal physiological environment
for healing to take place.
Of course a large component of this
process is the implementation of exercise to stabilize joints, rapidly
improve function, and particularly in athletes, to prevent future
complications relating to the initial injury once returning to activity.
Many of the methods typically used
to improve strength, flexibility, and optimal neurological coordination
have little functional carryover to sport and real world activities,
and in many cases can lead to further problems for very deconditioned
people. For example, many core stability exercises are performed
while lying on the floor, although most of our everyday activities
are performed in standing.
I remember how excited I was when
I first read Russian
Kettlebell Challenge, although I must admit it was for selfish
reasons initially. The idea of a weight-bearing exercise that would
do things like help an athlete improve strength, speed, coordination,
and cardiovascular capacity, to name only a few, was very appealing
to me for self-improvement. It wasn't until after I actually started
using the kettlebells that I realized that these are the exact things
exercise prescription for rehabilitative purposes strives to achieve.
And the fact that it happens to come in a compact form that doesn't
take up much room and is readily portable is a nice bonus.
Initially, I did an informal in-house study on people recovering
from motor vehicle accident-related (aka whiplash) injuries. What
I've always found is correcting the various bodily dysfunctions
these people incur is relatively straightforward and usually takes
6 to 8 weeks, depending on the severity of injury. The tricky
part is getting them back to level of strength they need to be at
so they can function in their everyday lives without pain without
setting them back in their recovery. The reason for this is
the fact that most people are usually in pretty bad shape before
they get hit, so even if you had them do some type of exercise that's
new to them then, you'd probably make them sore and painful. So
the challenge is to give them something worthwhile and effective,
but not too strenuous, but not too early in recovery, but not too
easy either. It would be nice if there was a formula or something,
but we all know everyone is different.
Kettlebells basically solve this problem,
as most of the basic exercises are so global that specific soreness
after using them is less of an issue. So I started teaching one
group of whiplash people the 2-arm swing and had the other group
do the regular regime of physio ball core exercises and scapular
retraction exercises on our Apex rowing machine after warming up
for 10 minutes on the treadmill. The kettlebell group usually started
with 3 sets of 10 with the 8 kg, and I had them add sets as they
felt capable. They were usually done their exercises in around
5 minutes, while the conventional exercise group took at least half
an hour. One of my pet peeves is always having to stop treating
another patient to rush out to the exercise area to get a person
to focus on the exercise and/or correct their form as most people
really don't "see the point" of the exercises and therefore
don't concentrate on the task at hand. The same was not true with
the group doing the swings, as they could feel the exercise through
their entire bodies and, despite the fact that it is such a natural
movement, really had to focus on what they were doing. Therefore
injuries did not occur, and because the exercise bouts were brief,
interest did not wane. Lo and behold, knots in the shoulders and
stiffness in the spine seemed to disappear in the kettlebellers,
while the conventional group still needed fairly intensive treatments
for problems that kept propping up well after the eight-week mark.
Further, the kettlebell group was generally more optimistic and
less miserable than the other group, probably because they were
producing natural endorphins for the first time in a long time!
Also bear in mind that I randomly selected people into the 2 groups
and did not let on what I was up to at any time.
Now that I have recently completed
Pavel's certification course, I feel like the possibilities are
even more endless in terms of using kettlebells for rehabilitation.
The one-legged deadlift is excellent for retraining proprioception
in a sprained ankle or unstable knee. Holding the starting position
of the Turkish Get Up while rotating the torso away was an excellent
technique for simultaneously strengthening and stretching the rotator
cuff/shoulder complex. The windmill performed with the top arm unloaded
while lifting the kettlebell from the ankle is proving to be awesome
for weak low backs. Also since the course, I've really kept an eye
on how most people breathe, and sure enough, most of us have forgotten
how to use our diaghragms. The mere act of teaching a person
how to breathe in their belly rather than with their intercostals
seems to be solving a lot of chronically tight shoulder problems.
The long-held belief of "drawing the belly-button in "
to engage the transversus abdominus muscles to stabilize the low
back is no longer advised at our clinic.
My only regret now is the massive
amount of money I've wasted on the shiny, high-tech gym apparatus
that sits lonely, neglected, and abandoned right in the middle of
an otherwise useful area of the clinic. I think I'll keep it there
beside my row of scuffed and grass-stained kettlebells sort of as
a reminder of how the more things change, the more things stay the
same.
Keith Weber is a certified kettlebell instructor based in Red
Deer, Alberta. He is also an excellent physiotherapist who amazed
the attendees of the RKC seminar with his amazing healing abilities.
He may be contacted at
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All rights reserved. No reproduction without consent of the original author.
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