Train with Pain with Dr. Nathan Dailey
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- Опубликовано: 17 ноя 2024
- In this episode, Mike Tuchscherer and Gaby Muller welcome Dr. Nathan Dailey, a renowned physical therapist with a background in the U.S. Army for an in-depth conversation on pain, rehabilitation, and return to sport. Dr. Dailey, known for his evidence-based approach and extensive clinical experience, discusses the complexities of pain science, the importance of an evidence-based triad model, and the need for a holistic understanding of rehabilitation and training.
This episode provides valuable insights for athletes, coaches, and anyone interested in the latest perspectives on pain and rehabilitation strategies. For more information on Reactive Training Systems and to join the RTS Training Lab for access to office hours with Dr. Nathan and other features, visit store.reactivetrainingsystems.com.
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Mike's injury sounds very similar to the issue I was having with my glute/hip for about a year. I thought that there might have been some correlation with squat depth so I played around with squatting with chains and squatting to a high box, but I wasn't gaining any traction progressing those variations without causing flair ups.
It did wind up being the "spinal sheer" scale that was the most productive tool for getting things better. Early on, I had tried out high bar squats and was still having flair ups. But eventually I got around to front squats and, whether it was from the upright posture or that enough time had passed, I was able to train that lift and make progress. Then high bar started feeling good and eventually I was able to low bar squat again.
That's not to say that "spinal sheer" is inherently bad or anything, but it was a useful way of thinking about different movements and ordering them to get back to training the movement I wanted.
I've got a similar thing, I can currently train front squats as hard as I like, but high rpe back squats and deadlifts are still off the table. How did you get deadlifts back?
I'm italian, huge thanks for the subtitols!
Great podcast - I thoroughly enjoyed this topic since I deal with various soft tissue pain almost constantly. I really wish I could find a local practitioner who is keyed into athletes and their challenges/needs.