Knee pain is typically located right below the kneecap, which is known as patellar tendon pain or tendinopathy. When that pain persists, the pro you seek out will usually prescribe exercises for it – ones in which the lowering (eccentric) phase is emphasized. But these movements are often painful to perform and have even been known to exacerbate the pain. There's a better solution, one that immediately relieves angry knees.
Isometrics (tension without movement) target the muscles and tendons surrounding the area under the patella, where the knee pain occurs. It doesn't just make the area feel better the moment you do it, it allows you to train or compete pain-free.
If you can take the time to rehab, then the eccentric knee exercises your doc prescribes should be your first choice. If not, give this a shot.
Researchers actually investigated the two different methods that might immediately reduce patellar tendon pain: isometric and isotonic exercises. Remember, isometric exercise is where force is applied with no change in muscle length (e.g. trying to push the wall of your house). Isotonic exercise is characterized by having a concentric and eccentric phase (upwards and downwards, like a squat).
The subjects were six male volleyball athletes diagnosed with patellar tendinopathy. They had pain just below the kneecap while jumping, landing, and even doing the activities prescribed to relieve the knee pain.
What did the study find? Isometric exercise significantly reduced pain and pain alleviation was sustained for 45 minutes post isometric exercise. Isotonic exercise resulted in pain relief too, but it wasn't sustained as long.
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