PFPS

Knee bone connected to the…?

Knee bone connected to the…?

Esther Gokhale
Date

Josephine Baker dances the Charleston
Josephine Baker dances the Charleston

The "knee bone" IS connected to the "thigh bone," but the knee and gluteus medias ALSO connect
The knee bone is "connected"
to the gluteus medius

 Can you sing "Dem Dry Bones"? If you don't know the spiritual by name, I bet you can intone at least some of the lyrics:

…the foot bone's connected to the leg bone, the leg bone's connected to the knee bone, the knee bone's connected to the thigh bone...

Beyond the direct structural connection between the "knee bone," or patella, and the "thigh bone," or femur, is another connection that will be of particular interest to athletes and other individuals afflicted with or susceptible to patellar femoral pain syndrome (PFPS), a disorder often referred to as "runner's knee." And this is the connection between the knee and the gluteus medius, the muscles situated above and toward the outer sides of the much larger gluteus maximus muscles. 

How to locate the gluteus medias
How to locate the gluteus medius

 

If you read my Samba Your Way to Beautiful Glutes post or joined my Samba webinar in November, you'll know how to locate these paired muscles, and you'll appreciate at least some of what they do. (If you'd benefit from a refresher, click and scroll through the Samba post, where you'll find a 6-point list.) 

 Gluteus medius muscles, pelvic anteversion, and knee health

Baby sitting on legs
This Burkina baby was patterned to
externally rotate his legs as he was
carried on his mother's back

According to modern conventional wisdom, it's considered normal for young children to have inward-turning knees, which are expected to straighten out by about age 7. What I've observed in village Africa and other nonindustrial cultures is that because children are carried on their caregivers' hips and backs, children's legs are externally rotated from the very youngest ages.

In contrast, in the US and other modern industrial cultures, the  internal rotation of the legs is often maintained into adulthood. 

Weak gluteus medias muscles can cause knees to turn inInternally rotated legs
are common in modern
industrial cultures, even
in adulthood

Because the gluteus medius muscles are external leg rotators, strengthening these muscles can counter internal leg rotation, helping  the kneecaps to align and track better. (To check the tracking of your patella, sit down, place your palm over one of your knees, and then flex your leg to feel and follow the triangular kneecap glide up and down along the end of your femur.) Strong gluteus medius muscles are important because people whose "glute mēds" are underdeveloped are at increased risk of knee and other lower-limb injuries, including patellafemoral pain syndrome. Preventing PFPS, or managing its painful symptoms if the problem has already occurred, are just a couple of reasons why--when you stand, walk, and run--you want to use your glute meds and externally rotate your legs.

There are more connections than meet the eye
In addition to promoting knee health, external leg rotation 
also facilitates an anteverted pelvic position and a
well-stacked spine

Gluteal muscle activity and patellofemoral pain syndrome (PFPS)

Votive relief for the cure of an injured knee, 100-200 AD, Melos
Knee pain is nothing new; this Greek votive
relief for the cure of an injured knee
dates back to 100-200 AD

If you've ever felt a dull, aching pain under or around your kneecap where it connects with the lower end of your femur, you may have experienced patellar femoral pain, especially if the pain occurred when you were sitting for a long stretch of time with your knees bent, or you were kneeling, squatting, or walking up or down stairs.

And, if you have been diagnosed with PFPS, you're not alone. Gluteal Muscle Activity and Patellofemoral Pain Syndrome--A Systematic Review, which was published earlier this year in the British Journal of Sports Medicine, confirms the connection between the knee and the gluteus medius. By synthesizing electromyography (EMG) measurements of the gluteus medius muscles during a range of functional tasks as reported in 10 case-controlled studies, all of which evaluated EMG activity of the gluteus medius, the authors strove to elucidate the relationship between gluteal muscle activity and PFPS. Among their observations and conclusions:

In a nutshell, if we have good strength in our gluteus medias muscles, our knees will be in better shape
In a nutshell, if you have good strength in your gluteus medius
muscles, your knees will be in better shape.

  • Patellofemoral pain syndrome is one of the most common presentations to sports medicine practitioners; of 2500 presentations to sports medicine clinics 25% of all injuries were PFPS
  • Individuals with PFPS exhibit reduced gluteus medius and gluteus maximus muscle strength
  • Growing evidence supports the efficacy of gluteal muscle strengthening for PFPS and gluteal-muscle strengthening programs have been associated with positive clinical outcomes

Walking is connected to healthy knees

Walking is something most of us do a lot, although according to the 2010 study Pedometer-Measured Physical Activity and Health Behaviors in US Adultsthe 5,117 steps Americans typically take each day are not enough--and in fact represent thousands fewer steps than those taken by our counterparts in Australia (9,695 steps), Switzerland (9,650 steps), and Japan (7,168 steps). But even if  we step just 5,000 times a day, if we engage our gluteus medius muscles with each step, that's still a lot of repetitions to help "re-architecture" our legs and minimize the risk of PFPS. 

Ancient Greek coin features Apollo (with anteverted pelvis!) and stag           
Ancient Greek coin features Apollo (with anteverted pelvis!                      

The pelvis serves as our postural foundation, and one of the keystones for healthy postures is to allow the pelvis to be anteverted. When your pelvis is anteverted and your "behind is out behind you," then the whole pack of muscles that includes the hamstrings, the gluteus maximus, and the gluteus medias can work to advantage, strengthening themselves, inducing circulation in the appropriate places, and bearing stress.

 

Eadward Muybridge human male walking
Eadweard Muybridge's 'human male walking'
demonstrates
strong gluteal action
in the rear leg

 

In Muybridge's model we see the interconnectedness between external leg rotation, pelvic anteversion, and strong gluteus medius action
This rear view of the
subject above shows his
healthy external leg
rotation

 

Beyond this, the relationship between external leg rotation, pelvic anteversion, and the action of the gluteus medius is cyclic. In order for the gluteus medius to be in a position of mechanical advantage, some degree of pelvic anteversion is required. And, if we are to believe the observations summarized in the British Journal of Sports Medicine review, strong gluteus medius action relates to a diminished risk of PFPS.

The interconnectedness between external leg rotation, pelvic anteversion, and strong gluteus medius action is beautifully illustrated in the detail of Muybridge's "animal locomotion" photo and "film" to the right. 

"Dem Dry Bones"

Bottom line, the knee bone is connected to the thigh bone, but it's also connected to the gluteus medius, and this is a fairly direct connection because these paired muscles externally rotate the legs. Finally--not just because the lyrics are right on point with this lesson, but because he plays and sings so artfully and with such a great sense of fun--I hope you'll listen to Fats Waller's wonderful take on "Dem Dry Bones." 

 

Join us in an upcoming Free Workshop (online or in person).  

Find a Foundations Course in your area to get the full training on the Gokhale Method!  

We also offer in person or online Initial Consultations with any of our qualified Gokhale Method teachers.

 

Image Credits: Josephine Baker Dances the Charleston, Wikimedia Commons; The Bath, Charles Degas, Wikimedia Commons, Public Domain; How to Locate the Gluteus Medius, Esther Gokhale; X-ray of "Knock Knee," Biomed Central, Wikipedia; The Spinal Cord, Bruce Blaus, Wikimedia Commons; Greek Votive Relief Knee Injury, Marie-Lan Nguyen, Blacas Collection, Wikimedia Commons; Female Jogger, Mike Baird, Creative Commons; Human Male Walking (animation), Eadweard Muybridge, Wikimedia Commons; Animal Locomotion, Eadward Muybridge, Wikimedia Commons;  AncientGreek Coin: Classical Numismatic Group, Inc, Wikimedia Commons

Samba your way to beautiful glutes

Samba your way to beautiful glutes

Esther Gokhale
Date

 

Why Samba?

Apart from the fun, the exercise, and the infectious music that's central to this Brazilian dance form, I endorse Samba as a way to promote healthy posture. Among the many benefits, dancing Samba:

  • Involves a lot of lateral motion and hip mobility, something especially needed in our culture, where so many of us tend to move mostly forward and backward and not so much from side to side.
  • Engages the gluteal muscles, including the gluteus medius, which--though vitally important to so many kinds of natural movements--are underdeveloped or even "fast asleep" in too many people throughout the developed world.

If  you're still not persuaded to join our online Samba workshop, watch even just a couple of minutes of this 4-minute video, and I'll wager that many of you will accept my invitation to dance.

Samba de Roda

What you just saw was a marvelous demonstration of Samba de Roda, or "Samba in the round," which features solo dancers surrounded by musicians and other dancers, singing and clapping and sequentially inviting others to take their turn. An aspect of this form of Samba that holds special appeal as the basis for a training workshop is that learning involves a great deal of observation and imitation, and that those with relatively less skill are among those in the circle invited to join in. Also appealing is the fact that not only are the dancers' feet, calves, legs, hips, and abdomens constantly working, their gluteus medius muscles are also fully engaged. So much so, that before we start dancing I'd like to highlight this important pair of muscles.

To engage, or not to engage (the gluteus medius)...

...can there be any question?

Even when considered from the pure-vanity standpoint of having an attractive, perky derriere, my guess is that most of us would favor the Ubong tribesmen's gluteus medius muscles, which can easily be seen in the upper, outer quadrant of their buttocks just below their cloth belts, to the less distinctive gluteus medius muscles in the photo below.

What accounts for this "flat butt" look is the fact that these important muscles are underdeveloped and have not been adequately used.

What are the gluteus medius and why develop them?

The gluteus medius play an essential role in all kinds of natural movement, including walking, glidewalking, running, and samba dancing. In particular, these muscles:

  • Help keep the pelvis level on the hip joint of the weight-bearing leg. (Without the gluteus medius, we would take a step and your pelvis would sink to one side.)
  • Are essential to holding the pelvis in the anteverted, or tipped forward, position. (This is essential because the pelvis serves as our architectural foundation; when it is inappropriately tucked in, the rest of the body cannot properly stack, and pain problems may ensue.)
  • Are essential to gait and facilitate "soft landings" when we walk. (Unlike our hunter-gatherer ancestors who lightly, quietly tread when hunting prey, too many of us thump around causing damage to our structures.)

The gluteus medius are shown in red

The gluteus medius are shown in red

A couple of other reasons, which we will only touch on here, but will explore in future posts, relate to two painful disorders that arise, at least in part, out of underdeveloped or suboptimally performing gluteus medius muscles:

In a nutshell, a growing body of evidence indicates that gluteal medius health strongly correlates to knee health. If you have good strength in your gluteus medius, your knees will be in better shape, and PFPS is less likely to afflict you. Similarly, if your pelvis is appropriately oriented and your gluteus medius muscles are doing their job, the pyriformis muscles, which lie directly beneath gluteus medius, won't have to pick up inappropriate load and, due to suboptimal orientation and / or hypertrophy, impinge on the sciatic nerve, which exits the pelvis just underneath.One technique to engage the gluteus medius is to raise your leg back and up and out with the foot in an L-shaped position

One technique to locate the gluteus medius is to raise your leg back and up and turned out

How to locate and engage your gluteus medius and practice basic Samba steps

  1. Identify your gluteus medius as shown in the above photo. Once you feel where this muscle is, step away from the chair.
  2. Now, take a small step back with your right leg, press your heel into the ground, straighten your right leg, and squeeze the gluteus medius muscle in the upper, outer quadrant of your buttock until you can feel with your hand how hard it is.
  3. When your right gluteus medius is engaged, hold this position for a beat.
  4. Return to your starting position by moving your right leg forward.
  5. Now, go through the same motions with your left leg.
  6. Practice these steps, alternating right and left legs, until the squeezing of your gluteus medius becomes natural and familiar.

Samba_Engages_Gluteus_Medias

 

Samba steps teleseminar

A fun and helpful way to prepare for the teleseminar on Monday, October 21, 2013, is to watch one or more of the following Samba YouTubes, each highlighting slightly different aspects and methods. What's really helpful about this first video is that the dancer starts with pre-Samba steps, emphasizing the side to side movement of the hips. Keep in mind that there are many varieties of Samba, and that this dancer demonstrates just one style. My only cautionary note about this demonstration and the one that immediately follows is that the dancers slightly arch their upper lumbar regions in a way that's not ideal.

 

Apart from the occasional sound of wind in the microphone, the second video is worth watching because it offers another lesson in the basic Samba step--this time with music.

 

The third video also highlights a very basic Samba step very similar to the one just above, but the dancer does so without swaying her back. Another nice feature of this video is that the dancer varies the speed of the Samba steps, starting slowly and then picking up the pace to the point where the Samba becomes attractive.

 

Because some of you might be inspired by pure music, I also suggest that if time permits you check out some of my favorite Sambistas:

And if you join me for our Samba steps teleseminar, I'll share some of these favorites with you.

 

Photo and Video Credits: Samba de Roda YouTube: pousadamorrodesaopaulo.net Ubong Tribesmen: Esther Gokhale Gluteus Medius Anatomical Drawing: Wikimedia Commons Esther Engages Her Gluteus Medius: Gokhale Method Institute Samba Dancer: Wikimedia Commons Samba Steps Youtube: sambabody.com Learn Samba with Gianne Abbot: Bella Moda Brazil Basic Samba Footwork: Michele Bastos

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