myPTpro Knowledge Base - Sport Performance

IlioTibial Band Syndrome (ITB Syndrome)

The iliotibial band is an important, yet easy to aggravate, structure in the leg.  The band itself is a very thick, fibrous tissue that arises from two main muscles in the hip, the gluteus maximus and the tensor fascia lata.  There are two bony areas in what people refer to as 'the hip.'  The pelvis is made up of two bones, a right and a left ilium (read, il-e-um), that come together in the back and attach to the sacrum.  The top of the ilium on the outside is just below the ribs.  Just below the bony part is where these muscles attach.  These muscles work to move the leg backward and outward when the leg is swinging and they stabilize the pelvis on the leg when standing or weight bearing.  Their attachments to the iliotibial band come together around the other bony part, the greater trochanter, which can be felt on the side at about the level of your side pants pockets.  

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Goals

Goals are not necessary but they do provide a framework to design and build your program upon.  Goals provide you with not only a direction but a magnitude. Saying you want to drive north for a vacation doesn't give you much, other than a direction.  Deciding you would like to travel north, 467 miles to a nice resort town for a 4-day stay, stopping at 246 miles in a quaint town with a nice bed and breakfast on the way to your vacation destination is a simple example of having a goal and creating a plan on how to achieve your goal.

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Specific Adaptation to Imposed Demand

The SAID principle should be taken into consideration by most everyone when developing an exercise routine or rehab program.  Click on the heading to read some of the FAQs on this topic.

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Sport Performance

Sport Performance is a process that you typically see in the sports world but is actually applied in many circumstances to non-athletes as well.  It starts with a very detailed evaluation of muscle length, strength and motor control and then assesses the ability of the body to put all these pieces together in the performance of a skill or activity.  For most people, a two-tenths of a second improvement in their 40 yard dash isn’t going to be noticed.  But, for an athlete, it could mean the difference between making the team or not, starting or sitting on the bench an

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