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Strength or resistance training involves much more than simply going to the gym a couple times a week. As health professionals, it is crucial we understand the scientific rationale and clinical application of exercise prescription in strength training to successfully guide our patients through their rehabilitation.
In fact, resistance training is more about the design of the program than the exercises themselves. Recent evidence highlighting the clinical significance of concepts such as load management and periodisation emphasise this point.
In our experience, the idea of strength training can make some patients (and health professionals) apprehensive. However, the risk of aggravating an injury must be balanced with the risk of prolonging a patient’s deconditioned state.
When discussing with a patient their goals following injury, one of the most common statements we hear is “what can I do to prevent this happening again?’.
Thankfully these days our answer is both simple and evidence based – improve your strength.
It would be wonderful if getting stronger was an easy process. Though the exercises or dosages need not be complicated, gaining strength requires some effort. The American College of Sports Medicine suggests exercise intensity of greater than 70% 1 rep max is required to elicit a neuromuscular response. This is one reason why walking won’t elicit the strength gains needed during rehabilitation, nor will exercises that generally feel easy to complete. However, a program that considers the injury and progresses the load appropriately can lead to significant strength gains.
As such, we would encourage all patients to consider introducing a suitable resistance training program into their rehabilitation for these three reasons:
A recent systematic review using data from 1545 rehabilitation patients demonstrated that strength training ‘can be used successfully with several musculoskeletal injuries, in particular those of the chronic varieties’ (Kristensen and Franklin-Miller, 2012).
Resistance training improved functional outcomes in chronic low back pain, knee osteoarthritis, chronic tendinopathy and post hip replacement patients (Kristensen and Franklin-Miller, 2012).
Other studies have shown that a structured resistance training program can reduce pain and improve function in other musculoskeletal presentations such as neck pain (Gross, 2015), groin pain (Jensen, 2012), shoulder pain (Andersen, 2014) and also osteoporosis (Gomez-Cabello, 2012). So not many of you wouldn’t benefit from more reps.
A recent systematic review using data from over 26000 patients showed that ‘strength training reduced sports injuries to less than a third’ and suggested that strength training may also halve overuse injuries (Lauersen et al, 2014). Not a bad justification to add a structure resistance training program into your patient’s management.
When we started using strength training as a treatment tool, we had to consider what would help patient compliance. Some patients where already members of a gym and had access to a wide range of machines and weights. However, most did not, nor were they initially likely to invest in a gym membership.
Thankfully resistance training doesn’t need to involve large weights, squat racks, benches or sweaty mats in a gym with blaring music. The benefit we have as health professionals in the delivery of resistance training is that our clients are generally starting from a low base. Therefore, in order to provide the appropriate dosage to elicit the physiological response, body weight is ideal in many cases. Further resistance, can be added with a resistance and power bands. Not only are they easy to store and transport, they are incredible versatile and quite affordable.
In our experience, only bodyweight exercises with a few bands for added resistance is perfect for the first 1-4 weeks of many rehabilitation based strength training program. Keeping things simple makes it easier for clients to continue at home independently (before getting them into the gym).