Saturday, August 16, 2008

Dissecting and getting past an IT band injury

Back in April, I had an IT band injury on my left leg. Iliotibial band (or better known as "IT band") syndrome creates a stinging sensation typically on the outside of the knee. I decided to rest and let it heal--an excellent idea.

As we runners tend to self-diagnose and self-treat, I decided to stay with the pack and dissect the underlying issue that caused the IT band injury in the first place.

Here's what I came up with:
  1. It happened not too long after starting to run post-marathon.
  2. Post-marathon runs were more exploratory. I ran roads that I had never run before because I was bored with the standard routes.
  3. Most of those routes had hills--BIG hills.
  4. I ran the hills too fast because I had tended to just muscle through the hills and push through the fatigue.
Once I stopped running hills too fast, the injury went away. I tried using an IT band wrap, but it didn't help at all.

How do I know that the hills were the culprit? I ran in Ireland with a much faster friend and we ran up hills much faster than I should have. The result? IT band problems. How did they go away? Stop running hills so darn fast.

For those of you with IT band issues, Rice University has a nice page with an explanation of the syndrome and suggested stretches to combat it.

2 comments:

  1. Great, thanks for posting! I'm sure someone else may find this useful, not only in diagnosing their own IT band problem but realizing that such things can be caused by a combo of things (i.e., physical but also environmental and speed-related).

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  2. You know you're right - at least for me. Knee and ITB are always tightly linked (hoho) and I was just thinking of racing this weekend but the only one I can still enter is a hilly one - so I'm not going to do it. I will bide my time..

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