|
|
![]() |
|
| Avoid the temptation of trying to return to training too early because the No. 1 goal of recovering from injury is to make the injured muscle stronger and more flexible than before the injury occurred. If this goal isn’t achieved, the chance of the injury striking again is very high. |
What happens next?
Depending on the severity of the injury, you should initially allow a minimum period of three days recovery for the inflammation to subside. After three days, rehabilitation can begin, following a programme which will include:
Stretching exercises
Stretching should begin gradually, carried out ‘little and often’ on warm muscles, which will gradually stretch the repairing muscle fibres and return the muscle to better then pre-injury levels of flexibility.
Sports massage
A valuable tool to employ with your recovery, a sports therapist will be able to specifically target the damaged tissues, flush out waste products, remove knots and adhesions and align the repairing muscle fibres.
Fitness maintenance training
Whilst the original activity is suspended, alternative sports should be tried to maintain fitness.
For example: to maintain cardiovascular fitness whilst injured, a runner might train in the swimming pool.
Conditioning training
A structured programme of rehabilitation exercises should be followed to strengthen the weakened muscle. The target should be to end the programme with the muscle stronger than before the injury occurred, so that the problem will not recur.
Activity replication training
As recovery continues, the gradual introduction of activities that mimic the movements and loading in the chosen sport can be progressively introduced until the original activity can be resumed.
Return to full activity
The final stage in the recovery process involves building up to pre-injury levels through actually carrying out the activity itself.
For example: a runner running 40 miles per week before injury would gradually build their mileage back to this level, rather than going from nil to full mileage in a single week.
And on and on and on . . .
Finally, once you have returned to full training, it is vitally important that you continue with the conditioning and flexibility exercises that you carried out as part of your rehabilitation. That is your best insurance policy against the injury recurring and ‘Help! – I’m injured’ will be a thing of the past.

![]() |