Better Ways to Lunge, Run, and Hit the Quads
Here's what you need to know...
The leg extension machine stresses out the knees. Use blood
flow restriction training to increase its efficacy by creating cumulative
stress in the muscle using less weigh.
Standard lunges cause knee pain for many. Either use
stationary lunges or reverse lunges to remove stress from the knee and activate
the glutes.
Running is hard on the knees. Swap it for incline treadmill
walking or add variety using sprints and Fartlek-style running.
If the exercises you love are wrecking your body, swap them
out. Or at least be open minded enough to try these modifications. Here are
three swaps for the most notorious knee-crushing exercises.
1 – Leg Extensions
The leg extension machine has been demonized in the fitness
industry for the last two decades. It's accused of creating chronic knee
irritation by creating highly compressive forces at the patella-femoral joint,
leading to breakdown of the joint surfaces. It's even called out by coaches,
physical therapists, and biomechanists because it's an "open chain"
exercise unlike a squat or deadlift.
These are all valid points, but the leg extension is also
responsible for helping build some of the most impressive quads in
bodybuilding. It continues to be a staple in many programs because it produces
results for those wanting muscular hypertrophy. So what's the answer if you
want tree trunks for legs AND knee health? Modification. And maybe even
replacing it with something to protect the knees for the long haul.
A Better Exercise – Rear Foot Elevated Split Squat
While fatiguing muscular fibers in the quads is guaranteed
on the leg extension machine, that same recruitment can be possible through
split stance loaded variations such as the lunge or split squat. If you've
proved the ability to dominate a static split squat and earned the right to
progress, try the rear foot elevated split squat.
2 – The Alternating Forward Lunge
The lunge is a foundational exercise, but the most popular
variation – the alternating forward lunge – is the most butchered. A rule of
thumb is to never load (use weights) during a dysfunctional movement pattern.
But many people don't have the ability to complete a single bodyweight lunge
with proper mechanics. And in a society that views more as better, that shitty
form becomes even more heinous when loads are introduced.
A lack of hip and core stability translates into valgus
(collapsed) knee positions, increased degrees of anterior translation of the
knee extending over the foot, and the use of momentum and compensation creating
unstable shear forces through the spine, hips, and just about every other joint
in the body. The smart thing to do is fix your form. And if you depend on the
lunge to round out an epic leg day, there's a simple movement modification to
help you keep lunging without the unwanted compressional stress on the knee
cap.
A Better Exercise – Static Split Squat
The forward lunge is a dynamic movement meaning that the
foot stepping ahead requires movement to step, complete the lunge, and return
back to neutral. Any dynamic movement that's just begging for injury can be
simplified into a static variation. The static split squat is a good
replacement for the forward lunge until you earn the right to progress once
again.
Static split squat
Place your feet in a split stance, hip width apart. If your
position is sound, you'll be able to drop down to the floor in a half-kneeling
position and your hips and knees will create 90-degree angles. From this
position, stay on one leg in non-alternating fashion and complete sets of
full-range split squats. This will target the same musculature of the dynamic
forward lunge but keep compensation and poor technique to a minimum.
If you find yourself struggling to keep your balance, then
adding a dynamic component isn't the right variation for you. Go inside a rack
or up against a wall and monitor your balance with your fingertips, enhancing
your balance each session, ultimately working your way back to free standing.
How to Keep the Alternating Lunge, If You Must
The reverse lunge will activate the posterior chain
musculature significantly more than its forward counterpart. It will achieve a
slightly (10-15 degree) higher front side hip flexion angle when the lunge is
completed in split stance position.
The reverse lunge:
This higher hip flexion angle will allow the rectus femoris
(a quad muscle in your thigh) to be slightly slackened when the back foot is
placed behind the front and when you're doing the eccentric portion of the
lunge. Without the strain from this muscle, the patella is more likely to
respond favorably to the training forces through the quads rather than the
strain on non-contractile tissues such as the patellar ligaments and fascia on
the front side of the knee.
By moving through the reverse variation of this exercise,
you'll be able to train the quads and legs just as effectively as the forward
version, minus the chronic stress and poor positions. And anyways, who doesn't
need a little extra booty emphasis on leg day? That's a win-win.
3 – Running
If you're a runner, you're either one of two people: A
natural born runner with impeccable gait mechanics, or a pretender who's
slogged through just enough miles to call yourself a runner, but not enough to
finally break your body.
If your goal is to stay fit and healthy for the long run,
prioritizing road work at sustained mid level threshold outputs for hours on
end isn't your fast track to fat-loss or body recomposition. But on the plus
side, it may help you finally tap into that health insurance plan. Here's how
to make some intelligent modifications to your training if and when you're
ready to break up with running.
A Better Exercise – Incline Treadmill Walks
The intelligent movement modification for running is to...
wait for it... stop running. Granted, going for a jog once or twice a month
isn't going to kill your body. But adhering to a multiple-day-a-week running
schedule at moderate intensity and mid-mileage is the norm, and something
that's in need of modification if your goal is staying healthy.
Training your cardiovascular system effectively involves
more options than just running. As long as the specific energy system is
targeted properly through heart rates and oxygen thresholds, cardio is cardio
and your body can't discern the difference. Even if you plan on taking part in
one long steady-state run a week, you can supplement in a more joint-friendly
cardiovascular activity another few days a week to match your cardio output and
keep your levels of conditioning up. My top recommendation is incline treadmill
walks.
More on the incline treadmill walk:
Do them 2-3 days a week, and if you're dead-set on keeping
your heart rate elevated at a sustained level, match your outputs on the runs
with your systemic outputs on the walks. Just increase the speed and incline
enough to reach those specific variables, minus the high impact rates
associated with running.
How to Keep Running, If You Must
There's just something about running that captivates people
both physically and mentally. So if you're not going to supplement incline
walks into your cardio program a few days a week, at least vary your runs
enough to avoid the stagnation and plateaus of training effects commonly
associated with steady state cardio. This can be done through two different
types of programming: traditional interval style runs, or sprints and
Fartlek-style training:
You're familiar with intervals, where a faster running speed
is completed for a duration followed by a slower speed to tap into heart rate
variability and cardiovascular response. Likewise, Fartlek runs allow the
variability in heart rate, but also the challenge of constant variances of
speeds, inclines, and training variables to produce a more novel training
stimulus compared to a steady state run.
Start off simply with the Fartlek runs, determining a
specific time or distance for the run, and listen to your body. Challenge
yourself with tempo runs, slower jogs, or periods of incline running if you're
on a treadmill. Because it's randomized, every Fartlek run will be different.
When it comes to improving the orthopedic response to a highly repetitive sport
or activity such as running, the more variability in gait stride, speed, and
ground reaction forces, the better.
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