Fitness Article
of the Month
November 1996
I was searching
the Net for fitness topics and came across this great article. The
article focuses on body symmetry and how to improve it. Credit goes
to Cory Johnson the author of the article and frequent contributor
to Outside magazine. Visit The link below for more great info from
"Outside". Best of Health. RM
The Symmetrical
Solution
Correcting your natural imbalances may just be the secret to superior
fitness
By Cory Johnson
Nine out of
ten people are born right-handed. But whether your right or left
handed your dominant side is always stronger. Your "handedness"
also affects what physiologists call kinesthetic proprioception,
which reinforces muscular imbalances. "Simply put, kinesthetic
proprioception is how your body moves through space," says
Eric Lawson, strength and conditioning physiologist for the U.S.
Olympic Committee. "Right-handers develop patterns in right-handed
ways, and vice versa. If you do something repetitively--say, spike
a volleyball with the same hand, over and over again, the same way
every day--you develop some asymmetries."
Injury will
also exacerbate any innate or acquired weaknesses, and not surprisingly,
it often occurs on your weak side. Indeed, an injury can turn your
asymmetry into a self-fulfilling prophecy, which is what happened
to Doering. "I've been an elite athlete for a number of years,
so I'm always concerned that my body is developed symmetrically,"
says the 34-year-old runner. "But I learned a hard lesson:
The slightest imbalance can throw everything off and cause a domino
effect."
Yet before you
undertake a regimen of one-armed push-ups, make sure you know your
own asymmetries. Diagnosing your weak side is easy: Take a good,
long look at your body in the mirror. Size up both sides of your
body, look at your shoulders and pectoral muscles, and compare the
bulk of your biceps and thighs. You can also use a cloth measuring
tape to check the circumference of your legs and arms. But don't
get too wrapped up in being exact. "It's natural to have one
side slightly bigger," says Parnes Cartwright, a top personal
trainer in New York. "Don't sweat it if your right biceps or
thigh is half an inch bigger in circumference. But if your dominant
side is so pronounced that you can see it in the mirror, that's
a problem that your training program should address."
The Perils
of Repetition
The effects
of athletic asymmetry are perhaps most pronounced in the legs and
hips, since they're the weight-bearing areas of the body. In particular,
a muscle imbalance in one leg can cause problems for the iliotibial
band, or ITB, a thin strip of tissue that braces the outside of
the leg, running from hip to knee. Take a skier, for instance. Making
turns to the strong side is no problem, but when he or she drives
into the weak side, the corresponding ITB has to make up for the
lesser quadriceps and hamstring to keep the knee from blowing out.
With every turn, the ITB gets overstretched.
Hips are another
symmetry trouble zone, especially for women. "With their wider
hips, women cyclists are particularly prone to problems," Lawson
says. "When they pedal, there's more pronation than for men,
and that leads to injury. On the weaker side, it gets worse."
Having one hip higher than the other (common for women as well as
men) can cause the shorter--and usually weaker--leg to bow outward,
leading to muscle inequities and strain on the medial collateral
ligament or the ITB.
Problems can
develop from the bottom up if your legs aren't the same length.
With every second stride during a run, the shorter leg is stretched
farther than the other, which causes the hip to turn out. Meanwhile,
that side of the lower back is getting slightly wrenched. Keep running
that way and you'll end up with a sore lower back, a tight hamstring,
and a crooked pelvis. "Endurance sports rely on repetition,
and that just magnifies the problem," Martin says. "Cycling?
That's tens of thousands of revolutions per week."
Martin's seen
the results of asymmetry up close working with the likes of world
champion duathlete Ken Souza, who tore the ligaments in his left
knee years ago. He developed a strength imbalance, and it still
affects his performance. "If one leg is off balance by even
10 percent," Souza says, "obviously I'm going to have
less output."
Getting
Even
The surest cure
for the asymmetrical body is in the weight room, using dumbbells
or a bilateral weight machine to isolate one side. But strength
is only part of the asymmetry solution. To even out your motor skills,
Lawson says, you have to practice your sport as if your other side
were dominant. For instance, a volleyball player who always steps
right-left before a right-handed slam should try stepping left-right.
"We identify that athlete's motor pattern and reverse it completely,"
says Lawson. "It will be very difficult at first, but with
practice, it can lead to body symmetry."
To do any of
this, though, you need good balance, says Kevin Moody, a trainer
at the Olympic Training Center in Lake Placid, New York. "An
injury or simply favoring one side of the body can cause the nerves
of your off-side to become ineffectual in controlling fine motor
skills," he says. "Balance training teaches your nerves
to send and receive accurate information between both sides of the
body and the brain." (See "Striking a Balance.")
Finally, make
symmetry-work a regular part of your sport-specific training. Spend
a certain portion of your workout time using only your weak side,
or at least concentrating on it. If you're a swimmer, spend about
10 percent of every practice pulling one-handed with your weak arm,
and when you do use both arms, make sure you breathe on both sides.
If you're a paddle-sport enthusiast, devote a bit of your workout
to paddling with your weaker side. Runners, meanwhile, should be
wary of pounding cambered pavement always in the same direction,
lest their hips and legs get out of whack.
Asymmetrical
training is a technique that Souza still works into his routine.
"In the wintertime, I'll do one-legged sprints on the bike,"
he says. "I'll hike one leg up, spin for a few minutes, then
reverse it. Since I tore those ligaments, I've had to do extra work
to make sure that my left side is as strong as the other. I've tried
to forget that injury, but my leg still remembers."
Cory Johnson,
a frequent contributor to Bodywork, is a runner and a cyclist.
Outside Magazine
This fitness
article is for educational purposes only. It is not medical advice
and is not intended to replace the advice or attention of health-care
professionals. Consult your physician before beginning or making
changes in your diet, supplements or exercise program, for diagnosis
and treatment of illness and injuries, and for advice regarding
medications. Thanks. RM
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