This is brilliant. This very high quality content. Thoroughly explained in understandable phrasing, not rushed through nor spoken through too slowly. I will be coming back to this video in the future, for sure. This is very very helpful. I thank you.
It feels amazing being able to comfortably BOUNCE into a full reverse nordic (even with a slight deficit and weighted!). Definitely worth training towards. My starting point was absolutely horrible and it took me a couple of years to get to this point. I'm glad I decided to adopt a long-term approach to training, because reversing poor joint health takes time.
This is something Kneesovertoesguy would say. Embracing this kind of mindset and incorporating his methods, has saved my knees and changed my life. FrFr #TrueStory
@@StraitjacketFitness Lol. Unfortunately I was too f'kd for kneesovertoesguy's protocol, even at the absolute lowest level. But once I tolerated basic movement, I did adopt some of their guiding principles in my training/rehab. That way I was forced to extract principles - not blindly follow protocols. I've learned from tons of different sources.
What did you do to yourself? I tore my ACL and double meniscus doing gymnastics last year in April, and can completely relate to what you mentioned being in too low of a rut to even handle the most basic of the ATG protocols.
Also, I'm still in the process of regaining range of motion to be able to sit on my heels like I could pre-surgery. The idea of being able to bounce into a reverse nordic sounds like a dream to me
@@joelgaal6438 Wow tough. Also double meniscus, which happened after I was inactive for like 5 years after a back injury that I didn't manage to heal. I was completely weakened, and more so along one side. It took me half a year just to be able to get started with the most regressed ATG exercise variations, so yes thats completely normal. Are you back to 100% by this time?
I would like to thank you very much because I was hesitant to perform the total hip joint replacement due to my young age, but your videos encouraged me. Thank you with all my heart
Good day doc Please drop a safe but effective leg workout for guys like me who's had a total hip replacement, im 50years old and the other hip is also bothering me hence im scared to train legs😢
I can do 10-12 reps assisted with a light resistance band.. but whenever I do these, I have pain in my pattelar tendon for few hours to a day following the set(s).
Sounds like your tendons aren’t ready for the load these put on them yet. Can you do sissy squats? I find that those naturally limit your range of motion until you are strong enough to get deep.
@@MeoCulpa I think you're right. I've never done sissy squats before, but I have been doing squats on my tip toes and that's helping. I feel less and less pain with these each week now.
my quads have always been tight and strong, no amount of stretching really helped, dabbling with Reverse Nordics and Sissy squats(Assisted) has worked great so far, Now I am going to take them more seriously
ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-_OyNx5VMzzc.html No, but the approach to management will have overlapping principles as the video linked.
Did these without shoes and the supportpillow, fucked upp the nerve in my foot and still one month later my whole leg is numb 24/7 and cant put on a shoe without being super carefull otherwise itll feel like someone stabbing a knife through my foot..
Many thanks for your amazing content. I'm able to do a full reverse nordic without any padding under my ankles but struggle with the consequences of the full syndesmosis disruption including the fully torn interosseous membrane. Is there any practical way to make it safer for me? My injury happened a few years ago and I'm pretty much recovered. The burning feel in the interosseous membrane is quite scary. I do not want to re-injure it. Any suggestions? Thank you very much!
Thank you very much. I wonder if this would also help strengthen the adductors, esp if done with knees further apart-Trying to recover from a nagging likely high adductor tendinopathy
Most likely (I have a right total hip replacement), but there are likely better exercises to prioritize. We have a new video coming out related to total hip replacements in a couple months.
@@bertlindsay thanks Burt , I’ll take that as a compliment… I guess it was my lifestyle, I was quite sporty I played soccer and my other hobby was running. I actually need the other hip done at some point but it’s not as bad as the other hip got yet. Why do you ask ?
@E3Rehab thank you for this video. Have had a quad strain for over 2 years and reverse Nordic’s are helping me overcome plateaus I seemingly couldn’t overcome for the last year
The blanket recommendation to “progress range of motion” is dangerous. More range of motion is not always better, and for more flexible individuals it can cause injury. I started doing reverse Nordics because I saw them from Kneesovertoesguy. He said the same thing “gradually increase the range of motion”. From start I was able to do high reps with bodyweight (5’6 and 175 lbs) going through a full range of motion without pain. I was actually able to perform them with my butt passing my heels and touching the flooring. Like a hero pose in yoga. Thought, “more range of motion is better”. But after doing these for a few months I gradually developed medial knee pain (probably minor MCL sprain with possible meniscus injury). Not sure if it was reverse Nordics, something else, or a combination of things, but once pain started reverse Nordics were the most consistently provocative exercise/activity. Still bothers me almost a year later. I think the main problem was I was using excessive range of motion. To bring butt to floor I had to slide tibia and femur past each other, which put high forces on medial knee structures. (Again think of Hero pose used by yoga practitioners) I think a better recommendation would be to progress range of motion UNTIL you can do reverse Nordics with butt touching heels. Then progress reps and weight. Explicitly avoid going past your heels will place excessive force on medial knee structures.
No. But I could have used better word choice (sorry). Your basic message was “gradually progress range of motion without pain”. That’s great just thought “up to a point” should be added. Most people shouldn’t progress range of motion further than butt touching heels. I’ve seen many videos of people performing and/or promoting reverse Nordics with an extreme range of motion where butt goes past heels and touches floor. One video of a guy who trains reverse Nordics with feet raised on 3 inch blocks and butt sinking down until feet are on the side of the thighs. If progressed slowly enough that is not inherently dangerous but most people will get hurt chasing extremes. For most people getting butt to heels is sufficient range of motion. Pushing further is more likely to create injury then build capacity. Once that is achieved progress with load, tempo, reps. Or progress to sissy squats.
@E3Rehab Well it was a LOAD MANAGEMENT problem (axiomatically true for non-traumatic injuries). Load management includes BOTH exercise selection and programming. No movement is inherently injurious but some movements require more recovery and should be programmed/progressed more conservatively than others. For most people I believe that trying to progress reverse Nordics to the extreme range of motion I described above is more likely to create injury than build capacity. That’s especially true for people with less programming experience (beginners) or more complex programming considerations (past injury, cross-training, physically demanding occupations). I believe that based on my own experience with the exercise and my basic knowledge of anatomy/biomechanics. And most people don’t need to push range of motion to extremes to get benefits of reverse Nordics. I think good standard is to get heels to butt. Then progress load, reps, tempo. Or progress to sissy squats.
@@gmelliot19 Your point about going lower is valid and makes sense to me as I'm able to reach the floor and return for reps, however, I'm concerned that the range of motion is excessive and dangerous; perhaps E3 Rehab can comment on the safety of 'butt to floor' rang of motion for the reverse nordic?
@@E3Rehab Thanks! I’m currently doing leg extensions, leg presses and variations of step ups along with static hold squats. Thinking about adding belt squats soon. I’m 4 months post op allograft repair
Do reverse nordics at your own risk. I needed surgery after performing them for months, because part of the cartilage of my patella just could not take the pressure and basically just blasted away in the last reverse nordic set I did. This exercise is just not worth it getting surgery and years of rehab.
What made them safe for the months leading up to your experience? And if someone hurt their knee after 6 months of squatting, would you consider squatting the culprit?
@@E3Rehab It was most likely an overuse injury. The cartilage degraded over those months and eventually ripped off. I was slowly adapting to the exercise and perfectly capable to go all the way down and up for 15+ reps. The thing is that reverse nordics may present a very different force to the patellas cartilage, depending on how large someone is and how much that person weighs. I am around 2 meters and about 95kg with long femurs. Which presents my patella with much more force through leverage and weight than a smaller person. The amount of focre the patella cen tolerate also depends hugely on the shape of the patella and nobody can check that before performing this exercise to see if the patella can tolerate that exercise long term. I understand your reasoning, but we have to differenciate between safe and not so safe exercises. For both is true, we can do them many times, but more people will get injured in the case of less safe exercises. At the end of the day, as reverse nordics get more popular, we will see if there is an increase of cartilage damage. I have the feeling that after decades of knee over toes phobia, that we currently do the exact opposite, until enough people get hurt and we settle somewhere in the middle between those two extremes.