This Made Me Roll My Eyes

The medical profession, sports physical therapy included, is good at giving out bandaids.

To illustrate this point, let me tell you a story about my best friend.  He lives in LA and takes advantage of all it has to offer. The guy can’t sit still. He hops in the ocean to go open water swimming in the morning and goes on hikes or trail runs in the evenings/weekends. 75 degrees and sunny every day must be nice…

On another beautiful, 75-degree day, he was running on a dirt trail to the top of Runyon Canyon and suddenly felt a sharp pain in the inside of his right knee. As he kept running, the pain increased. He decided to turn around, limp down the trail, and make an appointment with his Doctor. He saw his Doctor the next week and was told to take Advil and “take it easy”. This was when he called his favorite performance physical therapist…

My friend has known me since I was 10 years old and could feel me rolling my eyes.

Have you ever been told only to rest as a solution to an injury? This isn’t bad advice but it is a band-aid. It stops the bleeding without solving the reason the bleeding is occurring in the first place!

Pain occurs when the amount of stress placed upon the body exceeds the body’s tolerance of it.

So what is causing this stress to accumulate? It could be over-training, insufficient sleep, poor nutrition or a variety of other factors. Most likely it is a combination of many different things.

The root cause of pain must be addressed if you hope to feel better, stay better, and exercise consistently.

It is essential for your Doctor or Performance Physical Therapist to answer these questions and provide a plan to address them. If you are ready to finally solve the root causes of your pain and injury, contact us now!

What a Runny Nose and Your Pain Have in Common

Do you remember the last time that you caught a cold, the flu, or had Covid? If you are like me, you build a mountain of dirty tissues to keep your snot under control. Meanwhile, the little bug causing it runs around your body, creating chaos.

The pain you feel when exercising is a lot like your runny nose. Pain is a symptom of a larger issue and the key to finally fixing it is to correct that root cause.

Unfortunately, I find that most athletic physical therapy treatment for focuses on the symptoms, rather than the reasons the symptoms started in the first place. We wouldn’t blow our nose all day without taking medicine to kill the bug causing it, would we?!

At Cohen Health and Performance, the goal of every patient’s first performance physical therapy appointment at our Bethesda or McLean location is to discover the root cause of their symptoms. Once this has been identified, our physical therapists create a rehabilitation plan that is customized for every person that we see. Every person is different, with different reasons for an injury and different goals. If your physical therapist has a cookie cutter plan that they use for every patient with low back pain, for example, find another physical therapist!

How do you know if your physical therapy plan is a good one?

The end goals of the rehabilitation plan should be YOUR goals, not the goals of the physical therapist. The physical therapist should clearly describe how your plan is going to get you back to the activities that are most important to you, not what the insurance company wants to see.

For example, we help many runners overcome injury. Their first physical therapy appointment includes a running analysis if they are able to do so. Their rehabilitation plan then includes drills that will help them get back running ASAP. Below is an example of an exercise that we may give a runner with knee pain to prepare them for the stress of their training.


It is easy for physical therapy to become focused on outcomes that insurance companies want to see because that is what is required to get paid. This is why we advise our patients to look for a physical therapy clinic that works for their patients, not insurance companies!

3 Easy Exercises for Happy Knees

I can’t stand doing warmups. There I said it. Even though I’m a sports physical therapist both in Bethesda and McLean (yup, we opened our new location in McLean, Virginia!), and I know better, I just want to get into my workout without spending 15 minutes doing boring drills.

If you are anything like me, you want to spend the least amount of time warming up without increasing your risk of injury.

One way to reduce the amount of time that you need to warmup your knees are with home exercises that prepare your knees to handle more stress. Our athletic physical therapy patients (both youth athletes and active adults) see us in Bethesda and McLean for help with knee pain that limits them in the gym and/or out on the field. We commonly recommend that people perform drills that build the capacity of what the knees can handle. This means that the knees will be capable of handling more stress and be ready to go as soon as you walk into the gym.

Check out the videos below where I breakdown 3 drills that you can do at home for happy, healthy, and strong knees!

These are just a few examples of drills that help you with knee pain. If you are serious about finally solving the knee pain that is forcing you to modify your favorite workouts, don’t hesitate and contact us today to schedule an appointment in McLean or Bethesda. The root cause of your knee pain is unique and it is unlikely that the cookie cutter program you found online will do the job. We will show you exactly where your knee pain is coming from and provide a customized performance physical therapy plan to address it!

For Weekend Warriors Wanting to Avoid Knee Surgery

I probably don’t need to tell you this, but the best surgery is the one that is avoided. Disclaimer, as a sports physical therapist, I am a bit biased!

After knee surgery, your knee is not the same. Tissue may have been removed or artificial parts/pieces may have been put in. Regardless of the procedure, the skin was cut open, scar tissue formed, and time is needed time to heal.

This impacts the function of your knee and your ability to run and exercise as you had previously.

Now, I am not saying that surgery should never happen. What I’m saying is that it should be a last resort.

In my 12+ years working as a sports physical therapist, I have learned that people commonly have knee surgeries when there are things they can do to delay or avoid them altogether.

In many situations, the knee cannot handle the stress required of it for sports or your active lifestyle. As physical therapists, we  commonly prescribe exercises that train the knee to handle all of that stress. In other instances, the knees are dealing with too much stress because another area isn’t doing its job. A thorough sports physical therapy assessment will determine what these areas are so that a comprehensive plan can be prescribed to fix it.

Whatever the reason is, a sports physical therapy assessment may be the secret sauce to finally solving your knee pain and avoiding the surgery you have been worried about! To schedule that, contact us today!

What’s the deal with my ankle popping?

When your knuckles pop, your ankle cracks, or your hip makes that strange noise, do you ever wonder, “Is that bad?” Should you see a sports physical therapist or doctor about it?

Well, there’s no need to worry—it’s probably not a big deal if you’re not experiencing any pain when it happens.

I have this quirky habit every morning as soon as I get out of bed. I keep my right heel on the floor and move my knee over my toes until I feel and hear a pop in the back of my heel. It freaks out my wife, Deb, every time.

The cracking or popping in a joint is similar to the sound of pressure being released from a soda bottle. Over time, pressure builds up within a joint, and for some people, it feels good to release it. That’s the noise you’re feeling and hearing.

However, if you experience pain when the pop occurs or if the area feels unstable, it’s important to reach out to us. We can help determine the root cause of these issues and whether any treatment is necessary.

We’ll assess if your pain is related to arthritis, overuse, or another movement-related issue that we can address through physical therapy, with exercises you can do at home.

Here are a few questions to ask yourself. If you answer “yes” to any of these, it might be time to seek help:

1) Is the popping I feel painful?
2) Has there been a recent injury to this area?
3) Does this area feel unstable?
4) Do I have weakness in this area?

You might not even need to visit the office—a phone call could be enough. Check out our homepage here and click on the “free phone consultation” tab!

Create Your BS Meter

I’m lying on the couch as I got sucked into Instagram and all of their sports physical therapy videos. While scrolling, one exercise video grabbed my attention. This wasn’t because it was good information. It was because it wasn’t and had thousands of likes.
 
There is so much information out there and anyone with a social media account can have a platform. You have access to the best and the worst information. It is overwhelming!
 
You need a BS detector so that you aren’t doing bicep curls while standing on a ball, blowing up a balloon (not far off what I saw the other day).
 
So how do you determine when you should ignore a social media post?
 
Speaking in absolutes. Most times, the best answer that a professional can give you is “it depends.” Rarely is there a correct answer for every situation. For example, stretching or mobility is often promoted as a “fix” for a given injury. Yet, many people have more important problems to solve. For more information, check out our post, Is Mobility Overrated? It is impossible to know of every possible factor that could be contributing to pain or injury. Even the best among us cannot be 100% certain, especially on social media.
 
It is too complicated. An expert can take a complex topic and break it down so that it makes sense to you. Complicated medical jargon is a red flag that the presenter does not understand what they are posting.
 
Promoting personal success stories as evidence. Personal success stories are subjective and ignore the facts and research. Many influencers post personal success stories as evidence for their approach. This ignores all the other factors that may have contributed to the results being promoted (genetics, differences in lifestyle, priority differences, etc.). Quality research requires thousands of trials before it is valid. A case study of 1 or 2 people only applies to those 1 or 2 people!
 
P.S. If someone is promoting a “quick fix”….run!
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