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How to Avoid Ski Injuries This Winter

Tuesday, February 7, 2017 General News
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SPEAR Physical Therapist and Ski Instructor Gives Five Ways to Prevent Common Ski-Related Knee Problems

NEW YORK, Feb. 6, 2017 /PRNewswire/ -- It's peak ski season here in New York City, and ski injuries are presenting at physical therapy offices throughout NYC. The most common by far, are to the knee, specifically the anterior cruciate ligament (ACL).
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Matt Hastings, DT, DPT for SPEAR Physical Therapy in Manhattan, was a ski instructor in Breckenridge, Colorado, for three years prior to becoming a physical therapist, and his passion for snow sports runs deep. So does his experience with all kinds of ski and boarding-related injuries, particularly the dreaded ACL tear—dreaded due to its frequency and the duration of recovery, often six months or more.
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Even with a decline in ski injuries over the last number of years, if 2017 is like prior seasons, 20,000 skiers (more commonly women) will tear ACLs this year. The good news? Many ACL tears and other injuries can be avoided with some focused pre-ski training and vigilance on the slopes.

Hastings offers five tips for an injury-free ski season.

1: Strengthen Specific Muscles Prior to Your First Ski TripImproving overall fitness—endurance, strength, stability and power— can go a long way toward helping you prevent ACL and other ski injuries. Isolating muscle groups like the quads, glutes and hamstrings is key to maintaining balance when skiing or snowboarding. In the lead up to ski season, Hastings recommends wall sits, lunges, split lunges and split squats, as well as full body movements like box jumps, front squats and Bosu squat holds that parallel the movements in skiing and snowboarding.

2: Warm-Up Before Hitting the SlopesAdequate stretching will help get you to après ski in one piece. Hastings prescribes a dynamic warm up with a focus on movements that mimic activities you are about to perform, including lunge walks (forward and lateral), narrow and wide squats, quad pulls and knee hugs.

3: When Scared or Out of Control, Go to the Side"We have a tendency when we are scared to sit backwards, which forces the knee into a position where you're in the greatest danger of tearing your ACL," Hastings says. "You want to go to the side if you're feeling out of control or unsafe." Bend your knees slightly and tip onto whichever hip will allow you to ski safely, with no obstacles.

4: Listen to Your Body"When you're getting to that point when your body is telling you no, there's a reason for that." Ski easier at the end of the day, when you are typically fatigued.

5: Follow Ski CodesThere is a skier Responsibility Code established by the National Ski Areas Association (NSAA) that includes stopping in a place that's safe for you and others, looking uphill and yielding to other skiers, knowing how to use the lifts safely, and always staying in control. "Pay attention and watch out not only for yourself, but for everyone else."

About SPEAR Physical TherapySPEAR Physical Therapy is headquartered at 120 E. 56th Street in Midtown Manhattan. Founded in a single room in Manhattan in 1999, the company has grown to eleven locations that treat over 15,000 patients a year. In 2016, SPEAR was named the Nation's Top Physical Therapy Practice by the American Physical Therapy Association.

To view the original version on PR Newswire, visit:http://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/how-to-avoid-ski-injuries-this-winter-300402901.html

SOURCE SPEAR Physical Therapy

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