Hamstring Injuries

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eckas
eckas
NSW
323 posts
NSW, 323 posts
26 Jan 2005 10:40am
Hi All,

Had the misfortune yesterday of pulling/tearing/straining my hamstring on the second run of the day. Catapulted, and somehow ended up travelling feet first towards the mast which was on the water. 90% of the body went under the mast, 10% of the body went over the mast (ie my right leg), so I ended up with my kneecap much closer to my face than it was ever intended to be, plus a mighty sore hamstring.

Anyone got any advice about the recovery process? Currently icing it, resting it, and mourning a public holiday without windsurfing. Any idea when it would be safe to get back on the water?

Eckas
nat
nat
WA
102 posts
nat nat
WA, 102 posts
26 Jan 2005 8:26am
Hi Eckas

Sounds like your diagnosis of pull/tear/strain is right and your initial treatment (RICE Rest Ice Compression Elevation) is good. To the question how long you will be off the water depends on if it is just a strain or a tear. Just a strain a couple of days to a week - A tear e.g. if you have bruising to the back of your knee or even down your calf, longer. If you are quite sore today or even have some bruising I would suggest you see a good sportsphysio in your area - they will get you back on the water quicker.
Hope this helps.
nat
laurie
laurie
QLD
3902 posts
QLD, 3902 posts
26 Jan 2005 11:37am
Sorry to hear that eckas .. agree 100% with nat's diagnosis. You just have to grin and bear it and put windsurfing out of your mind until it's well again.

My understanding is this: When you rip a muscle/tendon, it bleeds into the surrounding skin, which is why you need to get ice and compression onto it straight away. The ice constricts the blood vessels, and the compression helps to reduce the bleeding as well. Some suggest icing every 30 minutes for the first few days, but I've never managed to achieve that!

Once the bleeding has stopped, and the vessels have closed themselves, then the idea is to get extra blood to it to (promote healing) by applying heat and massage to the area.

With the hamstring, you tend to keep it stiff, because it hurts. Is it right that you need to keep your stretches going while it's injured, or do you wait until it's better? Never quite sure - recently read a book by Barry Sheen the motorcyclist, and he had mega prangs and always kepts his body parts moving as soon as possible after the injury...

..Lozza

eckas
eckas
NSW
323 posts
NSW, 323 posts
27 Jan 2005 10:38am
Thanks for the advice guys. No bruising etc has appeared, so I don't think it was as bad as I first thought. At first, given the instant pain, instant loss of strength and distinct feeling of stretching/tearing, I thought I was buggered. However, the pain is in the bulk of the muscle, not at either end which could indicate a very serious tendon tear requiring surgical intervention.

I'm of the opinion that exercising and stretching promotes bloodflow to the muscle, and therefore healing (just don't overdo it) so I'm walking, stretching etc as much as possible without inducing pain.

PS - thanks to the guy who saw my plight and helped me carry by board back to the car - windsurfers really are a great bunch...(Brighton Le-Sands, Tuesday 25th, 3pm-ish)
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