KIMEcast
What does it actually mean to be “healed” after an injury? In Episode 59 of KIMEcast, the team breaks down one of the biggest misconceptions in sports medicine: pain-free does not mean ready to perform. From ankle sprains to ACL tears to throwing injuries, this episode explores why athletes continue to get hurt, how compensation patterns develop, and why true return-to-sport testing matters. The conversation dives deep into kinetic linking — the body’s ability to transfer force efficiently from the ground up — and how breakdowns in mobility, stability, reaction time, and movement quality create injury risk long before a major injury occurs. Topics include: * Why athletes reinjure themselves after “healing” * The difference between rest and rehabilitation * Force plate testing and modern injury risk assessment * ACL recovery and compensation patterns * Reactive strength index (RSI), plyometrics, and ground contact time * Mobility limitations that silently increase injury risk * Throwing mechanics and kinetic chain breakdowns * Why elite athletes are often elite compensators * The future of return-to-sport testing and sports performance This episode is a deep dive into the intersection of biomechanics, rehabilitation, performance training, and injury prevention — and why sports medicine must evolve beyond simply treating pain.
56 episoder
Kommentarer
0Vær den første til at kommentere
Tilmeld dig nu og bliv en del af KIMEcast-fællesskabet!