Welcome Dr. Masaaki Tsuruike: New Director of KIN Graduate AT Education Program

by S. Reekie.

We are fortunate to have been one of the few departments permitted to hire a new faculty member last year. I would like to take this opportunity to introduce to you the new Director of our Graduate Athletic Training Education Program, Dr. Masaaki Tsuruike. Prior to his appointment at SJSU, Dr. Tsuruike was a full-time faculty member at Osaka University of Health and Sport Sciences from 1997 to 2012. Dr. Tsuruike received his BS in Physical Education from Osaka University of Health and Sport Sciences in 1989, his MS in Kinesiology from Indiana University, Bloomington in 1996 and his PhD in 2010 from the same institution where his major area was Human Performance and his minor area was Neuroscience. He was also a visiting scholar there from 2004-2005.

Dr. Tsuruike writes: “I remember the University of California, Riverside (UCR) where I first learned English to prepare for graduate school in the United States, now more than 20 years ago, and Del Mar in San Diego where I proposed marriage to my wife in front of the Pacific Ocean view right before sunset almost 10 years ago. My wife, Yasuko, and I really enjoyed the weather, beach, Disneyland, and the entire atmosphere we saw in Southern California. We also learned English and enjoyed cable cars, Fisherman’s Wharf, bay cruises, and Napa Valley in the Bay Area! Yasuko is currently teaching at a public elementary school in Osaka Japan. This year I joined San Jose State University as Graduate Athletic Training Education Program Director, which will be one of the biggest changes in my life and one of my dreams coming true. I look forward to taking part in SJSU Judo. I practiced Judo for 10 years up to the high school level. I’m always excited to watch Judo. Indeed, I practiced Judo with Coach Mike Swain once in Los Angeles while participating in UCR’s Judo club in 1990. I still have the photograph with him.”

Dr. Tsuruike has studied in the field of motor control and is especially interested in the modulation of spinal motoneuron excitability. This modulation, called plasticity, has been shown to be different between older and young populations.

The Dreaded Hamstring: Pathophysiology and Rehabilitation Tips

by Joshua J. Stone, MA, ATC, NASM-CPT, CES, PES, FNS
Article originally posted on http://athleticmedicine.wordpress.com/
Follow Josh on Twitter http://twitter.com/JoshStoneATC

How many times are we going to see an athlete suffer from recurrent hamstring strains? How many times are we going to see delayed recovery from a mild hamstring pull? Unfortunately, it’s going to continue, because some health and wellness specialists (ATCs, PTs, and Strength coaches) are looking in the wrong area. Read the following conversation I had between myself and a concerned parent of an athlete (the parent also happened to be a chiropractor).

‘What are you doing? Why are you not treating the hamstring?’

Because it’s not the hamstring.

‘What?!?  When an athlete says “I was running and I felt a pull I the back of my leg…. it feels really tight.” you are going to tell me it is not a hamstring strain? Please! Can you please just treat the hamstring?’ 

Well, technically yes, it is a hamstring strain, but it is not the hamstring – which is why I am doing this.

‘What? techinically it is, but it isn’t? That makes no sense. I evaluated him myself. MMT was 3/5 for knee flexion w/ external rotation, hip extension was 4/5. Passive Hip flexion was -40 degrees when compared bilaterally. There is point tenderness over the proximal musculotendinous junction and you still say its not the hamstring.’  

Well, technically yes, it is but no – its not the hamstring.

‘Fine, enlighten me, what is it?’ 

The hamstring is what hurts and what is injured, but the problem and what needs to be fixed is not the hamstring.

‘My son needs to play and you are not doing your job to help him get back. I am informing the athletic director.’ 

** This actually happened and yes the athletic director was notified. He backed me up (after a conversation). Such is the life of the athletic trainer.**

Now, before I swarmed by an angry mobs of chiropractors trying to beat me with sticks, this is not about chiropractors – this is just one example of the trap that many health care practitioners – Athletic Trainers, PTs, OTs, RKTs, DC, MD, LMTs, etc – fall in to.  Many practitioners are too concerned with ‘the what‘ rather than ‘the how‘ and ‘the why‘. I think Athletic Trainers (especially students) do this too often. Even though I am writing about it today – I do this myself. We keep fixing what hurts – not how and why the injury is occurring. Athletic training rooms are not just first-aid triage and pain-relief centers. Athletic trainers are to relieve pain, prevent pain, and optimize function (amongst other things).

What is the traditional therapeutic approach to patellar tendonitis; Rest, ice, ultrasound, massage, cho-pat strap? All viable and great for triage, but it may not fix the problem. Maybe we should apply MWM to the ankle and improve ankle dorsiflexion, that might fix the problem and relieve pain.

********Back to the dreaded hamstring and my conversation with the parent / medical professional********

This particular parent was upset and did not understand why I was not addressing the what. In my defense, I was dedicating some time to fixing the what – using ultrasound, massage, PROM, etc – to facilitate proper tissue healing. However, I knew this would not fix the problem, thus I was focusing most of my attention on the why and the how. In this particular instance (and most hamstring injuries) I needed to correct human movement dysfunction (poor neuromuscular recruitment, suboptimal arthrokinematics, and altered length-tension relationships). This will fix the problem and go a long way in prevention of re-injury.

Let me explain the breakdown of optimal function – or lack thereof:

Secondary, to pattern overload or prolonged static posturing many individuals suffer from chronic hypertonicity and mechanical shortening of the psoas.  A chronically tight psoas will cause altered reciprocal inhibition of its functional antagonist, the gluteus maximus. What that means is the overactive psoas muscle is telling the nervous system to turn off neural drive to the gluteus maximus.

With this muscle imbalance an abnormal force coupling occurs yielding poor arthrokinematics in the form of an anterior pelvic tilt. Because of the hamstring’s proximal attachment to the ischial tuberosity an anterior pelvic tilt will cause the hamstring to migrate superiorly and posteriorly, essentially lengthening the muscle. If you recall from your applied kinesiology course, muscles have optimal length tension relationships – a zone where maximal muscle force can be produced. The longer or shorter a muscle is, the less the muscular force can be applied or tolerated.

In addition to this, with the glute inactivity caused by altered reciprocal inhibition, a muscle must make up for the glute’s loss of functional ability. So now a synergistic muscle must help with the glutes ability to perform hip extension. Which muscle is going to this? You guessed it – the hamstring.  This is called synergistic dominance – the hamstring (synergist) must dominate the movement of hip extension.

If you recall from above, the hamstring is working in a lengthened and suboptimal position. Coupled with this it is being asked to do more work. So, when we are applying the greatest amount of muscular tension – eccentric contraction near end ROM (such as sprinting) – the hamstring fails. Commonly it fails near the proximal attachment secondary to a line of pull change.

Back to my opening questions:

  • Why do we see so many hamstring injuries? Because health and wellness professionals are not identifying or intervening to correct human movement dysfunctional patterns.
  • Why do we see so many recurrent hamstring injuries? Because we are not fixing what needs to be fixed and allowing the hamstring to work inefficiently.
  • Why are we seeing delayed recovery? Because we are using antiquated rehabilitation techniques. We are focusing on the hamstring when the problem exists elsewhere.

Correcting movement dysfunction and optimizing function will fix the problem. This is so much easier in the long run. I am sure practitioners will disagree with me or have some refuting evidence. Recently there has been a slew of research published discussing the effectiveness of high-intensity eccentric hamstring strengthening on the prevention and rehabilitation of hamstring injuries. Yes, eccentric hamstring exercises work, but why? They work because you are making the hamstring more tolerable and able to function with poor mechanics. Essentially, you are just making the chain a bit stronger. Again, this is not fixing the problem.

KIN Ambassadors Connect KIN with Student Community at SJSU Student Org Fair

by Danika Ziemer, undergrad major KIN

Kinesiology Ambassadors Club is headed toward another great year. At the Student Org Fair last Wednesday, we met 49 new prospective members. Thank you to everyone who came out to our booth. The Org Fair was an awesome experience to connect with the student community. Our table was next to the KIN Pre-Physical Therapy Club and KIN Adapted Physical Activity Club, which allowed the officers from the various Kinesiology clubs a chance to meet, work together to attract new members, and pass students on to the adjoining tables.

We had the chance to work together as a unified Kinesiology family. Many students saw the importance of networking with fellow students and realized the positive impact that we can make on our school and community when we work collaboratively. Last year, we began this mission to promote Kinesiology to our SJSU student body and community at large culminating with winning Best New Club on Campus award.

We are looking forward to getting our new members together so we can organize the events that we have planned for this year. The most exciting part is having members from all emphases in the KIN Department. Imagine what the SJSU Kinesiology Department can accomplish when we combine the different disciplines that comprise the field of Kinesiology.

If you are a Kinesiology student, and you didn’t get a chance to stop by the booth to sign up, it’s not too late. Stop by our board in SPX and sign or send us an e-mail: sjsukinambassadors@gmail.com.