Mind Pump: Raw Fitness Truth - 1397: 5 Ways to Maintain Muscle When You’re Sick or Injured
Episode Date: October 8, 2020In this episode, Sal, Adam & Justin cover five different ways to maintain muscle when you are recovering from an illness or injury. How to navigate around an injury or being sick. (3:47) Mind Pump Re...velations: Don’t be afraid of going backward. (5:54) 5 Ways to Maintain Muscle When You’re Sick or Injured. #1 – Focus on healing. (12:03) #2 – Train what you can. (25:23) #3 – Dial in that nutrition. (30:50) #4 – Apply static tension. (34:12) #5 – Utilize blood flow restriction (BFR) training. (38:25) Related Links/Products Mentioned Visit PRx Performance for an exclusive offer for Mind Pump listeners! **Code “mindpump” at checkout** October Special: MAPS Anabolic and No BS 6-Pack Formula The Dark Side of Cortisone Shots: Joint Deterioration Why you should almost NEVER take Advil, Aleve, or Aspirin (NSAIDS) before or after exercise – Mind Pump Blog Do Ibuprofen and NSAIDs Affect Athletic Performance? MAPS Fitness Prime Pro - Mind Pump Media The Myth of Optimal Protein Intake – Mind Pump Blog Mind Pump #1275: The Best At-Home Workout That No One Is Sharing Occlusion Training Tutorial- How to Increase Muscle Size Using Blood Flow Restriction – Mind Pump TV Occlusion Training Guide – Mind Pump Media Mind Pump Podcast - YouTube Mind Pump Free Resources
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If you want to pump your body and expand your mind, there's only one place to go.
MIND, MIND, MIND, UP with your hosts.
Salta Stefano, Adam Schaefer, and Justin Andrews.
In this episode of Mind Pump, your favorite fitness health entertainment podcast,
we talk about how to maintain your fitness, how to keep your muscle, how to stay strong, or at least keep yourself
from losing too much strength when you get sick,
or especially when you get injured.
We actually give you five things you can focus on
that if you do these five things,
your recovery will be faster, you'll build your muscle back.
Faster than you would have had you not follow
these five things, and you'll get back to a place that's possibly better than you left before. Now this episode is brought to you by PRX,
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A Hurtfoot, Torna Keeili's, Torn ACL, MCL.
What, right now?
No, these are just all the things.
Oh, geez.
All the injuries that I've been through in the last,
I don't know, what is that?
Am I going on three years, three years?
Wait, wait, when did you turn your ACL in?
No, that was like six years ago, seven years ago.
We were walking yesterday and you said your foot.
I know, dude.
It's still hurting, yeah. What's going on? foot. I know, dude. We're still hurting.
What's going on?
I don't know, dude.
I don't know what it is.
Being old.
You know, my bones are brittle.
I think I have like a small fracture in like one of my very small bones in my feet.
Yeah.
One that I can't pronounce.
Yeah, I think that's what's going on.
It's been three months and it hasn't fully recovered.
So, but anyways, the reason why I brought it up
is because we haven't addressed this really
on the podcast, not in full length,
but I get DMs a lot about injuries.
And of course, most people that are into fitness
and working out and either building muscle
or losing body fat, they're always concerned
when something like this happens. Rightfully so, that, you fat, they're always concerned when something
like this happens.
Rightfully so, that they've made all this progress, and then an injury happens, and how do I not
lose all of my gains?
And so I think that we should address some of the top things that we focus on when this
happens.
It's inevitable for most people that something is going to happen at one point in your
life that may obviously hinder your training regimen and how do you navigate around that
without losing all of your games?
I get DMs on that all the time too.
It's probably one of, I'd say probably the top five questions I get, which is like,
some along the lines of, I hurt my shoulder, how do I maintain my fitness,
or I tweak my back, how do I keep my deadlift
from going down, or I hurt my knee,
how do I keep my quads from shrinking?
So it's a common question.
It's also, and I understand why,
it's probably one of the more frustrating things
that could happen to you
if you're somebody who's very dedicated
to working out because you're on a roll.
Usually this is what it looks like.
And at least in my experience, I'm crushing.
I'm on a roll.
It almost never happens when everything sucks.
It's always like I'm flying with my progress.
I'm getting stronger, I'm feeling good.
And then either I'll get sick.
That's one thing that can happen,
or I'll tweak or twist something or hurt something, and then immediately it's like,
because you feel like you're being forced to stop progressing, it's not a choice.
It feels like it's not a choice.
It's pretty depressing, you know, for a lot of people, especially when you're on that high of a motivation,
and you're really putting the work in and being
disciplined and then that just takes, you know, your feet literally right out from under
you and it feels like not have to start all over.
Right, right.
And your biggest enemy in this, by the way, is the fear of going backwards.
It really is because there's a couple of things you want to face here.
Number one, you, the reality of the situation
is something that you're denying
because the reality is you do have to change gears.
You are injured, right?
There's no going around that.
If you hurt your back,
to face the reality of what it is.
Yes, so you have to accept it.
You have to be careful too.
I mean, because this is,
I mean, and I remember the first time that I injured my knee,
I was
in such a hurry to get back and recover.
And because I, you know, I'm a trainer, I have all the tools, I know what I need to do.
You know, I forced it and then end up re-enjuring yourself and then setting yourself even further
back.
So, it is a delicate dance, you know.
Totally.
How do I maintain the progress that I've made over the last months or years,
but the same time too, not to overreach
and end up setting myself further back.
Yeah, and there's also, you know,
like you don't wanna mask a lot of like your body's signals
of what it's telling you while you're doing these movements
because I know, you know, the tendency is to like really
brace up and you know, kind of work around all these things that you're buying.
The signals are going off all over the place, but there's a lot of ways that you could think
you're making progression, but you're really just masking a lot of the underlying symptoms.
Oh, dude.
I have a wonderful story about that.
I experienced myself.
So years ago, I was on a roll.
I was working out.
I was very consistent. At the time, I had
just got it started in Jiu-Jitsu, but I was still lifting weights quite a bit. And I was
practicing a position and I went to post with my left arm and I felt something in my
shoulder, it didn't really feel good. And I couldn't really tell what it was, but it did
hurt. And what I didn't do was rest.
I didn't allow myself to heal or rehab.
Instead, what I did, I started with the ibuprofen.
So, okay, my shoulder hurts.
Don't want to miss Jitsu.
Don't want to miss my workout.
Takes you ibuprofen.
So, I did that for a little while,
and I did get away with it for a second.
I think it was probably a month or two.
I could take ibuprofen, but I noticed that the over time the pain started
getting a little worse, a little worse, a little worse. Finally it got so bad to where I
couldn't bench press and I couldn't overhead press and when I would, I couldn't do
jujitsu, went to the doctor, set up an appointment and the doctor said, well, you know, he said,
do you want to take some time off?
Like, what do you want to do?
I said, no, I don't want to take any time off.
He says, well, I can give you a cortisone shot
right on your, it was my AC joint that was injured.
He said, I can give you a cortisone shot there
and then you'll feel a lot better.
I mean, it relief.
And I said, let's do this.
So he boom, puts the needle right at the point
where it hurts, gives me a shot, about two, three days later, felt good again, went right back to training, ended up causing damage to
my AC joint and having to get surgery to have my AC joint resected.
They actually had to remove some of it.
Now when I went to the doctor to get the surgery, it was, became very painfully obvious to
me.
And I would recognize this in a client.
I didn't recognize it myself because,
when it's you, you have your own ego in the way, right?
So I recognized it myself that I caused it to get this bad.
I got to the point now where I need to have surgery.
So what I did with the surgery was I said,
okay, I'm gonna take this seriously.
I'm gonna take the healing process seriously.
I'm not gonna push it because I already made that mistake.
And one thing that helped me was remembering muscle memory.
This is a real thing.
As a kid, I really injured my knee really bad.
And I remember when I finally took the brace off,
that kept my leg straight.
I looked at my left leg and it looked
scarily skinny like in my knee was bigger than my my femur and it looked crazy and I remember thinking oh my gosh
What happened to my leg and then doing some rehab and doing some exercise and the muscle came back so quick
That it really blew me away. So I thought okay no matter what happens with the surgery
I know I'm gonna lose my pack I know I'm to lose my shoulder and triceps, I'm not going to
be able to do pressing or pulling or whatever, but it should come back fast.
In that time, I treated it properly.
I did everything the right way.
I remember when I took the bandages off and I finally, I did look in the mirror and I did
look scary, I lost a lot of muscle, but I did everything the right way and it came back
and it came back very quickly to the point where, you know, I have wonderful balance between my right
and left side.
And that taught me a lesson which is, don't be afraid of going backwards because muscle
memory is a real thing.
How long it, however long it took you to build your muscle in the first place, is not nearly
as long as it's going to take to get it back when you lose it.
If it took you four years to build your arms and then you can't work out for a couple
months, it'll take you like four weeks to build them back.
Literally, that's how fast it works.
So you got to make peace with that because that, if you can't make peace with that, you
will screw yourself over.
I had the same experience with my arm and I broke it in the same year, twice.
And it was so demoralizing.
I didn't know, and it was my right arm.
It's my dominant arm and it's something that I was,
you know, really identifying as an athlete.
I couldn't do all these things
like that I could normally do with my right arm.
And taking the cast off, especially for the second time,
it was almost like I was just skin and bone.
And it was really one of those moments
where I was like, I don't know if I'm gonna be the same
after this, if I really have to like change everything
I'm doing to my left side and relearn everything,
but you're right, it really came back fast.
It came back, you know, within an amount of time,
I wouldn't even have thought it possible.
So it's one of those things that might look scary at first,
but it's, your body will respond appropriately.
And it helps with the fear.
Yeah.
Because I think if you're focused on the fear,
oh my God, I'm gonna go backwards.
I'll never get be the same.
You're more likely to do the wrong thing.
Well, especially when, you know,
the first step
of the five steps that we listed for this
is focus on healing.
Yes.
And that is, you know, the mistake that I made in the past
was still focusing on trying to build muscle and gain
and gain and, you know, work around this injury
versus put all of my effort and energy towards
getting better and healing and rehabbing and
addressing the root cause that got me there.
Like, I feel like you have to explain a little bit more about the quarter zone shots because
I remember as a trainer, this was a massive hurdle for me.
One, understanding what exactly is a quarter zone shot.
Why do so many doctors prescribe it and tell clients when they have issues like this
that you dealt
with your shoulder and that's to go to.
It was hard to overcome that as a trainer
because one, I wasn't educated enough to really understand it
and what we were doing to the body by taking one of these shots
and then I had to overcome my clients going,
I feel amazing.
They take this shot in their hip,
they take this shot in the shoulder
and they're elbow or wherever they're trying to put
the brakes on a little bit to be conscious of it.
And then they go, I feel amazing at them.
So I'm just gonna go get another quarter zone shot
in a few months if I need one.
And what I learned later on was we were never addressing
the root cause, and not only were we not addressing
the root cause, we also were setting these clients up
for failure.
No, it's the equivalent of driving your car,
hearing a funny noise from your engine,
and just turning up the radio. So you don't hear the engine anymore. Yeah, yeah, that's the- of driving your car, hearing a funny noise from your engine and just turning up the radio.
So you don't hear the engine anymore.
It's literally the same thing.
So what a quarter zone shot does is it,
because here's why you feel pain from an acute injury.
So you hurt your shoulder, your body sends
even flammatory factors and markers over to the area,
increase inflammation.
That's also a signal for repair,
healing, for all the good stuff to happen. You feel the pain, which prevents you from moving it.
This is a good thing because it allows the area to heal. Injecting a cortisone shot there immediately
reduces the localized inflammation. So now you've reduced the pain, but you've also reduced all the
important signals
that tell the body to heal.
Over time, repeated core zone shots have been proven
to cause joint degeneration.
Not only that, but if you take away the noise, right?
If your car's making noise and you turn up the radio,
now your just, the noise eventually will get louder
because you're not fixing the root cause.
So if I'm moving improperly,
and that's what causes my shoulder pain,
and I take the pain away,
I haven't fixed what caused it in the first place.
I'm gonna continue to move wrong,
and I'm gonna cause more problems down the road.
So this is the challenge.
This is why focusing on healing is so important,
because the focus on healing not only allows you
to heal and recover, but it also gets you to focus on what caused the problem in the first place.
Why did I hurt my shoulder or why does my knee hurt?
Not just that it hurts, but what caused it to hurt in the first place?
Is it because I used too much weight?
Is it because I didn't have good stability?
Is it because my form and my muscle recruitment patterns
aren't great?
Address that, otherwise it'll happen
as you will continue to revisit this problem.
This is why a good chunk of people who have pain
or tend to hurt themselves, it tends to be a repeated injury.
If you talk to somebody who has hurt their back in the past,
ask them how many times they've had that same injury.
And more often than not, you'll hear a number like three or four.
Oh, yeah, I hurt my back.
How many times have you heard, oh, it's been a few times.
I hurt my knee, which knee, my left?
How many times have you heard your left knee?
Ah, like three or four times.
Well, and that's where we get to saying
where in clients would say things like,
I have a bad knee, right?
Bad hips, or I have a bad back.
You start to identify with a bad area of your body
because it constantly gets injured.
And so you just assume that, oh, I have a bad low back,
I have a bad knee, I have a bad hip.
It's constantly bothering me.
I'm always having to get quarter zone shots.
And it just becomes this vicious cycle
and we never really address the root cause.
You never focus on truly healing correctly,
and then getting to the bottom of,
why did I get in this place in the first place?
And what do I need to do to avoid this in the future?
And I think people need to understand,
healing isn't just not doing anything,
and laying down, and elevating, and mobilizing.
Like healing, there's a lot more involved in healing,
and movement is a part of that.
But it has to be appropriate
and it has to be addressing the type of movement
that was creating the problem for you.
You have to identify that.
Yeah, and studies show this, like when people have surgery,
if you've ever gone to the hospital
and had surgery, they'll encourage you
when it's appropriate to walk through the hospital.
Prevents blood clots, it's also been shown to speed up
healing, so that's what we mean by moving,
because there are moments when you should not move the area
that's injured, right?
You broke your arm.
You're actually in a cute injury, yeah.
Exactly, but moving otherwise, which means
don't just lay on the couch and be depressed,
unless you need to just lay down,
unless that's what's recommended,
but you could just go for a light walk or moving.
That's also part of the healing process.
But healing is the most important thing.
That's why it's number one in this list because nothing will prevent you from or nothing
will make you lose muscle.
Nothing will make you get out of shape more than failing to heal.
Like if you, you can have all the strategies in the world,
but if you get in the way of the healing process,
you ain't gonna go anywhere,
because an injury stops you right there,
dead in your tracks.
He prevents you from moving forward.
Now, did you guys use tools?
I mean, this is what I love like ice bath for too.
Like during this time, like,
because you have so much inflammation normally
in an area that's injured,
instead of blunting it with something like ibuprofen,
I'll do something more natural where I'm using like ice baths to bring down
the inflammation.
And even though you guys both alluded to, when you have an acute injury that
you need to leave it alone and rest, at one point, it eventually heals and it
is time to move that area.
And when it is time to move that area, I don't go right back into strength training that area.
Most of my focus is on mobility and stability
of that joint.
So the area that it may be injured or causing pain
or I broke or whatever it may be,
as I start to heal and get better,
the first emphasis that I put on any sort of training
is training the movement.
So having stability and making sure I have
in good range of motion because after you end up
healing in an area, we also tend to build up
a bunch of scar tissue that tends to limit your range of motion.
And if you go back to just a strength training that area
with a even shortened range of motion,
now you're setting yourself up for things.
Well, this is why I do, yeah,
I don't like blunting the signal
like as much as possible because I want to find the threshold.
I want to find where that lies in terms of like my body's natural signal to tell me,
oh, okay, that's the range.
You know, I'm going to move into that angle and that position and keep gradually working
my way towards, you know, maybe expanding upon that, but it's a gradual process.
And when I am trying to do that,
then I'm gonna come back and, you know,
obviously it's gonna aggravate it a little bit,
which may, you know, this is where ice for me
is definitely an answer to lowering the information.
Yeah, and ice can slow down recovery as well,
because it does slow down blood flow.
It's good for pain relief.
This is what's good about ice,
is if you have a little bit of pain,
you can use ice, it's natural.
It doesn't have the systemic inflammatory lowering effect
like drugs.
But when I say focus on healing,
what I mean is because if you're a hardcore fitness fanatic
and you're really worried about losing muscle
when you're injured,
you tend to be terrible at resting when you're supposed to.
I know I was.
If the doctor says to me,
hey, stay off your foot for the next four days,
I'm thinking to myself,
he doesn't really mean stay off of it.
Like I could walk around a little bit.
I think I know.
And this is the challenge.
The challenge is,
you're worried it's just so worried about losing muscle
that you won't literally follow the doctor's advice.
That's number one. listen to what they say if they say
Rest it let it heal then you should rest it and let it heal
I've trained female athletes who got breast augmentation who were so afraid of losing shoulder and chest
Muscles that they went and started working out and messed up the implants and caused, you know, the implant to shift in its
cavity and to cause different problems.
That's one example.
I've had examples of, you know, I've trained male athletes that had like a bicep tear and
the doctors like don't do anything with your biceps for the next, you know, three months
or whatever.
They thought, well, I'm just going to go light.
That's what I'm retaring where they had reattached the muscle.
So really focus on healing really is take their advice and if they say don't move it,
that's okay.
Yes, you'll lose muscle.
It'll come back faster though if you let it heal properly.
This is also to bring up a point for me when talking to the doctor.
This is a crucial thing to ask as many questions as possible.
I think people do a terrible job of getting all
of that stuff really defined in terms of what does that mean in terms of resting?
Is my leg elevated the whole time?
What are the actual steps throughout my day look like and have them outline that whole
thing for you?
Because the more information, the better. And so, I actually, I had a,
Courtney would come into some of my appointments
and would sort of act as an advocate
for a lot of like different types of medications
and things they present.
And the worst thing you can do is just kind of nod your head,
like you understand them, but not really understand them,
not ask more questions.
And so I just find that very common for a lot of people,
they don't ask enough questions.
Well, I also think, I mean, I'm gonna keep hammering
the mobility thing down and stability and range of motion,
because I mean, this is so close to home for me
when I talk about my Achilles tear that I just had,
and because I opted not to do the surgery
and I healed myself, it did take much longer,
and still to this day, I have to put a little more energy
and effort into a combat stretch on that side,
more than I need to do on the other side,
because it is still a little stiffer than my right side.
And so that focus has to be there.
I mean, when we created Prime Pro,
I really, like one of my favorite things about that program
is I really feel like it is the perfect bridge from physical therapy. So if you're somebody who has an injury like that
was acute to where you had surgery or something broken and you go in or cast up or whatever
and you see your doctor then the next thing after that they send you to physical therapy.
Physical therapy basically gets you to heal and get it better and at least being able to move
it again. Then you take your cast off or then you're released.
And from that moment of being released from physical therapy, you're not done.
You're not done.
Like going right back to training just because they have, they've said, okay, you're healed.
Now go back.
If you go back from there and go right back into your normal training routine, what you'll
find is that area that was injured more often than not is going to have all this scar tissue build up and you're going to have limited range of motion.
And if you just go into training and you neglect putting that extra effort into working
on the mobility and stability portion and range of motion of that joint or that injured area,
that is the, that is the most ideal way to segue back into. And again, it prolongs
the going to build a lot of muscle aggressively at first, at first, but it's laying the foundation
so that it does come back fast and that you don't end up re-induced or because what
will end up happening, here's what happens. You hurt your shoulder because you have, you
know, muscle recruitment pattern issues or movement issues,
cause let's say your left shoulder's moving
not in the ideal way.
So you end up hurting it.
You go to the physical therapist, do physical therapy,
range of motion is back.
By the way, let's switch physical therapists.
Real job is that's what the insurance pays them to do.
It's kind of bring back a normal,
what they'll say range of motion.
It's not to bring back strength, not to bring back the stability that you had before, but rather just give say, range of motion. It's not to bring back strength, not to bring back
the stability that you had before,
but rather just give you the range of motion.
So then you go back to the gym
without really working on correctional exercise,
and you're like, I'm gonna go work out.
I'm just gonna go work out.
You're gonna have more compensations
than you did before.
If anything, you'll make whatever
cause your shoulder to get hurt, worse.
You'll cause worse movement pattern issues,
rather than healing and solving the issue, you'll make things a lot worse later on.
So that gradual process is very important.
Well, and this is also assuming that you have a really good physical therapist too.
Just like there's bad trainers, there's bad chiropractors, there's also bad physical
therapist.
There's physical therapist that will get not get your old range of motion back.
They'll get you back range of motion that allows you to do daily functions, which means walking, sitting, standing.
Yeah, it's not many times it's not ideal.
Many times it's not back to your range of motion you had before that.
It's good enough for you to walk.
It's good enough for you to get up and down.
It's good enough for you to reach above your head, whatever wherever the injury may be.
That's what a lot of them focus on.
And that a lot of times is not enough
to prevent it from happening again to you.
It's enough for you to get by,
and then you go back again to strength training,
and then we re-endered again.
So I can't stress enough that when you get back
into your training, and so like the next point is,
you know, train what you can.
Well, part of training what you can isn't just training the other body, which that is a point too.
It's also focusing on that area and working on the mobility and range of motion. You've
got to put the energy and focus there that needs to be, I think, a staple in the beginning
of your recovery. Right. But, you know, the second point being trained what you can also refers to this.
I've known this to happen with people.
They hurt their knee.
So now they can't go and do their normal leg workouts.
They're doing some correctional stuff.
Let's say they're doing some prime pro, some maps, prime pro type stuff for the lower body,
but because they can't go in the gym and really work their legs, they also neglect working
their upper body. So now they're't go in the gym and really work their legs, they also neglect working their upper body.
So now they're not working out at all, okay?
Studies show that not lifting weights at all accelerates the muscle and strength loss
that you may get from your injury.
No joke, literally going to the gym and working out other areas actually reduces some of the
muscle loss you'll have in the injured area.
So just because you're upper body,
it's even more common for people with up,
I think for guys at least,
to have an upper body injury
and then just not go to the gym and work out legs either.
If you hurt your upper body, if you hurt your shoulder,
or your elbow, you can still work out your legs,
you should, you should still work your legs out.
Now that doesn't mean you're gonna not lose muscle
in your upper body, but believe it or not,
you actually lose less muscle in your upper body because you work your legs out. Now that doesn't mean you're gonna not lose muscle in your upper body, but believe it or not, you actually lose less muscle
in your upper body because you work your legs.
Whenever you work out, when especially with resistance
training, most of the muscle building signal is local,
meaning most of the muscle building signal goes to the area
that you're training.
But there is a lesser powerful, but still real muscle
building signal that's systemic.
So working your legs out does send a large signal to build muscle on your legs, but it sends
a smaller signal to build muscle and the rest of your body.
There are some very interesting studies that are old and they've done a few of these
where people will have a one arm immobilized and they'll have a control group.
So one group does nothing.
Then they'll have another group that works out the other arm.
And they find that the group that works out the other arm
loses less muscle in the arm that was immobilized.
Even though it's a different arm.
So train what you can also means
whatever your injury is,
avoid training it or correct due correctional exercise
or whatever is appropriate.
But that doesn't mean you should not work out
the rest of your body, find ways to do so.
So like with me, with my shoulder injury at that time,
that meant I couldn't do barbell squats
because I couldn't hold the bar behind my back.
I couldn't hold dumbbells for lunges.
This is when machines were great for me.
I got to went to the gym and I'm like,
well, I can leg press, I can literally sit in this chair
and do a leg press, I can literally sit in a chair
and do a leg extension or a leg curl.
And I did do those things,
and I do think that those contributed to my faster.
Well, you know, this is what machines were.
I know, this was the year.
This is what they're going for.
Well, this is what they originally were designed for.
Yeah. They were originally designed for rehabilitation.
They were made for that.
We found out that they were just so effective at it that they also built some muscle.
And so they've now bled into like everybody's routine, but the reality is, and I know we
heart for a long time, mine pump is harped on a lot of, you know, machine exercises taking
over your routine and eliminating the barbell complex movements
that are so important.
But here's a classic example of where they have tremendous value.
And the reason why they have tremendous values is because you are in a fixed position,
the body is in a fixed position.
And if you have an injury, you can pick machines that lock that injury area in a fixed position
that it's not at risk while you're lifting,
you know, potentially heavy weight
in other areas of your body.
So this is where I do see tremendous value in this.
Totally.
So aside from the correctional exercise
and the appropriate stuff you can do from the area
that's injured, train the rest of your body.
By the way, this is even something you can do
when you can't move the injured area.
You know, if your leg is in a cast and you a cast and you can't do really any correctional exercise, you can still
work out your upper body.
You can still do seated exercises and seated presses and bench presses and machine rows
and curls and those types of exercises.
So still train the rest of your body.
Because here's the fear, I think some people,
number one, they're unmotivated because like, what's the use? I can't, you know, work
on my upper body. So what's the use of training my legs or I can't work my legs? What's the
use of work on my upper body? Get over that. That's, that's the, you know, go train what you can.
But here's a second part to it. I think there's a bit of a fear where the person thinks,
I'm gonna, I'm gonna make, if I can't work out my legs
and I just work out my upper body,
I'm gonna cause an even greater discrepancy.
I'm gonna make it even more of an issue
because my legs are gonna get so weak
and my upper body's gonna continue to get stronger.
Not true, the muscle memory brings you back
very, very quickly.
And again, I'm gonna reiterate this,
that general muscle building signal that you send
reduces the amount of muscle that you lose in the area
that you can't work.
And when you go back to training it,
it makes the muscle memory that much more effective.
Believe it or not, although you can create big imbalances,
there are some safeguards where your body tries to
keep things a little bit more balanced.
So training what you can is a very, very,
that's a very important part of training.
And I, and look, the next point, I think,
kind of speaks to this as well,
because part of what happens when you're injured
is you stop training that area,
you start to lose motivation,
and what tends to fall with that is...
Yeah, dial in that nutrition.
Yeah, you stop training everything.
I hurt my leg, now I'm not training my arms either,
everything, and what's the use of eating a good diet, right?
What's the use of eating a high protein diet?
I'm not working out.
Anyway, huge mistake, this is a huge mistake.
This is where the comfort food
and the junk food kind of creeps in is, you know,
you're, again, psychologically,
this is where you want to feel better.
And so you're going to gravitate towards a lot of the foods that are comfort foods and things like that.
Yeah, it's that all or nothing mentality, right?
If I can't do this, and I'm not doing anything, so I'm going, well,
that'll make the healing process take longer,
and it makes the recovery and the road back process take a lot longer.
Now, do you see any value in even increasing your protein intake
during this time?
I do.
A high protein diet by itself will build a little bit of muscle.
It preserves muscle in people who are not moving.
So if you have like a patient who's literally bedridden
and you increase their protein, they notice less muscle loss
as a result, so it's protective.
And I will say this, if you're not moving as much as you were
before, I wouldn't necessarily bump my calories really high. I might control my calories a little bit,
but I would make up for it with higher protein. So you can reduce your carbs a little bit,
and then increase your protein. So maybe your calories don't go up, but your protein intake definitely
goes up. And remember, protein provides you with the building blocks of tissue,
muscle in particular. So you want to keep it high. So for somebody who's trying to build muscle
and somebody who's trying to heal, I would recommend about a gram of protein per pound of body weight.
So whatever your body weight is, hit that number in protein and keep it that way and you're
still going to lose muscle, you're still going to lose strength, but you'll lose less
because you're protein intake.
Well, you glazed over the calorie thing, which I think we have to talk, even though
this is about protein, it's also about recalculating and recalibrating the amount of calories you
should be consuming too.
So, obviously, if you were somebody who was training very intensely for a consistent period
of time, and then all of a sudden you go in your sedentary, especially if it's in a lower
body injury, which is keeping you from even walking around very much and moving, you do
need to keep in mind that you're probably going to have to reduce calories dramatically.
And so, based off of how, and that's gonna be,
it's gonna, and the reason why I won't give you a number
is because it's gonna be a huge range,
depending on your size and how much your movement is limited,
but it's something you need to think about.
So you reduce calories, with the same time,
you don't wanna end up reducing protein solo
that you're not hitting even those minimum target.
Yeah, so let's say you cut your,
you could cut your calories by 300 calories or 400 calories
and still increase your protein.
And the way you would cut your calories
would be by cutting some carbs,
maybe cutting some fat calories.
So let's say you cut, you know, 500 calories
from carbs and fats.
And then you increased your protein
and take by 200 calories.
You're still at a deficit of 300 calories
but you're now consuming more protein than you were before,
and that should have a protective effect on muscle.
Now, the next one, this is a good one,
and there's kind of two ways to do this.
So this is using static tension.
So static tension allows you to activate a muscle
without moving a joint.
So let's say my shoulder is injured
and I can't do a bench press, I can't do a row,
I can't do a shoulder press, but I can keep my arms immobile
and flex my pec or flex my lats and create tension
in that area.
Now for some people, this is gonna be okay.
For other people, just flexing the area
might be a little bit too much.
In this case, this is where stem can be valuable.
And stem kind of does what static tension does
to a much less degree.
Static tension is better.
But stem is those are the pads that you put on your muscle
and it causes the muscle to flex on its own.
These days, luckily,
stem machines are super cheap.
I could go on Amazon and buy one for 20 or 30 bucks
and physical therapists have used them for a long time
and they do reduce the amount of muscle
that you lose when you're not moving.
But this is really an important point
because this is that signal
that you're providing to the support system
around the joint where the problem lies
and to be able to start creating more of a rigid structure
that is telling your body,
like you have the safety now to start producing movement
around this joint again,
like everything is sort of accounted for,
that's part of the process is really being able to flex
and connect and provide that stability
there around the joint.
Well, this is when we talked about Prime Pro, right?
So Prime Pro, a lot of those movements are static tension movements, right?
We take the muscle to its in range of motion and then we connect to it and we create tension.
So this is what this is all about. And even though I, I, I used a,
an, a Easton machine, right? So I think those are great bridges for this time, like, like,
it's how I made a point, like, if it's so injured, still, that you can't even flex it, it
hurts. Like, okay, Easton makes sense. But I also caution people that use that because you're
also creating an artificial communication to the muscle to stimulate it.
You're not using it intrinsically.
You're not using the main frame.
You're not using your brain to fire that muscle and we don't want to lose that communication
and we don't want to artificially bring something else in for a long period of time that we
don't retrain the connection from the brain to those muscles.
It's a great bridge for somebody that it hurts to do that right now
to get some sort of artificial stimulation.
But for the long, long term,
you wanna get to the point where you can actually
connect to the muscle and create tension yourself.
And that's again, Prime Pro takes you through
every major joint in the entire body
and will help that.
So I don't care what injury you have,
there's movements and exercises in that program
that will help that person out.
And that's where you spend a majority of your time
when you're starting to rehab.
Yeah, when I had my shoulder in the brace,
and then finally when I was,
when I could activate it a little bit,
I couldn't, I didn't have a range of motion.
So I wasn't like I could lift my arm, that was too much.
But what I could do is lean up against the wall,
and what I did is I'd lean up against the wall,
pull my arm up against the wall,
and then I just push up against the wall.
So my arm didn't move, but I would activate
the shoulder muscle.
And when I started doing that when it was appropriate,
the recovery really started to take off.
This is how you use static tension.
Let's say your knee is injured.
Once it becomes appropriate, you could literally
flex, just flex the quad.
Just focus on flexing the quad.
Maybe put your foot up against something
that doesn't move like the wall,
and then push against the wall.
Don't move the joint, just activate the muscle.
That activation alone prevents muscle loss
and maintains that connection.
Well, I'm also going back to talking about the threshold,
so you know where your boundaries are.
Right up in front of that threshold
is where I really want to squeeze and connect
and provide stability,
because that's what's now gonna provide that feedback
to your body that, okay, now that that's secure,
we can press a little further forward
and gain just a little bit more range of motion.
Yeah.
Now, the last point is a relatively new one that I've started using.
I would say in the last maybe six years, five or six years.
Before that, I wasn't super familiar with it, but it's also one of the most exciting.
And that's blood flow restriction training.
It's exciting because nothing that we have tested or seen
can maintain muscle or even build muscle
on an injured joint like BFR.
It's actually no joke studies will show that it's similar.
It's not the same, but it's similar to lifting weights
like you normally would lift weights.
Like there's no recovery, you know, tool, there's no, you know, healing tool,
there's nothing that the physical therapist provided before, that would,
that even comes close to what BFR could do in terms of maintaining or even building muscle.
And so I'm putting a lot of impact in that injury joint.
That's the thing,, if your knee is injured
in order to really build a back and to build muscle,
you have to wait for it to be fully healed
so you could do your normal exercise,
your squats, your lunges, your leg press, or whatever.
Up until that point, it's basically about
preventing as much muscle loss as possible,
but you're gonna lose some muscle.
BFR has actually shown to stop the muscle.
To stop the muscle loss and then maybe even build a little bit, which is really crazy.
So the way BFR works is, and it's much more effective for the limbs, so the arms and
the legs, is to tie off the limb with like a knee wrap and you tie it off so that you
restrict some of the blood flow.
You don't tie it off so tightly that you go numb, but enough to where you feel the blood flow is restricted
and you feel some tension.
Then you do some light exercise.
So let's say normally, let's say I have a knee injury,
it still hurts a little too much.
I can't do body weight squats, I can't do barbell squats,
but I can walk and I can move it.
So I can move it a little bit
and I get on the leg extension machine.
And let's say normally I use 150 pounds when I'm healthy on the leg extension machine.
Well with BFR I would tie off my leg with a knee wrap, I'd get on the leg extension machine
and let's say at the moment my knee can handle 20 pounds.
Like that's it.
More than that it's too much for my knee joint but 20 pounds is about appropriate.
Under normal circumstances 20 pounds wouldn't
build muscle because the muscles that I had built before could handle 150 pounds. But now
that I've restricted the blood, it prevents, it actually starves the muscles of oxygen,
making, training them as if they were trained under high loads. So now I'm doing the 20 pound
leg extensions, and as I'm doing reps, and this is what you'll experience, you will feel
burning in the muscle like if you're doing something with much more weight.
You do a few sets like this, you get an incredible pump and it actually tricks the muscles into
thinking they're being trained with heavier weight and it's a remarkable, it's so remarkable
in fact that people who don't need to heal their body from injury can use BFR to build
their body parts anyway.
That's how effective it is.
Well, here's a cool thing too.
If you, this is so, so new,
that if you have a physical therapist
that is utilizing this,
you probably have a better physical therapist.
Yeah.
It's a good litmus test.
Yeah, this is something that is, you know,
it's relatively new.
It's what, six years or so, six, seven years is when it started hitting kind of a
business.
Yeah, it was, it started in the sports world, of course, right?
Where lots of money is at stake and getting these athletes back on the field or back on
the ice, or, because I believe it was hockey where it became popular first, you know, that
is where we found this research and that, and then it slowly has made its way into your standard
physical therapy and then now into the bodybuilding and training world, but it's still relatively
new.
So if you have a physical therapist that went to school 15, 20 years ago and they're rehabbing
you, they may not even be utilizing this.
And I think it's one of the coolest things.
I mean, I've came across in the last decade for sure
in training that it's been like a new hack that we didn't know.
I use BFR all the time.
I mean, we, what, three years ago, three, four years ago,
we created a guide.
So we have a BFR guide.
The inclusion training guide, I think we call it.
Yeah, yeah.
And we also have done some free content on YouTube,
our Mind Pump TV channel.
So if you wanna see how we utilize it,
we actually, I think in the YouTube channel,
we're talking about how to utilize it for building muscle
by itself, but this is incredible for rehab.
And this, in my opinion, like this is like the next,
so you talk about physical therapies first,
then you get into a lot of like the prime pro type of work.
And BFR, it was really, I think, the way you should be lifting
weights and training initially before you start to load
and do anything like that.
Yeah, it's extremely effective.
It's a wonderful tool.
In fact, it's a tool that we, I even recommended,
I think a couple of times for people when they were training
at home with no equipment during the pandemic.
It's a great way to prevent muscle loss.
But that's pretty, what we just told you really is the road map
to preventing muscle loss and to getting you back on your feet
as quickly as possible.
Number one though, is to focus on recovery and healing.
If you don't recover properly and get your body to heal properly,
nothing we said will help. You'll be stuck on this hamster's wheel of continued pain and
injury and not be able to get back to where you were before. But keep in mind, muscle
memory is a real thing. And if you do it right and if you heal yourself right, getting back
to where you were before can be a very
fast and rewarding process.
If you do it the right way, you'll get back better than you were before.
Look, Mind Pump is recorded on videos as well as audio.
If you want to watch the show, check us out on YouTube, Mind Pump Podcast.
You can also find all of us on Instagram.
You can find Doug, the producer at Mind Pump Doug.
You can find Justin at Mind Pump Justin. You can find Justin at Mind Pump Justin.
You can find me at Mind Pump Sal and Adam at Mind Pump Adam.
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