Training & Nutrition - Illiotibial Inflammation

Bikeforums.net is a forum about nothing but bikes. Our community can help you find information about hard-to-find and localized information like bicycle tours, specialties like where in your area to have your recumbent bike serviced, or what are the best bicycle tires and seats for the activities you use your bike for.




View Full Version : Illiotibial Inflammation


James Johnson
01-21-09, 07:13 AM
I have been riding regularly for the past 6 or 7 months, not a ton of mileage but probably 1000 miles in the mountains as I live in western north carolina. I got a trainer for Christmas and was working that into my routine as well. I have run only sporadically during this period. I have had some minor twinging episodes that I assumed were IT related when running in the past but nothing crippling. Well, one week ago I went for a run and experienced a crippling pain in my left knee. The run was up hill and it was freezing so I went out harder than usual. 24 hours later my knee was on fire. I was sure I had really damaged it, so I had an MRI and was surprised it was simple IT band inflammation. I have been given stretching exercises to do and ibuprofren. I don't think the IT band was a direct result of cycling since it hadnt showed up on any of my rides no matter how long or steep.

I want to return to cycling as soon as I can, but my knee hurts even doing nothing. I can ride the trainer and it doesnt hurt *more* than doing nothing. My question is do I need real rest, no spinning at all until the inflammation goes away, or can I do some spinning. I had a pro bike fit last week and they made some substantial adjustments but I havent ridden it yet. How long should I stay on the couch? Any advice appreciated. Thanks, JJ


pyeyo
01-21-09, 08:41 PM
You didn't mention your age but "substantial adjustments" sounds scary, anything more then a few mm at a time can really affect you.
IT band syndrome is tough if you let it become chronic. I would hook up with a good massage therapist, don't be afraid to ask around for recommendations, can help, go for one treatment and try to incoporate their technique into self-massage.
The old rule of thumb or my old rule of thumb was to ride 400 miles in my lowest gear before starting to ramp it up.
Not that I want to send you away from here but http://www.cyclingnews.com/fitness/ is a great resource for these types of questions. There is a panel of several sports therapists and MDs that answer questions. You can scan there answer forum back to 2003 or email them a question and they usually answer pretty quick or point you to the post dealing with it.
They deal with multi-sport questions as well.