Blogs, Articles, Video Tutorials & Self-help Guides
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Trail and hill running as a sport is demanding on our bodies. Common injuries are often as a result of overloading an area of the body not able to meet the demands placed on it, particularly as running is a repetitive, high-impact activity. Here are four minimal equipment/no fuss drills to help improve strength, proprioception and build fatigue resistance to improve your running economy.
Read how Lewis planned, trained and ran his first marathon. Helpful insights and tips with some guidance from our resident Running Physio expert Jonny Kilpatrick
Read about Jonny’s incredible experience running his Bob Graham Round in the English Lake District, the home of Fell Running.
Women’s health expert Physiotherapist Jenny Devlin gives insight on what you might expect from your postpartum body and the best approach to begin exercise and optimise your recovery
Think your core muscles are just a ‘six pack?’ You’re wrong! Learn more about your core and it’s importance in movement.
Pelvic Organ Prolapse - Signs, Symptoms and Treatment
What is pelvic floor physiotherapy and how can our team help you get back to doing the things you love symptom free?
Trail and hill running as a sport is demanding on our bodies. Common injuries are often as a result of overloading an area of the body not able to meet the demands placed on it, particularly as running is a repetitive, high-impact activity. Here are some of our favourite exercises to help improve strength, proprioception and build fatigue resistance to improve your running economy.
Video Tutorials with free downloads:
Hip Mobility
Stiff achy hips? Try this routine to ease the ache & improve your range of motion - Move better, feel better
Shoulder Mobility
Take a break from your desk - Try this routine to ease tight achy shoulders and improve your range of movement - Move better, feel better
Back Mobility
Use this routine to increase your range of movement and relieve back pain - Move better, feel better
check out our favourite exercises:
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mobility, stretching & Rehab:
Check out these blogs for guides and video instructions to improve your movement, mobility, strength and well being:
Is working from home making you ill and injured? Are you in pain & stiffer than ever? Are you feeling isolated and unsupported? The risks are real and you are not alone. This survival guide will help you make better choices to reduce pain & stiffness and look after your body and mind. What are you waiting for? Follow our top tips to move more, organise yourself and have a positive impact on your physical and mental health
Back pain is very common. It’s frustrating at best and debilitating at worst. This guide will help you develop strategies for long term change to get rid of back pain and stay pain free long term. No magic bullet or ‘Guru’ advice here, just sensible and actionable tips allowing you to take control and start your journey to a pain free back.
Animal flows are a great addition to any exercise plan, warm up routine or injury prevention plan. Learning to move like a monkey, frog, or bear helps to build full body strength, mobility and motor control which in turn will make you a more awesome human and less prone to injury. This blog with video tutorials will explain what these movements are, how to utilise them and why you should should be doing them
6 step mobility stretch routine to ease back stiffness and relieve back pain. Practice daily and you will see improvements in your range of movement and alleviate tension, stiffness and pain in your back.
Complete hip mobility routine to increase range of motion, reduce pain and improve function. Explore your own limitations and work to improve them with daily practice of this routine. Rid yourself of stiff achy hips and restore strong, healthy movement while improving athletic ability.
5 step shoulder stretch routine to relieve stiffness and tension. Discover a new range of motion and rid yourself of nagging tightness in your shoulders and upper back
5 Tips To Keep Your Health & Fitness Goals On Track - Physio Effect Director Danny Wray shares his advice on how to keep those New Year’s Resolutions going for the whole of 2019 and beyond!
Let one of our Physios, Danny Wray, take you through a set of exercises which will help to strengthen your back and hips and that help counteract the negative effects of sitting.
We see a lot of clients coming to us with shoulder injuries – sometimes it’s not what they think! In this new video, Danny gives us a the basics (and a bit more!) on the rotator cuff!
Physio Effect physiotherapist Jonny Kilpatrick demonstrates some exercises to improve overhead range of movement using small equipment you’ll find in your gym
It’s back month here at Physio Effect Glasgow - how to use a foam roller to help with back pain
Self-myofascial release is a name given to the use of equipment or tools to perform self-massage and stretching with the aim of increasing joint range of motion and improving muscle recovery and performance. One of the most commonly used tools is a foam roller. You will often see people in gyms attempting to manoeuvre their bodies in various positions over one of these rollers.
pilates, pregnancy & postnatal content:
Check out these blogs for inspiration, advice and information on all things pregnancy, postnatal and Pilates at Physio Effect:
This is our Postnatal Pilates class which you can begin from 6 weeks postpartum if you had a straightforward vaginal delivery or 8 weeks after a C-section or assisted vaginal delivery (with any complications)
The class is designed to help heal and strengthen muscles affected after pregnancy and delivery such as your pelvic floor and abdominals.
Fiona Callan is a CrossFitter and Ultra-marathoner who injured her back in 2017. She had an MRI which showed an “L5/S1 disc bulge with nerve root irritation”. In this interview we discussed how she chose to avoid surgery and returned to the things she loved doing best.
Lockdown has made many things more challenging, none more so than giving birth. Here I spoke to one mum who had been attending our Antenatal Clinical Pilates classes up until the country shut down on the brink of a global pandemic.
Running after having a baby is the obvious choice for many new mums wanting to begin or return to exercise. There are however some important things to consider in order to safely return to running and any other high impact exercise after having your baby. Returning too soon can cause long term implications including pelvic floor dysfunction, pelvic girdle pain and other musculoskeletal issues. This guide outlines the impact pregnancy and birth has on your body and important healing time-frames you must be aware of before returning to running. You will also find 2 free Pilates strength videos to give you an idea of the kinds of exercise that will help prepare your postnatal body for the demands of running
Returning to exercise after having a baby can be daunting & difficult. It is possible to cause yourself more harm than good if you return too soon or to the wrong type of exercise. This blog looks at the evidence and guidelines for returning safely to post-natal exercise and the specific benefits of Post-natal Pilates in restoring your Pelvic Floor muscle function, reducing Diastasis Recti and rebuilding your core strength and function. A FREE 30 minute Post-natal Pilates class is linked for you to try.
For over a year I’ve been enjoying teaching two Antenatal Pilates classes at Physio Effect and, from the start, the classes have been fully subscribed. Many of the women tend to come from Health Care professions themselves and know the benefits of exercising during pregnancy. I am always surprised at how many old wives’ tales are out there and how many women remain inactive or stop physical activity during this crucial time. I plan to summarise some recent evidence-based reviews on the topic so that the facts can be divided from fiction.
How one of our Physios managed getting back to fitness alongside the challenges of a new baby!
Our Post-Natal Pilates class is designed for new mums from 6 weeks post-partum (8-weeks if by C-section) and onwards. The class is designed to help heal and strengthen muscles affected after pregnancy and labour such as your pelvic floor and abdominals.
Watch Nicki demonstrating our new Pilates Reformer in our Northside Studio!
Interested in Pilates in general but not sure what we mean by Clinical Pilates?
pelvic & women’s health
Check out these blogs for information and advice about all things women’s pelvic health.
Women’s health expert Physiotherapist Jenny Devlin gives insight on what you might expect from your postpartum body and the best approach to begin exercise and optimise your recovery
Think your core muscles are just a ‘six pack?’ You’re wrong! Learn more about your core and it’s importance in movement.
Pelvic Organ Prolapse - Signs, Symptoms and Treatment
What is pelvic floor physiotherapy and how can our team help you get back to doing the things you love symptom free?
Returning to exercise after having a baby can be daunting & difficult. It is possible to cause yourself more harm than good if you return too soon or to the wrong type of exercise. This blog looks at the evidence and guidelines for returning safely to post-natal exercise and the specific benefits of Post-natal Pilates in restoring your Pelvic Floor muscle function, reducing Diastasis Recti and rebuilding your core strength and function. A FREE 30 minute Post-natal Pilates class is linked for you to try.
For over a year I’ve been enjoying teaching two Antenatal Pilates classes at Physio Effect and, from the start, the classes have been fully subscribed. Many of the women tend to come from Health Care professions themselves and know the benefits of exercising during pregnancy. I am always surprised at how many old wives’ tales are out there and how many women remain inactive or stop physical activity during this crucial time. I plan to summarise some recent evidence-based reviews on the topic so that the facts can be divided from fiction.
How one of our Physios managed getting back to fitness alongside the challenges of a new baby!
shockwave therapy - what? How? WhY?
These blogs detail how our groundbreaking shockwave therapy can help treat many common injuries, Click to read more below:
running - Training, inspiration, rehab & more
Check out these blogs for running inspiration, rehab and technique suggestions and testimonials
Trail and hill running as a sport is demanding on our bodies. Common injuries are often as a result of overloading an area of the body not able to meet the demands placed on it, particularly as running is a repetitive, high-impact activity. Here are four minimal equipment/no fuss drills to help improve strength, proprioception and build fatigue resistance to improve your running economy.
Read how Lewis planned, trained and ran his first marathon. Helpful insights and tips with some guidance from our resident Running Physio expert Jonny Kilpatrick
Read about Jonny’s incredible experience running his Bob Graham Round in the English Lake District, the home of Fell Running.
Trail and hill running as a sport is demanding on our bodies. Common injuries are often as a result of overloading an area of the body not able to meet the demands placed on it, particularly as running is a repetitive, high-impact activity. Here are some of our favourite exercises to help improve strength, proprioception and build fatigue resistance to improve your running economy.
On the 18th December 2021 , Jonny Kilpatrick who’s one of our owners and Sports Physios here at Physio Effect successfully ran the West Highland Way from Fort William to Milngavie in 20 hours and 25 minutes, beating his summer effort from 2018 at the West Highland Way race but on the weekend of the shortest day of the year. Here is an account of his day on the trails.
Running after having a baby is the obvious choice for many new mums wanting to begin or return to exercise. There are however some important things to consider in order to safely return to running and any other high impact exercise after having your baby. Returning too soon can cause long term implications including pelvic floor dysfunction, pelvic girdle pain and other musculoskeletal issues. This guide outlines the impact pregnancy and birth has on your body and important healing time-frames you must be aware of before returning to running. You will also find 2 free Pilates strength videos to give you an idea of the kinds of exercise that will help prepare your postnatal body for the demands of running
Learn how Physio Effect can help assess your running technique and how this could be the key ingredient that’s been missing in your quest to be a faster and better runner while also reducing your injury risk. Slow motion video analysis combined with advanced running metrics analysis, achieved via wearable Runscribe Pods, gives a complete picture of your running health. Based on this we can advise on simple techniques to improve and optimise your running technique making you faster, stronger and less prone to injury
New runners are often the most vulnerable to injury. Your body needs time to adapt to the new loads and demands that running puts on your tissues and joints. This blog provides expert advice on preventing overload and injury through planning, awareness and patience as well as tips on how to maintain tissue strength and flexibility to minimise injury risk.
At the end of May 2020, I intend to take part in the Cape Wrath Ultra and have my journey on the race documented in the Journal by 'Proper Adventure’. The Cape Wrath Ultra is an eight day event that will take competitors and ‘journeymen’ like myself through 400km of epic trails, mountains and world class coastal scenery. It starts at the highland town of Fort William and finishes at the most North-Westerly point of the country at the Cape Wrath Lighthouse.
This month we planned a trail session combining the well-known route up to the Whangie from the Queens View Car Park (10 minutes past Bearsden) with a short section of the John Muir Way and a loop of the Burncrooks Reservoir.
I started a 16-week marathon training program in January, only to get a recurring calf injury in the second week, but thanks to treatment and advice from Jonny, I was able to get back to training in a couple of weeks and back to running properly is a couple more, but it was a less than ideal start.
Part 2 of our ankle rehab case-study following Mariam's injury two weeks before a trail marathon.
Is working from home making you ill and injured? Are you in pain & stiffer than ever? Are you feeling isolated and unsupported? The risks are real and you are not alone. This survival guide will help you make better choices to reduce pain & stiffness and look after your body and mind. What are you waiting for? Follow our top tips to move more, organise yourself and have a positive impact on your physical and mental health