IF YOU'RE EXPERIENCING hip pain, you're going to have a tough time avoiding discomfort. These essential joints are involved in all kinds of basic movements, like walking and running, so you'll have issues being active—but the hips are also important for all the time you spend sitting down. They're in a tight, flexed position whenever your butt is in a chair, so you might not get a break when you take a seat to relax.
Luckily, there are stretches and exercises you can do to help alleviate some of that hip pain. You'll be able to work to improve your mobility and strengthen the muscles around the joints, which can be the key to finding relief.
Here, Brett Warner, P.T., D.P.T., C.S.C.S. of Bespoke Treatments and Vaughn Gray, C.P.T., guide us through a series of exercises you can add to your workout routine to address hip pain.
First, it's important to understand a bit more about the hip joint. The hip is the connection point between the pelvis and lower body. It's a ball and socket joint—the ball is made up of the head of the femur, or thigh bone, which sits just inside a socket created by the bones of the pelvis. Ball and socket joints are extremely mobile, and the hip can move in six different directions. The hip moves in flexion and extension ('closing' the joint and moving your thigh in closer to your body and 'opening' the joint and moving the thigh away, respectively), abduction and adduction (pulling the thigh away from the body and pulling the thigh in towards the body, respectively), and external and internal rotation.
This wide range of motion means the hip is used almost anytime you use your legs. That's great for overall mobility when the joints are working optimally—but that becomes an issue when something is wrong and you're suffering from hip pain.
Though the hips are relatively stable, Warner notes that it's not uncommon for the joints to become an issue for a wide range of people. "The weight-bearing nature and the amount of tendons and soft tissue structures that cross it make it a hot spot for irritability," he says.
Hip pain typically stems from mechanical imbalances in the body, according to Warner. Injuries or strength differentials on either sides of the body can cause the hips to become unbalanced, altering the movement pattern in the hips. Hip-powered movement then becomes "less efficient, often causing fatigue and weakness," Warner says.
Follow the routine below to find relief. If your hip pain seems to get worse or remain the same after this routine, be sure to contact a doctor or a physical therapist to get more individualized treatment for your injury.
Why: To start, emphasize mobility through the hip joint. This move helps open up the internal and external rotation aspect of the hip.
How to Do It:
Sets and Reps: Alternate back and forth for about 10 to 15 reps
Why: The hip flexor muscles power—you guessed it—flexion of the hips. Every time you drive your thigh up to bring your foot to the top of a step, that's your hip flexor working. This exercise will provide a good stretch through this muscle, which can get tight when we sit for too long.
How to Do It:
Sets and reps: Hold this position for about 30 seconds for a total of 3 rounds.
Why: Now that you've mobilized the hip, start addressing to strengthen the muscles that surround it to produce stability. "We often see weakness in the lateral hip musculature, specifically the gluteus medius and minimus," Warner says. This exercise has been shown to strengthen those muscles.
How to Do It:
Sets and Reps: 3 sets of 8 to 12 reps
Why: This exercise will really help increase strength through the extension motion of the hip. It also acts as a stepping stone from a traditional deadlift to a single-leg deadlift.
How to Do It:
Set and Reps: 3 sets of 8 reps
For more advice from physical therapists to help you move and feel better, check out all of our guides in The Fix series.
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2023-09-07T15:41:49Z dg43tfdfdgfd