enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Popliteal fossa - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Popliteal_fossa

    The popliteal fossa (also referred to as hough or kneepit in analogy to the cubital fossa) is a shallow depression located at the back of the knee joint.The bones of the popliteal fossa are the femur and the tibia.

  3. Knee pain in the US increased 65% over the past 20 years ...

    www.aol.com/help-knees-doing-easy-exercises...

    Knee pain from poor biomechanics is the driver behind much of the knee issues seen by Shari Berkowitz, a biomechanist and founder of The Vertical Workshop, a studio in New York’s Westchester ...

  4. Baker's cyst - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Baker's_cyst

    A Baker's cyst, also known as a popliteal cyst, is a type of fluid collection behind the knee. [4] Often there are no symptoms. [2] If symptoms do occur these may include swelling and pain behind the knee, or knee stiffness. [1] If the cyst breaks open, pain may significantly increase with swelling of the calf. [1]

  5. A flexibility expert shares his four top stretches for ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/flexibility-expert-shares-four-top...

    Place your right knee on the floor where the wall meets the ground, then extend your right shin vertically upwards along the wall. If this feels too intense, move your knee further away from the wall.

  6. Dimples of Venus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dimples_of_Venus

    The dimples of Venus (also known as back dimples, butt dimples or Veneral dimples) are sagittally symmetrical indentations sometimes visible on the human lower back, just superior to the gluteal cleft. They are directly superficial to the two sacroiliac joints, the sites where the sacrum attaches to the ilium of the pelvis. An imaginary line ...

  7. Stretching This Small Muscle Can Make Knee And Back ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/lifestyle/stretching-small-muscle...

    The psoas is a hip flexor connecting from the spine to the femur and lower back. Here are the five best stretches to release the psoas, according to trainers. Stretching This Small Muscle Can Make ...

  8. Iliotibial band syndrome - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Iliotibial_band_syndrome

    Iliotibial band syndrome (ITBS) is the second most common knee injury, and is caused by inflammation located on the lateral aspect of the knee due to friction between the iliotibial band and the lateral epicondyle of the femur. [2] Pain is felt most commonly on the lateral aspect of the knee and is most intensive at 30 degrees of knee flexion. [2]

  9. Patellofemoral pain syndrome - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Patellofemoral_pain_syndrome

    Exercise therapy is the recommended first line treatment of PFPS. [3] Various exercises have been studied and recommended. [29] Exercises are described according to 3 parameters: [8] Type of muscle activity (concentric, eccentric or isometric) Type of joint movement (dynamic, isometric or static) Reaction forces (closed or open kinetic chain)