Showing posts with label calf compressions socks. Show all posts
Showing posts with label calf compressions socks. Show all posts

Saturday, March 19, 2011

And The Cause Of My Injuries Is . . . Me.

I am feeling relieved.  In the last few days I have had so many different people tell me so many different things about the issue with my left foot.  There were x-rays, MRIs, examinations, therapy, medication, ice, heat, etc.  There were different doctors who had different opinions.  All but one of the doctors who had a specialty in a type of surgery wanted to operate, because that is what surgeons generally do.  The only doctor who didn’t think surgery was necessary --- or even indicated --- is a runner.  Note to all runners (or people trying to be runners) out there who have orthopedic issues and need to consult a doctor: make sure the doctor is a runner or has been a runner.  In my humble opinion (and after the last few days), having a medical degree and even board certification in orthopedic medicine/surgery and/or podiatry isn’t enough.
As I wrote a few weeks ago, I was prescribed orthotics and told to give up my neutral running shoes (which I loved) for running shoes that had more stability/motion control.  It made sense and I did it.  A few weeks ago the doctor also gave me a prescription of prednisone, which I took.  I ran somewhere between 25-30 miles with this new combination of orthotics and stability/motion control shoes.  With the exception of the last 5.5 miles that I ran, I was taking the prednisone, which was numbing the pain.  I was already being tentative while I was running because of the Achilles tendonitis, which is more pronounced (and more painful) in my right leg.  Seemingly, as a result, I was putting more pressure on my left leg and foot.
When you put your heart, soul, and mind into training and when you have a goal, it really throws you when someone who doesn’t really know you tells you that you won’t be accomplishing what you set out to do.  Frankly, I was downright pissed.  It showed in my mood.  It showed in my interactions.  It showed in relation to my sleep and my pain level.  I was starting to get very nervous that I actually needed surgery now.
I pulled some strings and got into a doctor who is also a runner.  I wasn’t expecting much.  It was more to appease myself and make me feel as if I had done everything in my control.  I was wrong.
The purpose of stability/motion control shoes is to control your motion and make your gait more stable.  The purpose of orthotics is to control your motion and make your gait more stable.  Theoretically, if you use orthotics with neutral shoes it should have the same effect as using stability/motion control shoes without orthotics.  But, if you use orthotics with stability/motion control shoes then it is too much stability/motion control for your foot --- it actually hurts your foot by pushing on your outer foot and arch and putting pressure on that part of your foot. 
Remember I said there was pain on my left outer arch and foot and that it was a pain that I had never felt before?  Remember how I said that in all but my last 5.5 miles I had been taking prednisone, which was masking some of the pain?  Remember how I said that I was putting more pressure on my left leg and foot?  Is this starting to make sense?
Bottom line, I screwed up my foot with too much stability/motion control.  Luckily, I caught it early enough and didn’t keep running in the combination of orthotics and stability/motion control shoes.  Just think that if I hadn’t been so insistent in seeing a doctor who was a runner, I may have ended up with surgery that, in all likelihood, wouldn’t have helped and may have hurt my foot even more.  I was told to keep up the ice, take the pain killers for a few more days, and then it will start to get better.  I was told to try running in the motion control/stability shoes without the orthotics and then try running in the neutral shoes with the orthotics and compare them.  Under no circumstances, though, am I to run with both the orthotics and the motion control/stability shoes combination.
The doctor today gave me a lot of really amazing insight.  He said that you can tell the difference between a good running store and an average running store by the shoes that they give you.  He said that if the store brings you three models --- Asics Gel Kayano, Mizuno (model I don’t remember), and the Nikes that I have --- they are bringing you the three most expensive shoes in the store and also bringing you more stability/motion control than you likely need (especially if they know you have orthotics).  For some reason, the stability/motion control shoes are more expensive than the neutral shoes.  That comment made me appreciate Varsity Sports so much more, especially when there have been times when the staff there has talked me out of the more expensive shoes based on the reasoning that I didn’t need “that much shoe.”
The doctor also recommended that I take magnesium.  Magnesium will help with muscle recovery and timing.  Every night, during the hour before I go to sleep, I am to spend the first 20 minutes icing, the next 20 minutes soaking my feel in Rev Epsom Salt (http://www.rev-life.com/ ), and then the final 20 minutes icing.  Apparently the Rev Epsom Salt makes a product meant for athletes that has more magnesium in it than other brands, which will help work out muscle knots. 
He didn’t tell me anything that I didn’t know in terms of my Achilles issues.  I am going to be sore.  I am going to have to spend a lot of time stretching and icing.  I am going to have to take a lot of ibuprofen (although he said I should take it before my runs).  I am going to have to limit how many times per week I run.  But, if I can handle it then it won’t hurt me any more than I’m already “hurt”.  But, at the end of the appointment he asked if I loved my shoes before, the neutral ones, why had I changed because the shoes weren’t going to help with my Achilles issues in light of the bone spurs?  I didn’t have a good answer.
What a lot of this comes down to is the need to trust yourself and your senses.  My feet weren’t really hurting me.  It was my right Achilles, not even my left Achilles.  I saw a doctor not because of my feet, but because of my Achilles.  I should have trusted myself and asked more questions before making the change in my shoes.  Lesson learned, loud and clear.
I didn’t trust myself enough or my instincts enough, and as a result I got hurt.  I got hurt because I wasn’t able to see myself as a runner.  Instead, I was comparing myself to my impression of who a runner is and what a runner looks like.  I might not be the person in my head, but based on my mileage and what I have done in the last 11 months --- I am a runner.  I may be a runner who is trying to improve my distance and my pace, but I am a runner.
In a few weeks, God willing, I will be “back in the game”.  Bruising and minor tears will be healed by then --- injuries I brought upon myself.  I can’t wait to get "back in the game."  Until then, let's hope for a Badger win tonight.  It may be the pain killers (which I admit I took a few hours ago, so this post may not be so lucid), but I am starting to think it is possible that the Final Four may be four Big Ten Teams --- maybe even a Wisconsin v. Michigan showdown.  Now that would get me excited.......

Saturday, March 12, 2011

Don't Diss Them Until You Try Them.

I hesitated before buying them because I know how stupid they look.  The thing is, though, that after doing my research they seemed to make sense --- especially with the issues that I was having with my Achilles.  They make me look like I am wearing knee socks or leg warmers, something I didn’t wear even when they were popular in the mid 1980s.  I’ve gotten over the feeling of looking stupid and have become immune to the funny looks.  Truth is, I LOVE them and I don’t know if I could run without them anymore.  Moreover, the fact that I put them on as a matter of course when I put on my gym clothes --- whether I am running errands first or going to the office, etc. --- makes me realize how much self confidence I have gained from running.  I care more now about how my run is rather than how I look while I am running or how people may see me while I am running.  That was a pretty big realization for me, not to mention how much personal growth.
In the last few years a growing number of runners, including honest to goodness world class runners, started to wear calf compression sleeves.  Some wear them during their runs and others wear them to recover after their runs.  The purpose of calf compression sleeves is somewhat akin to the use of surgical socks in a hospital setting --- reduce swelling and increase venous return.  In essence, there is increased blood flow, decreased swelling, there isn’t a buildup of lactic acid, and there is a decrease in muscle vibration with increases muscle power.  They come in surgical grade and some that are non-surgical grade. 
I’ve tried several different kinds, both in terms of the compression sleeves and the actual compression socks.  I like the sleeves more for running and the socks more for recovery.  I also think it is important not to explicitly follow the directions and try them for yourself --- as an example the “recovery” socks or sleeves may work better for your actual runs versus for recovery.  Here are my thoughts about what is out there in terms of compression socks/sleeves.
·         The brand that I like the best is CEP.  http://www.cepcompression.com/.  I have bought the compression sleeves and the socks.  They are snug, but in no way uncomfortable.  I feel more secure when I am wearing them.  I like using the compression socks for recovery.

·         The brand that I like the least is Zensah.  www.zensah.com.  Because I say that I like them least is not to imply that I dislike them.  Instead, of all of those that I have tried they are simply the ones in which I feel the least secure, meaning I don’t feel like they are really compressing all that much.  Initially I thought it was because I bought the wrong size, but even when I bought the size smaller they felt fairly similar. 


·         The Sugoi compression sleeves are a close second to CEP.  www.sugoi.com.  Ladies, please note that they only come in the men’s category, but just buy the smaller size.  Do not let the fact that they are men’s accessories stop you from trying them.  Sugoi is a well known running company and the quality of these sleeves is excellent. 

·         Saucony makes two different levels of compression socks and also compression sleeves.  www.saucony.com.  If I was someone who liked running in the compression socks versus the compression sleeves, I have no doubt that I would be wearing these for every run.  I have gotten used to wearing these to sleep in on the night after a really long run.  I just feel better in the morning and my Achilles feel much better.

·         I have not yet tried other brands.  Remember, I live in New Orleans where I don’t have as many options as I would if I were living in a larger city.  But, then again, I didn’t see either the Skins (http://www.skinsusa.com/ ) compression sleeves/socks or the Zoot (www.zootsports.com ) compression sleeves/socks in either New York or Chicago.  Those are the other brands that are fairly well known in the market.
All in all, it could all be in my head.  Maybe it is psychological and I simply feel more secure wearing the sleeves/socks; almost as if because I am wearing them my injuries aren’t going to get the best of me.  So even though I may look silly, I am going to keep wearing them and praising them at every opportunity that I get.