1. Start With a Warm Up
The warm up is arguably just as important as the workout itself. The best warm up will help pump more blood through your muscles to get them ready to work. You can knock out knee pain by adding light cardio to your warm up. Start with a light walk or jog, add shallow squats, and work up to jumping jacks. Your warm up should also include dynamic stretches, which are stretches that you don’t hold, but instead keep the body moving– like spider lunges, walk out planks (with straight legs), and toe touches to activate the muscles that support your knees. By the end of your warm up, your joints should feel less stiff, meaning less pain during and after your workout. Try this warm up routine on for size.
2. Don’t Miss Leg Day
To keep knee pain at bay, you should pay extra attention to the muscles around your knee. The muscles in your thighs give serious support to your knees. The tighter or weaker these muscles are, more pressure your body will put on your knees.
You can strengthen your quads with a seated leg lift machine, wall sits or your basic squats. You can work on your outer thighs with outer thigh lifts and side kicks. Finally, hit the back of your thighs, or hamstrings with deadlifts, with or without weights.
3. Choose Exercises Carefully
You can modify certain exercises to make them easier on your knees. For instance, you can squat with your back against a wall, which will isolate your quads and keep your posture upright. Just be careful not to put your hands on your knees to avoid added weight on the knees! If you want to get moving, but running is too painful (for now) you can try alternatives like rowing on a rowing machine. Rowing is a full body workout with very little impact on your knees. Same goes for elliptical and stationary bikes.
Knee pain might be made worse by some moves. Try to avoid moves that put most of your weight on one leg as they might put too much pressure on one knee at a time. Watch out for exercises that require you to move side to side like skaters and side lunges, which can cause your knee to rotate and lead to more pain. Check with your doctor or physical therapist for these kinds of movements, otherwise, avoid them until you’re all healed up.
4. Check Your Shoes
Sometimes the key to happy knees is where you’d least expect it: on your feet. Worn out shoes, or shoes lacking in arch support can put your knees into overtime. A good shoe spreads your weight across the foot, rather than favoring one part of your foot over another. If your walking shoes are over nine months old, then it’s time for some new shoes with plenty of cushion and all around support.
5. Roll Out Tense Legs
Saving the best for last, foam rolling can instantly relieve your knee pain. Tight leg muscles can make your knees work harder than they should. Good news is that you can force the tension out of these muscles. Grab a foam roller and focus on your outer thighs, quads, and hamstrings. Go slowly, and spend about 1 minute on each area, or until the muscle feels looser. It will hurt, but the pay off will be worth it! Try to roll a bit before and after a workout for the best pay off.