knee joint anatomy
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Oh and here are links to check the type of foot you have and which shoe you should be getting.. http://www.runnersworld.ltd.uk/foottype.htm http://www.zappos.com/runningfitguide.zhtml "Remi" <reparent@nbner.nb.ca> wrote in message news:e7Rwh.1682$R71.21523@ursa-nb00s0.nbnet.nb.ca... > Well I have been a cyclist for a long time and started to have bad knee > problems the year I was     

Group: rec.sport.triathlon · Group Profile · Search for knee joint anatomy in rec.sport.triathlon
Author: Remi
Date: Feb 2, 2007 17:22

Well I have been a cyclist for a long time and started to have bad knee problems the year I was trying out for the Canada Games, I stopped cycling for 7 years (buying first car, going to college, meeting girls and all that kind of stuff kept me away from the sport a little longer than I thought it would). I hurt my knee from over training on the bike, I pushed myself way too hard not having
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Well this is what is good about publishing a book first on the Internet in that I can show how a book is made with all of its changes. I am still wrestling with the title. Today I think the title should be this New Book: STONETHROWING THEORY THE DOMINANT THEORY OF ANTHROPOLOGY, Chapters of this book: (1) Introduction and stating the theory of Stonethrowing (2) the synchronous and intertwining     

Group: rec.sport.triathlon · Group Profile · Search for knee joint anatomy in rec.sport.triathlon
Author: Remi
Date: Feb 2, 2007 16:58

New Daddy wrote: Thank you all for your replies. I still have one question. Would the pain cease when I get used to running? I don't remember having to apply ice pack or take medicine for a moderate amount of swimming/cycling, and am wondering running, due to its impact on the knees, is an inherently different sport. Given your initial assertion that your knee pain is "due
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KC wrote: > Carl Douglas wrote: > > >>>>Although the leg extensors are at their shortest when the leg is >>>>straight, their job is also easiest since the straighter the legs the >>>>less force the extensors need to develop. >>> >>> >>>How do you figure that? For pure knee extension, the moment arm about >>>the patella can be simply modeled as constant (it may vary slightly >>>since the     

Group: sci.physics · Group Profile · Search for knee joint anatomy in sci.physics
Author: a_plutonium
Date: Mar 6, 2007 11:12

Carl Douglas wrote: Although the leg extensors are at their shortest when the leg is straight, their job is also easiest since the straighter the legs the less force the extensors need to develop. How do you figure that? For pure knee extension, the moment arm about the patella can be simply modeled as constant (it may vary slightly since the knee joint
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KC wrote: > Carl Douglas wrote: > > >>Kieran - I think you might be temporarily confusing ability to do work >>with ability to provide force? > > > Not at all. Individual muscle cells lengthen and shorten. They > produce force by trying to shorten. If they do shorten while trying to > shorten, they do (positive) work. If they are lengthening while trying > to shorten (aka an eccentric     

Group: rec.sport.triathlon · Group Profile · Search for knee joint anatomy in rec.sport.triathlon
Author: Tamyka Bell
Date: Feb 1, 2007 21:08

Carl Douglas wrote: Kieran - I think you might be temporarily confusing ability to do work with ability to provide force? Not at all. Individual muscle cells lengthen and shorten. They produce force by trying to shorten. If they do shorten while trying to shorten, they do (positive) work. If they are lengthening while trying to shorten (aka an eccentric contraction) they do what
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Dave <dave_m_moore@post2me.freeserve.co.uk> wrote: > On 30 Dec, 18:31, pas...@blueyonder.co.ruk (Peter Ashby) wrote: > > Dave <dave_m_mo...@post2me.freeserve.co.uk> wrote: > > > > > Thanks Peter. I think there's definitely something in what you're > > > > > saying. I'm conscious that I do tend to lean forward whilst running. I > > > > > only really noticed it when glancing at myself whist running     

Group: rec.sport.rowing · Group Profile · Search for knee joint anatomy in rec.sport.rowing
Author: Carl Douglas
Date: Sep 27, 2006 10:49

On 30 Dec, 18:31, pas...@blueyonder.co.ruk (Peter Ashby) wrote: Dave <dave_m_mo...@post2me.freeserve.co.uk> wrote: Thanks Peter. I think there's definitely something in what you're saying. I'm conscious that I do tend to lean forward whilst running. I only really noticed it when glancing at myself whist running past a shop window and catching my reflection. I
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Group: rec.sport.rowing · Group Profile · Search for knee joint anatomy in rec.sport.rowing
Author: KC
Date: Sep 27, 2006 08:36

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Group: rec.sport.rowing · Group Profile · Search for knee joint anatomy in rec.sport.rowing
Author: Carl Douglas
Date: Sep 27, 2006 06:30

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Group: rec.sport.rowing · Group Profile · Search for knee joint anatomy in rec.sport.rowing
Author: KC
Date: Sep 26, 2006 08:05

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Group: uk.rec.running · Group Profile · Search for knee joint anatomy in uk.rec.running
Author: Peter Ashby
Date: Dec 31, 2007 01:19

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Group: uk.rec.running · Group Profile · Search for knee joint anatomy in uk.rec.running
Author: Dave
Date: Dec 30, 2007 15:33

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