Cardio with Achilles Insertion Tendinitis
drewdeabenderfer2009
Posts: 1 Member
So, I just started feeling better after months of pain, (and rapid weight gain lol) and need to get back into the gym. I need to start doing cardio again, and my regular go-to was power walking on the treadmill at 15% grade for an hour at a time. Pretty sure that's how I injured myself in the first place lol. I know full well I can't do that quite yet, if at all. So now I'm trying to figure out what to do instead. I have tried the elliptical machines and they destroy my thighs before I can get in a good workout and then I am partially crippled for the next 2 days from the pain. Same kind of thing with the stationary bike. Any suggestions other than that? Was thinking maybe a stair climber but idk how rough that will be on my ankle/heel. Open to any suggestions.
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Replies
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Indoor rower. My trainer had me use this machine even when my achilles was highly inflammed. If it is only one foot, then you could even rest the injured foot on a box, completely eliminating it from the movement.
Swimming is also great, as is aqua jogging.1 -
@drewdeabenderfer2009 - I'm totally feeling you. I was in a car accident in 2017 which stopped my running full tilt. Was working back to it when I was diagnosed with chronic lyme disease and found out the bacteria was eating my achillies tendon causing achillies tendonosis. A lot of inflammation on the sides of my ankle when I walk, go up steps, get out of bed. Make sure anything you undertake you do achillies stretches beforehand. It'll help warm up the muscles and use ice after working out. I agree with above - if you can get in a pool, aqua jogging is great and less pain.
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drewdeabenderfer2009 wrote: »So, I just started feeling better after months of pain, (and rapid weight gain lol) and need to get back into the gym. I need to start doing cardio again, and my regular go-to was power walking on the treadmill at 15% grade for an hour at a time. Pretty sure that's how I injured myself in the first place lol. I know full well I can't do that quite yet, if at all. So now I'm trying to figure out what to do instead. I have tried the elliptical machines and they destroy my thighs before I can get in a good workout and then I am partially crippled for the next 2 days from the pain. Same kind of thing with the stationary bike. Any suggestions other than that? Was thinking maybe a stair climber but idk how rough that will be on my ankle/heel. Open to any suggestions.
You sound like you are jumping into anything too hard to start with.
Treadmill - too fast to 15% grade.
Elliptical - too hard (or fast) for level of fitness on it.
Bike - too long or too much tension for level of fitness.
You'll just keep injuring yourself if you keep attempting those methods. Or rowing for sure you will, since you can actually hurt your back if done wrong.
There's nothing wrong with those machines - only your method of using them.
Accept the fact you need to start out slow and easy and short.
Build up from there - slowly.
Also - your comments seem to suggest you think the cardio is required for weight loss - or at least blaming lack of for weight gain.
You have that concept wrong if that is the case.
As to what can be used with that type of injury - swimming, or 1 legged rowing/bike.
Everything else will just engage the calve's and use that tendon - possibly too much.5 -
Yep. I tore my Achilles tendon 4 years ago overdoing it on a treadmill w/ 12 % incline for 1+ hrs/day, and now I have Achilles tendinosis and a foot doctor who told me to *never* use incline again, not even 1 %, or I might get a full rupture.
It's really been a struggle to find exercises that work. Swimming, obviously, is the "school solution" for people with bad ankles, since it doesn't put any strain on the Achilles, but at least for me it's highly inconvenient to get to a pool.
I eventually got a recumbent bike and that solved the problem. For reasons I can't fully explain, it puts zero strain on my ankles whereas an upright bike causes inflammation. So that's what I do - 45 minutes ish a day on my recumbent - works great. Suggest you try on at the gym and see if it works for you.
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Ditto to a recumbant bike, or regular bike actually can work (once healed) - as long as the feet are on the pedals right.
You have to have the pedal wayyyyy back by the heel - maybe not directly under, but might close.
Might have to take straps off on gym bike to do that, don't attempt the back side if it's just the rounded axle cover.
This can cause some mechanical problems usually taken care of with ankle flexibility which you can't have.
You'll need flex to the knee without the hips rocking.
Normally proper seat height/extension is heel on the pedal with knee straight at furthest reach, causes the correct flex in knee when forefoot is properly on the pedal.
You might do that to see what that flexed knee looks like properly done. The duplicate it with heel on pedal.0
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