| Return
to index of articles
ON
YOUR KNEES
by Julie Gudmestad
Published
in Yoga Journal, May/June 2001
You
can either strengthen your knees or blow them out. It all depends
on your alignment.
If
you've ever experienced knee pain – or, worse luck,
a chronic knee problem – you know how frustrating and limiting
it can be. Unfortunately, it's not unusual for yoga students
to practice asanas with small misalignments in the knee. Repeated
over months and years, these small misalignments can contribute
to pain and long-term join problems. On the other hand, yoga poses
practiced with conscious good alignment of the leg bones and joints
can be a wonderful tool for building strong, healthy knees.
The
knee is so vulnerable and sensitive to alignment because it is
a shallow, basically unstable joint. Picture two long columns
stacked atop each other, and you've got the thigh bone (femur)
and the shin bone (tibia). The flat surfaces of the bones make
the knee dependent on ligaments (which join bone to bone) and
tendons (which join muscle to bone) to hold it together. Any side-bending
or twisting forces endanger these supporting tendons and ligaments.
For
example, standing poses done with improper alignment can put great
strain on the knee. The best indicators of knee alignment in standing
poses are the relative positions of the foot and kneecap. The
foot acts like a pointer showing the rotation of the shin and
lower leg, while the kneecap shows the rotation of the femur.
In Trikonasana (Triangle Pose), for example, the front leg kneecap
should point over the center of the foot. If the kneecap points
toward or even inside the big toe, you know that the columns are
twisting. In Trikonasana, all yogis need a strong outward rotation
of the femur bone in the hip socket to align the femur with the
shin and foot.
Bent-leg
standing poses can also stress the knee. As the knee bends, it
should function like a hinge, with no sideways movement. In Virabhadrasana
II (Warrior II), a common misalignment is for the front knee to
point inside the big toe. In this position, the columns of the
leg are not only twisting, they are also bent to the side at their
junction. This widens the gap between the bones at the inner knee,
straining the ligaments there, and compresses the outer knee,
which abrades the join surface and contributes to arthritis. As
in Triangle, a strong outward rotation of the front leg femur
is needed.
Divine
alignment
To learn proper leg alignment, it can be helpful to practice first
in a simpler exercise before incorporating the action into more
complex yoga poses. In both of the following exercises, standing
in front of a mirror will help you monitor your alignment.
In
the first exercise, lean back against a wall, with your heels
about a foot from it. Slowly slide down the wall; as the knee
bends, make sure the kneecap points straight out over the center
of the foot.
In
the second exercise, stand with your left hand on a counter or
the back of a chair. Put your right foot on the broad side of
a yoga block. Make sure that the right knee stays centered over
the foot as you step up onto the block and as you set the left
foot back on the floor. Especially if the knee is displaced inwardly,
bending and straightening it over and over can cause pain and
injury. Practice of this simple exercise can help train the muscles
to hold the leg in proper alignment, preventing repetitive damage
to the knee ligaments and cartilage during standing poses –
and during everyday activities like going up and down stairs.
These
simple exercises also help to strengthen the quadriceps muscles
on the front of the thigh. Quadriceps strength is very important
in supporting the knee joint, including the kneecap, which is
actually embedded in the quadriceps tendon. A strong quadriceps
helps to stabilize the femur and shin bone in proper alignment,
and the inner quad is especially important in stabilizing a fully
extended, straight knee.
Many
yoga students have difficulty engaging or contracting the quadriceps
in straight-leg standing poses, especially Trikonasana. To learn
how to contract the quadriceps in a straight-knee position, try
sitting on the floor with both legs stretched out in front of
you. Find your kneecap with your fingers; then slide one finger
down the kneecap to the bottom edge, toward the shin bone. As
you slide the finger just over the edge of the kneecap, you will
be on the quadriceps tendon, which attaches the muscle to the
top of the shin bone. With just a mild attempt to straighten the
knee or lift the foot off the floor, you can feel the tendon become
firm under your finger. Continuing to contract the quad, try to
move the kneecap around with your fingers: The contracting quad
will prevent the kneecap from moving. If you then consciously
relax the quad, you can move the kneecap around.
Now
come back to standing and move into Trikonasana to the right.
Press out through the right foot and draw up with your quadriceps.
Put your right fingers on the kneecap and try to move it. If it
stays still, your quadriceps are contracting as they should, helping
to stabilize the knee.
Take
the Padmasana challenge
Seated poses may also put strain on the knee. In Virasana (Hero
Pose), if your toes angle out to the sides instead of pointing
straight back, you're twisting and straining your knees. The foot
and lower leg are rotating out while the femur is, relatively
speaking, rotating in. While Virasana does require the femur to
rotate in slightly and while the knee can safely allow some twist
in a bent, non weight-bearing position, Virasana with the feet
turning out is an excessive twist which will damage the knee ligaments.
To
set up good Virasana alignment, start on your hands and knees.
Make sure the shin bones point straight back and are parallel
to each other and the little toe is just as close to the floor
as the big toe. Sometimes it helps to dig the tops of the toes
into the floor. Then sit back between the heels. If the sitting
bones won't touch the floor, or if you feel any discomfort
in your knees or ankles, sit on a support (a book, a folded blanket,
or a block).
Cross-legged
sitting poses such as Padmasana (Lotus Pose) can also be problematic
for the knees. To sit well in Padmasana, the femurs must be able
to deeply externally rotate within the hip sockets. When this
rotation is limited, the knees will stick up in the air. If you
then attempt to place the foot on top of the opposite thigh, the
outer knee ligaments will be stretched and the inner knee surfaces
compressed, causing pain, and if the pose is forced, injury.
Before
students attempt Full Lotus, I recommend they increase their hip
flexibility so the knees come near the floor when they sit cross-legged.
To help improve external rotation, try this variation of Baddha
Konasana (Bound Angle Pose). Sitting tall with your back to a
wall, place the soles of the feet together and draw the heels
in toward the hips. Either allow gravity to pull the knees down
or very gently press the hands on the thighs, lengthening the
thigh bones out of the hip sockets and down toward the floor.
Sit in this position for two to three minutes, so the muscles
and connective tissue around the hip joint can soften and release.
Hip
joint flexibility can also be helped by lying on your back and
crossing the right ankle over the left knee. Hold your hands behind
the left knee and gently pull the legs toward the chest. You should
feel a stretch in the back of the right hip, not at the knee.
Because the muscles and fascia (connective tissue) of hip joints
are so strong, it may take months of work to improve hip flexibility
enough to do Padmasana without knee strain.
If
your hip flexibility is adequate and you still experience knee
pain in sitting poses, it may be due to previous knee injuries
or strains. If that is the case, it can help to create a long
thin roll with a washcloth or small towel. Holding each end of
the roll, pull it deep into the back of your partially bent knee;
hold the roll in place as you continue to bend the knee fully.
Then try Virasana, Padmasana, or some other bent-leg sitting pose.
The roll helps to keep the bones in their natural alignment, without
twisting or side bending, and keeps a little space open inside
the joint, avoiding compression.
All
these cautions may sound alarming, but you really only need to
keep a few simple principles in mind: Always check your alignment,
and if you ever feel strain in your knees, back out of the pose
and experiment until you feel the stretch in your hips or groins
instead. Practiced with care, asanas can contribute to the long-term
health of your knees by strengthening your quadriceps, opening
your stiff hips, and teaching your body improved alignment and
movement patterns that transfer into your everyday activities.
back
to top
|