Latest Injury Prevention Research: Asymmetry, Strength, Flexibility, & Shoes
The Run Smarter Podcast - Een podcast door Brodie Sharpe - Zondagen

Learn more about Brodie's Research Database & AI Assistant ๐๐In this episode, Brodie dives into three new studies aimed at helping runners prevent injury and understand how tech and biomechanics affect performance. Whether you're a recreational runner or an aspiring marathoner, these findings offer practical, science-backed takeaways.Featured Studies & Key InsightsAsymmetry & Bone Stress InjuriesStudy Title: Can biomechanical variables and asymmetry predict bone stress injuries in collegiate distance runners?โ Key Finding: Even small left-to-right asymmetries may increase injury risk โ particularly for female runners.๐งโโ๏ธ Implication: Asymmetry under 10% was still meaningful in injury prediction. Donโt ignore minor imbalances in cadence, step length, or ground reaction force.๐ง Tip: Wearables that track contact time or vertical oscillation may help identify early imbalances before pain begins.Strength & Flexibility Self-Assessments for MarathonersStudy Title: Strength and Flexibility Self-Assessment and Subsequent Training Injuries Among Recreational Runners of the NYC Marathonโ Key Finding: The single-leg glute bridge was the only test significantly associated with injury risk.โ Flexibility tests (sit & reach, quad stretch) and other strength tests (planks, heel raises, push-ups) had no predictive value.๐ DIY Test: If you canโt hold a single-leg glute bridge for >20 seconds on your weaker side, your injury risk may be higher.Super Shoes & Injury RiskStudy Title: Technology Advanced Running Shoes Reduce Biomechanical Factors of Running-Related Injury Risk๐ Super shoes (like Nike Alphafly) encouraged mid/forefoot striking without increasing joint or muscle strain.โ They reduced load on key areas like the ankle joint, soleus, and peroneus longus.โ๏ธMinimalist shoes, on the other hand, tripled ankle joint forces and heavily loaded the calf and foot โ a risk for Achilles and metatarsal injuries.โ ๏ธ Caution: Transition slowly into super shoes or minimalist footwear. Your body needs time to adapt to new mechanics.Practical Takeaways for RunnersMonitor asymmetries using wearables or self-awareness โ donโt wait for pain.Use the glute bridge hold as a simple strength test at home. Aim for >20 seconds on both sides.Super shoes arenโt just for speed โ they may actually help with injury prevention, especially for habitual forefoot strikers.Avoid going cold turkey into minimalist shoes unless you're conditioned for it.๐ Want to Go Deeper?๐ All referenced studies are stored in the Run Smarter Research Database โ accessible for just $8.99/month. ๐ฌ Plus, get access to the Run Smarter AI Assistant, which answers your running questions based on podcast episodes, papers, and course content.๐ Click here to explore membership optionsFor MORE Run Smarter Resources ๐โโ๏ธ๐- Including Free Injury Prevention Courses ๐ฉน๐- The Run Smarter Book ๐- Access to Research Papers ๐๐- & Ways to Work with Brodie ๐ค๐๐ CLICK HERE! ๐โจย