| Wedding | Fashion | Home | Onlypunjab Email Add Url | destination guide |
World News
Gadget News
Infotech News
Entertainment News
UK News
Culture News
ERP News
Science News
Asia News
Business News
Tech News
Webmaster News
Asia News
Hardware News
Security News
Legal News
South Asia
Africa News
Animal News

Website Main Page | News Main

The Piriformis Muscle
Publish Date : 10/10/2007 10:54:00 PM   Source : Fitness News Onlypunjab.com

The piriformis muscle is categorized as one of six deep lateral rotators of the hip and is one of only two muscles that connect the legs to the spine. If you know your piriformis you probably consider it more of an irritant than a rotator. Let's look closely at the specific functions of this consternating muscle.

The piriformis originates on the front portion of the sacrum, the triangular bone wedged between the two hip bones, passes under the greater sciatic notch (an opening of the pelvis) and attaches to the top of the greater trochanter, a bony prominence on the outside of the femur (thigh) bone.

The piriformis is involved in a number of actions. It assists in turning the foot out, drawing the leg away from the body when the leg is flexed and extension of the hip joint. Contraction of the piriformis moves the body in different directions depending on which bones do what. If the sacrum is stable the leg turns out but if the leg is fixed, movement will come through the pelvis. It is an amazing thing when your think of how many muscles, bones, ligaments and tendons are involved in every movement we make. Nothing happens in isolation.

Here is a way to feel the piriformis at work. Stand with your feet together, your knees bent and your butt stuck out a little. Put your hands on your butt and draw your knees apart slightly. Your piriformis should be working beneath your big gluteal muscles.

Another essential role of the piriformis is the balance it seeks to create with the psoas major, the only other muscle that attaches the legs to the spine. The piriformis is the only one of these deep hip muscles that attaches to the front portion of the sacrum. This brings it across the sacroiliac joint and its pull on the sacrum at the back body works with/against the psoas' pull at the front to bring balance to our delicate upright posture. Imagine the psoas pulling forward and down on the lumbar vertebrae at the front and the piriformis drawing the sacrum down at the back. This interplay with the psoas is one of the most important of the body's balancing acts, and as I will explain below, almost everyone is losing out on an extraordinary ability to find ease within our body.

One of our key postural issues regarding the piriformis is the position of our legs below the pelvis. The length and tone of the hip muscles is determined by the ease of the femur bones connection to the hip. If the head of the femur is free in the hip socket (acetabulum) the leg will fall to the ground with the ankle joint aligning with the middle of the kneecap and the center of the hip joint. If you are standing as we are designed, the feet are parallel and barely apart and these deep hip muscles will be in their ideal resting position. It is not that they are engaging; they were designed to be this length in standing.

If we stand and walk with our feet always turned out, the length and tone of the hip muscles will change. They will always live in a lax or short state as they are not naturally drawn to their proper length. This is easy to see in people as the displacement of the leg in the hip socket always manifests in the eventual turn out of the foot. Anyone who walks around with their feet splayed has strange things going in in their hip muscles.

For the piriformis this means that if the leg is turned open, or the thighs are pulled forward, it will have no contractile strength and will not be exerting its pull on the sacrum at the back to balance the opposite pull of the psoas at the front. Obviously if this is the posture that we always inhabit our piriformis is always lax or short.

You can get away with this for a long time or even a lifetime if you are lucky. But if you know about the pain that can arise from problems with the piriformis there is a lot of incentive to learn about and understand this muscle. It is not difficult to make a few easy changes to your posture and bring your piriformis around to being a team player in the complex of the pelvis.

Jonathan FitzGordon is the creator of the FitzGordon Method Core Walking Program. You can find more information at http://www.fitzgordonmethod.com or visit his blog at http://www.fitzgordonmethod.blogspot.com

Jonathan has been practicing yoga since 1995 and has been teaching since 2000, having studied with some of the yoga community's leading teachers. In addition he is a Level II Reiki (healing art) practitioner.

The FitzGordon Method is uniquely influenced by the Universal Principles of Alignment as created by John Friend of Anusara Yoga. The program synthesizes years of inquiry and practice and was born out of FitzGordon's personal and professional experience with changing neuromuscular patterning through self-awareness and repetition. The program's philosophy rests on the rock solid belief in our ability to change and evolve as we age.



Canada News
Gadget News
Infotech News
Europe News
Health News
Middle East
Sports News
Advertising News
America News
Application News
Asia Pacific
Software News
Education News
Networking News
Technology News
Entertainment News
Add Your Link to Our Directory
Health Care Message Board
Travel News
Fitness News
Onlypunjab Coop | Latest News | Reprint Articles | meditation techniques |

Advertisment >> Search Engine Ranking, Link Building, Website Hosting at Affordable Cost
Copyrighted Material © Onlypunjab.com 1998 - 2004.      Maintained & Designed by gdtech