Core
all of the muscles that attached to or pass the joints in the lumbar pelvic complex.
Draw in maneuver
where you draw your navel to your spine without spinal flexion. This helps to activate the inner unit of the core for stability.
bracing
bracing is contracting the outer muscle units. Imagine trying to squeeze everything out of your stomach by taking a deep breath, holding it, and then pushing out. clients should be practicing abdominal bracing while strength training with weights.
Local Stabilization system
1) muscles that attached to the vertebrae.
2) Consist mainly of type 1 slow twitch fibers.
3) Provide support from one vertebra to another vertebra and are responsible for intersegmental and intervertebral stability.
4) helps with postural and proprioception control.
5) consists of the muscles: internal obliques, pelvic floor muscles, lumbar multifidis, diaphram, and transverse abdominis.
Global stabilization system
The muscles of the core
The progression and regression of core exercises
In order to understand the regression and progression of core exercises, you need a good understanding of the OPT training model as well as which exercises go in each phase.
Core training in each stage of the OPT model:
Stabilization core training:
Mostly done with stability balls or isometric holds. Between 12 and 20 repetitions, with a slow tempo, 0 to 90 seconds of rest and 1-4 sets. Example: floor prone cobra.
Strength core training
Include physically moving from the core, 8 to 12 repetitions, medium tempo, 0 to 60 seconds of rest and 2 to 3 sets. Example: reverse crunch.
Power core training:
explosive movements including throwing medicine balls, 8 to 12 repetitions, 0 to 60 seconds of rest for 2 to 3 sets. Example: rotation chest pass.