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Thread: Femur Fracture, Bad Form.

  1. #1
    Join Date
    Jan 2018
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    Default Femur Fracture, Bad Form.

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    Dear Coach,

    I have been following progressive overload program that includes squatting three days a week, deadlifting, OH pressing, and bench pressing for a month now.

    All going so well, but I have two concerns; ten years ago I had a broken femur and I was hospitalized and I had intramedullary nailing and the fracture healed and a couple years later it was removed and everything is fine but I cannot stop but amagining that once My squats get so heavy -my goal is to hit 3 plates as soon as possible- but i cannot stop but imagining my femur will just snap one day under the weight when i start squatting heavy.

    Also, I mostly taught my self to do the left using your book and videos and the videos of Alan Trhall and I really want to know how to self assess my form.

    Seeking help from coaches in my area is not an option I now train at a gym and when I asked the gym coach to assess my form he told me to look up while squatting, inhale when I go down, exhale while going up, and place the bar in my hands not my back ( I swear I’m not kidding). I live in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia and strength training is never been heard of in these parts.

    Sorry for the long questions and I really appreciate your help.

  2. #2
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    Jul 2007
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    Default

    What specifically are your questions?

  3. #3
    Join Date
    Aug 2010
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    Wichita Falls, Texas
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    Quote Originally Posted by Mosaba View Post
    Dear Coach,

    I have been following progressive overload program that includes squatting three days a week, deadlifting, OH pressing, and bench pressing for a month now.

    All going so well, but I have two concerns; ten years ago I had a broken femur and I was hospitalized and I had intramedullary nailing and the fracture healed and a couple years later it was removed and everything is fine but I cannot stop but amagining that once My squats get so heavy -my goal is to hit 3 plates as soon as possible- but i cannot stop but imagining my femur will just snap one day under the weight when i start squatting heavy.

    Also, I mostly taught my self to do the left using your book and videos and the videos of Alan Trhall and I really want to know how to self assess my form.

    Seeking help from coaches in my area is not an option I now train at a gym and when I asked the gym coach to assess my form he told me to look up while squatting, inhale when I go down, exhale while going up, and place the bar in my hands not my back ( I swear I’m not kidding). I live in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia and strength training is never been heard of in these parts.

    Sorry for the long questions and I really appreciate your help.
    I think his question is this: will his femur snap in half from a heavy(ish) squat? The answer is a resounding no, unless, that is, your femur was going to snap anyways. A properly performed linear progression will likely result in your previously nailed femur to heal to a density beyond what it was when you were injured. I have had many patients with IM nails that have squatted, and a couple years ago, had one squat over 600# in competition. You should be fine.

  4. #4
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    Jan 2018
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    Sorry I guess I was so excited that I can ask you a question directly.

    1) My question is do squats put high stress on the femur that is enough to break it, specially that it has been broken before?

  5. #5
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    Like Will said, your femur will be Just Fine. Just out of curiosity, how did you break your femur originally? That's kinda hard to do.

  6. #6
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    Jan 2018
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    Thank you very much for your answer Will and coach Rippetoe I really appreciate it.

    I actually was just running on asphalt and out of no where it snapped in half. I know it is hard to believe but my doctor at the time said that this could happen because I landed heel first on asphalt on a shoes that is not designed for running plus a lot of bad luck.

  7. #7
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    This is difficult to believe.

  8. #8
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    Quote Originally Posted by Mosaba View Post
    Thank you very much for your answer Will and coach Rippetoe I really appreciate it.

    I actually was just running on asphalt and out of no where it snapped in half. I know it is hard to believe but my doctor at the time said that this could happen because I landed heel first on asphalt on a shoes that is not designed for running plus a lot of bad luck.
    Where did your femur fracture?

  9. #9
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    Quote Originally Posted by Mark Rippetoe View Post
    This is difficult to believe.
    That was my reaction. My working assumption would have been a pathologic fracture. Will asks a good question: Where was the fracture? And how old is OP? And does he have any other condition we need to know about?

  10. #10
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    starting strength coach development program
    Like bone cancer. Tuberculosis.

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