The Bill Hartman Podcast for The 16% - Season 18 - Number 1 Podcast
The glutes, the glute medius. They blame glute medius to be weak. And so what they do is they lay people on their side and they do the traditional Lawrence Kendall manual muscle test. They go, look, a weak glute medius. And then they do some stuff. And then they push on it again. They go, look, it's now strong. When the reality is is what they had to do is achieve a pelvic shape change to get the muscle to actually produce force. So it's not that the muscle itself is weak. It's not that it lacks cross-sectional area. It was out of position to produce force in the position that they tested in. They changed that position. The muscle is now forceful. Yeah, so they blame a muscle and they accidentally do something correct. But what the solution is, is to create the shape change that is necessary to produce force straight into the ground.
glute mediusmanual muscle testingpelvic shape changeforce productionTrindelenburg gait