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Stretch and Flex

Stretches for Your Lower Legs

Stretching can keep your lower legs limber and your joints pain free. The following stretches from One Hundred Stretches by Jim Brown involve the ankles and knee joints.

Keep these guidelines in mind when doing them:

  • Start out slowly and build repetitions gradually.

  • Stop any exercise that causes pain.

  • Repeat each exercise three to five times.

  • Begin each stretching session with five to seven minutes of gentle aerobic exercise, such as walking or riding a stationary bicycle.

Lower legs

Stand with your feet separated 12 to 18 inches, one in front of the other and toes pointed forward. Slowly shift your weight forward, bending the knee that’s out in front and keeping the heel of the back foot on the floor. You should feel the resistance in the muscle on the back of your calves. Switch legs and repeat.

Achilles tendon/calf

Stand two or three feet from a wall. Lean forward with both hands touching the wall, one foot forward and the other 12 to 18 inches behind. Leave both feet flat on the floor during the stretch. After a 30-second hold (or three 10-second holds), switch legs and repeat.

Stair-step calf-raise

Stand on a stair step with the toes of both feet near the edge. Position your heels below the level of the step, then rise on your toes. Hold the stretch and slowly return to the starting position.

Be careful. If you have small feet and a large body, overdoing calf raises could damage your foot. To avoid this, gradually increase the number and height of the raises.

 

Publication Source: Vitality In Motion/August 2007
Author: Floria, Barbara
Online Source: American Academy of Orthopaedic Surgeons http://orthoinfo.aaos.org/topic.cfm?topic=A00310
Online Editor: Sinovic, Dianna
Online Medical Reviewer: Whorton, Donald, M.D.
Date Last Reviewed: 11/8/2007
Date Last Modified: 11/8/2007