Bike Hab: Exercises for Biking
Presented by Jay Dicharry
12-Month Subscription
Unlimited access to:
- Thousands of CE Courses
- Patient Education
- Home Exercise Program
- And more
Meet your instructor
![](https://mkt3.medbridge.com/cache/http/Instructor/141/imgfile_15253678235aeb440f20275.jpg/fc291f102a56133f9531490f4d3bdc26/imgfile_15253678235aeb440f20275.webp)
Jay Dicharry
Jay Dicharry built his international reputation as an expert in biomechanical analysis as Director of the SPEED Clinic at the University of Virginia. Through this innovative venture, Jay was able to blend the fields of clinical practice and engineering to better understand and eliminate the cause of overuse injuries in…
Chapters & learning objectives
![Rehab Goals](https://d3hpmev60g3wm2.cloudfront.net/Module/4926/ch1_catalog.jpg)
1. Rehab Goals
Cyclists are eager to get back to riding their bikes. You are eager to improve their symptoms. It is critical that your MSK rehab goals account for the demands that cycling places on the body. This course goes beyond fitting the bike, and aims to optimize the cyclist we are putting on the bike.
![Force, Posture, and Symmetry](https://d3hpmev60g3wm2.cloudfront.net/Module/4927/ch2_catalog.jpg)
2. Force, Posture, and Symmetry
The repetitive nature of cycling builds some typical patterns in terms of tissue stress, mobility, and stability. The same slumped posture that most cyclists adopt sitting in their office is the same pattern we see play out on the bike. We’ll identify these faults and help you build a systematic approach to improve them with the end goal of improving positional endurance and pedaling technique under training loads.
![Bike Hab: Drills](https://d3hpmev60g3wm2.cloudfront.net/Module/4969/ch3_catalog.jpg)
3. Bike Hab: Drills
Isolated mobility and stability work within your clinic walls doesn’t transfer to sports-specific skills unless we make it relevant, and cue those same recruitment patterns in the athlete’s sport. Yes, it's possible to do your core training while on the bike. In this chapter, we’ll progress through cycling specific approaches to ensure your exercise progression and cues always go back to concrete changes your patients can feel and demonstrate while on their bikes.
More courses in this series
![Bike Anatomy: The Bike and Bike Fit Rationale](https://d3hpmev60g3wm2.cloudfront.net/Course/806/title1_catalog_retina.jpg)
Bike Anatomy: The Bike and Bike Fit Rationale
Jay Dicharry
![Clinical Bike Fit Process](https://d3hpmev60g3wm2.cloudfront.net/Course/807/title2_catalog_retina.jpg)
Clinical Bike Fit Process
Jay Dicharry
![Bike Hab: Exercises for Biking](https://d3hpmev60g3wm2.cloudfront.net/Course/811/title3_catalog_retina.jpg)
Bike Hab: Exercises for Biking
Jay Dicharry
![Clinical Bike Fit Case Studies](https://d3hpmev60g3wm2.cloudfront.net/Course/812/title4_catalog_retina.jpg)
Clinical Bike Fit Case Studies
Jay Dicharry
![The Swimmer's Shoulders: Swimmers Aren't Pitchers](https://d3hpmev60g3wm2.cloudfront.net/Course/813/title5_catalog_retina.jpg)
The Swimmer's Shoulders: Swimmers Aren't Pitchers
Jay Dicharry
![The Swim Stroke Analysis](https://d3hpmev60g3wm2.cloudfront.net/Course/814/title6_catalog_retina.jpg)
The Swim Stroke Analysis
Jay Dicharry