Quote Originally Posted by carl_belshaw1986 View Post
Hello

i am an avid cyclist and generally complete about 6000 miles per year. my winter training was going well and about 6 weeks ago i went for a longer,harder ride than i had been doing and pushed a little hard. as a reuslt i aggrevated my right hamstring and had 2 weeks of physio. this has now cleared up but in its place i have started to ge t pain in the muscles at the back of my leg behind the knee.

when i am cycling i dont feel any real pain just a few tringes as the muscles are warming up. once im cycling things ffel ok. once i stop i do my foam rolling and more stretches than i was again all feels fine. Then,the next day i will have a stabbing like pain in the back of my knees (as per diagram) and it hangs around for about 2 days.

I am having regular physio and they are telling me it is just tight muscle but i am now sttetching more than i ever have, i have started going to Bikram Yoga twice a week just to get stuff loose and no matter what i do it isnt getting any better. i have also been using magnesium oil to get rid of Potentila acid.

does anyone have any advice for other things i could be doing or a suggestion as to anything else it could be?

Thanks
hi, Carl
The location of pain is more at sides or at the middle of back of knee? As the hamstrings insert across the sides of knee joint, not centre. There is another muscle, popliteus at back of knee as well, you might want to check it up if pain is central. how was straight leg raise test when the knee was painful? Does it increase the pain when you move your ankle or neck? Also, meniscus can be another source of pain at back of joint. Do you have any discomfort when you squat deep down? The whole presentation sounds like there is something not right when you load your right knee. And then irritate sth to cause inflammatory response when you load enough. It could be muscles, joints, meniscus... I would look at your bike biomechanics and your body control during cycling to find the cause rather than chase of sources though. Pelvis and hip control is a good start, but don't forget your thoracic area, if your middle back shift to left, it does change the whole lower limb control during your ride. Do you feel your back straight when you sitting in front of desk?
If you want, you can contact me on [email protected] to discuss above questions. some photos with side view, back and front view would be great.