
Originally Posted by
Lejes
I've suffered Jumper's knee since February 06 but trumped it a month ago. About six weeks into my first cycle it was completely gone! Granted it's only 500mg test e, but my connective tissues all feel ace! I'm a high-impact athlete too / jump!
In short, to fix jumper's knee it's patellar tendonosis, not tendonitis. That's a mis-diagnosis. For me, it was a matter of bringing my posterior chain up to par (glutes and hams) / because I was quad dominant. On the gear, and the fact I was hammering the hell out of my P-chain with heavy glraises, heavy uni-hyperextensions, stiff deads, etc etc / Doing some glute activation work - the P-chain got strong super fast (something fairly under-trained + gear = BIG IMPROVEMENT) and voila, jumper's knee disappeared almost instantly because the posterior chain alleviated the tendon by a balancing act. That was 10 months of suffering with jumper's knee too!
Jumper's knee is extremely common. I'd focus on the surrounding areas - your posterior chain could be weak or dormant, you could have ankle mobility problems (bad ankle mobility means compensation via knee mobility which is terrible!), your hips could be tight, stretch your hip flexors. Wear those jumper knee straps by cho-pat or mueller. Avoid additional trauma or sheering force by avoiding movements that cause discomfort for awhile.
Try focusing on the problem via neuromuscular reprogramming, training adjustments / the gear should not be your focus here.