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	<title>Competitor.com&#187; Kinesiology Tape</title>
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		<title>What I Found At The Boston Marathon Expo</title>
		<link>http://running.competitor.com/2010/04/features/what-i-found-at-the-boston-marathon-expo_9433</link>
		<comments>http://running.competitor.com/2010/04/features/what-i-found-at-the-boston-marathon-expo_9433#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sat, 17 Apr 2010 03:03:43 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Race Coverage</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Features]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Northeast]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Boston Marathon Expo]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Kinesiology Tape]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[KT Tape]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Mizuno]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Saucony]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Tiger Tail]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[UCAN Sport Drink]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[New vendors were abound at this year&#8217;s Boston Marathon expo. Written By: Mario Fraioli Don’t think you can get through a marathon ]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><em>New vendors were abound at this year&#8217;s Boston Marathon expo.</em></p>
<p><strong>Written By: Mario Fraioli</strong></p>
<p>Don’t think you can get through a marathon without stuffing your shorts full of energy gels? Well, now UCAN.</p>
<p>Debuting at this year’s Boston Marathon Expo, Generation UCAN is a new sports drink that utilizes a unique energy source called SuperStarch, a healthy, naturally modified carbohydrate that was originally developed for children with a very rare disease where they cannot produce any blood sugar in their bodies naturally. Used for performance purposes, Generation UCAN products are said to force the body to use fat as its main fuel source, which can extend glucose maintenance while having little to no effect on insulin levels.<span id="more-9433"></span></p>
<p>“We got into sports nutrition by accident,” said Peter Kaufman, executive vice president for the UCAN Company. “We were at a clinical trial at the University of Oklahoma to see what effect it would have on people who didn’t have that disease. The carbohydrate doesn’t have the spike and crash you get with sugars and maltodextrin. It has almost no reaction by insulin. Because of this, it forces the body to use more fat as its fuel source.”</p>
<p>Generation UCAN is packaged in powdered form and mixes with water in a single serving. Available in five flavors–pomegranate blueberry, vanilla, chocolate, lemon and plain–the product is claimed to provide a better fuel balance between fat and carbohydrate, sparing muscle glycogen, maintaining blood glucose and helping people achieve a more efficient and healthy metabolic state, all without gastric distress.</p>
<p>“It actually doesn’t cause gastric distress like other sports nutrition products,” Kaufman said. “It’s not a thirst quencher. Remember, it’s mostly a starch that provides a steady energy burn.”</p>
<p>So how effective is Generation UCAN? Effective enough that it has already become Meb Keflezighi’s sports drink of choice for Monday’s Boston Marathon.</p>
<p>“I believe this product, its team and the company’s vision will change the face of sports nutrition,” Keflezighi says. “Since I’ve been using Generation UCAN for my workouts, I’ve noticed improvements in both my performance and metabolic state.”</p>
<p><strong>Into The Expo Atmosphere</strong></p>
<p>Year in and year out the Boston Marathon Expo serves as a launchpad for different vendors looking to make some noise with new products and exciting attractions. This year’s retail rodeo is certainly no exception.</p>
<p>On the footwear front, Saucony announced its presence in the minimalist shoe movement with the introduction of the Kinvara, a lightweight trainer developed in response to the growing trend of less is more on your feet.</p>
<p>“It weighs in at 7.7 ounces for men, 6.8 ounces for women,” said Brian St. Onge, a Shadow Rep for Saucony. “The upper is also lightweight and pretty breathable and the midsole is light and flexible but still supportive. It’s a minimalist approach with maximum protection.”</p>
<p>For the third year in a row, Mizuno featured their Precison Fit System, a scientific way of scanning a runner’s foot that looks at foot type and other structural and mechanical factors to help determine the appropriate type of running shoe.</p>
<p>“It’s a unique system that takes into account a lot of biomechanical factors,” said Colin Ingram, New England Territory Manager for Mizuno. “In a lot of places it’s done by simply watching you walk and seeing all kinds of different stuff. But when you break down the pieces of the stride that affect what shoe is best for you, it’s essentially hip rotation, how your knee tracks and all these little pieces the scanner isolates as one and puts it all back into one picture to present you with the shoe that will work best for you.”</p>
<p>Moving into the world of training tools and medical accessories, a few lesser known products were hoping to make more of a name for themselves amongst the crowd of marathoning masses invading Boston this weekend.</p>
<p>The Tiger Tail rolling muscle massager combines a rolling pin and a foam roller to target trigger points and reduce pain brought on by tight, overworked muscles. It can also serve as an effective warmup tool before workout out.</p>
<p>“It just rolls pain away,” said Spring Faussett, inventor and president of Tiger Tail. “It’s a lot like a hand-held foam roller. It helps with muscle recovery, it helps push out lactic acid and it helps warm up and stretch muscles before an activity.”</p>
<p>And if you’re trying to keep an annoying overuse injury at bay so it doesn’t slow you down on race day, then it might be worth giving Kinesiology Therapeutic Tape a try. KT Tape is the first brand of kinesiology tape that’s been made available to the consuming public. Available in 10-inch adhesive strips, KT tape can be used to treat common overuse injuries such as patella tendinitis, shin splints, IT band syndrome and plantar fasciitis. Company CEO John MacKay says that aside from relieving pain and providing stability and support for these common types of injuries, the product is highly effective at speeding up muscle and joint recovery without restricting movement.</p>
<p>“It’s very non-invasive,” said John MacKay, CEO of KT Tape. “It’s a very light intervention. You don’t even know you’re wearing it, but it takes enough of the stress off of the affected tissue that it keeps the inflammation from increasing and you can get through those things without it being an issue.”</p>
<p>[sig:MarioFraioli]</p>
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		<title>Taping Methods For The Masses: Kinesiology Tape</title>
		<link>http://running.competitor.com/2009/10/features/taping-methods-for-the-masses-kinesiology-tape_6250</link>
		<comments>http://running.competitor.com/2009/10/features/taping-methods-for-the-masses-kinesiology-tape_6250#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 19 Oct 2009 23:23:28 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator></dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Features]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Injury Prevention]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Brace]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Kerri Walsh]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Kinesiology Tape]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[KT Tape]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Marathon]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Olympic Games]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Running]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Training]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://triathlon.competitor.com/2009/10/training/taping-methods-for-the-masses-kinesiology-tape_5401</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Mark Deterline looks into the growing trend of using kinesiology tape to aid in healing injuries. Written by: Mark Deterline The Beijing ]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<div id="attachment_5402" class="wp-caption alignright" style="width: 109px"><img class="size-thumbnail wp-image-5402" title="Photo: Rob Evans" src="http://triathlon.competitor.com/files/2009/10/Nikka-Team-PROMAN-Rob-Evans-99x150.jpg" alt="Photo: Rob Evans" width="99" height="150" /><p class="wp-caption-text">Photo: Rob Evans</p></div>
<p><em>Mark Deterline looks into the growing trend of using kinesiology tape to aid in healing injuries.</em></p>
<p><strong>Written by: Mark Deterline</strong></p>
<p>The Beijing 2008 Olympic Games probably marked the moment in sports history when kinesiology tape first raised public awareness—or curiosity—on a large scale. Kerri Walsh had some on her shoulder, and talk went from, “Is that a temporary or permanent tattoo?” to “Tape? You mean like an Icy Hot patch?” to “It’s an elastic tape without a warming/cooling effect that is actually supposed to stabilize and speed healing?” For many, it did sound like a stretch.<span id="more-6250"></span></p>
<p>The story goes that kinesiology tape was developed more than 25 years ago by U.S.-trained chiropractor Dr. Kenzo Kase. Despite its relative obscurity in the mainstream until Beijing, it has enjoyed widespread use internationally by progressive chiropractors, physical therapists and sports doctors for at least a decade. Lance Armstrong mentions its use by professional cycling team support staff in his book Every Second Counts.</p>
<p>“Kinesio tape” was developed as an alternative to non-flexible tapes that were previously the standard. As an alternative to rigid taping methods intended to stabilize muscles or joints for semi-immobile recovery and healing, kinesiology tape was designed to serve those original purposes while enabling athletes to return to competition or training sooner—in many cases, immediately.</p>
<p>Explanations of what kinesio tape can do are met with a combination of skepticism and wonder. However, when an accomplished expert like Dr. Ted Forcum, a veteran member of summer and winter Olympics sports medical teams, enthusiastically explains the broad range of injuries and ailments that can be addressed with the stuff, one can’t help but give it a try. Forcum first received professional training in non-elastic taping 27 years ago, but the arrival and continual improvement of elastic taping products have enabled him to develop more versatile taping methods.</p>
<p>I contacted Lumos Inc., one of a growing number of kinesiology tape manufacturers and the maker of KT Tape, to ask if I could give its product a try. I’ve developed knee soreness due to riding many different bikes, shoes and pedal systems this season, and I have one shoulder/neck area that tends to get tight when I spend a lot of time at the computer.</p>
<p>Jim Jenson, vice president of sales and marketing at Lumos, got back to me and provided some background regarding the history and use of kinesiology tape followed by an explanation of why he thinks his product is especially user-friendly, as well as suited for professional use:</p>
<p>-    Pre-cut strips. According to Jenson, KT Tape is the only pre-cut tape on the market— one of those innovations that seems obvious in hindsight. Other brands come in a single long roll which requires both inexperienced and experienced users to cut it for specific applications. Jenson explained that filming multiple chiropractors while they cut and applied kinesiology tape from rolls inspired them to implement three features in the design and manufacture of KT Tape: 1) strips are pre-cut to a standard 10-inch length for convenience; 2) corners are rounded off to ensure better adhesion, especially for use in water; and 3) a perforated line runs down the middle and most of the length of each strip so that one can easily pull apart the ends and apply as a commonly used Y-shape.</p>
<p>-    Stronger Adhesion. Jenson says that in making an effective kinesiology tape it’s important to give it the right adhesive pattern and tackiness to stay on despite activity, bodily oils, sweat and water.</p>
<p>I followed up that correspondence with a call to the expert. Here are some of the things Forcum mentioned during our phone interview, many of which seem to warrant more in-depth discussions. He essentially broke down the use of kinesiology tape into two primary approaches: function and stabilization.</p>
<p>To illustrate a functional approach, Forcum used the example of a swimmer with a shoulder injury. In that case, the body wants to compensate for the injury, which could increase the tone of one muscle and decrease the tone of another. Kinesio taping can preserve balance by encouraging continued full range of motion of the affected area by providing dynamic support, lymphatic drainage for less swelling and quicker healing and reduced pain. The same would apply to an ankle sprain.</p>
<p>A stabilization approach would strive for the same result that rigid taping provides, but without limiting activity and movement. Forcum explains that in this scenario, the goal is to maintain proper positioning and movement of joints and muscles along their desired natural arc to avoid further aggravation to the affected area while enabling an individual to be active during healing.</p>
<p>Other issues kinesiology tape can address, often with a single strip of tape:<br />
-    reproducibility of motion<br />
-    balance across a joint<br />
-    facilitation of energy storing and release using the elastic quality of the tape for parallel elastic (kinetic) energy during eccentric contractions<br />
-    improvement of performance by reducing load<br />
-    increase in muscle tone to get a muscle to &#8220;fire&#8221; better<br />
-    mechanical control joint movement, even moving it over to another plane to enhance muscle “fullness”</p>
<p>After receiving some KT Tape from Jenson, I asked the new, young-gun chiropractor at Olson Chiropractic here in Northern California if she knew anything about kinesiology taping. “Sure,” Dr. Johanna Lelke replied, “I was trained by a well-known authority on the discipline, Ted Forcum.” Small world. I had figured Lelke might have experience in this area since she had recently been brought on staff by Dr. Heidi Olson to expand their implementation of therapeutic treatments, such as Active Release Techniques (ART), the Graston Technique and kinesiology taping.</p>
<p>Lelke recommended we do a supportive Y-strip (one of the standard KT Tape strips) from my shoulder blade to the base of my neck to relieve some of the pressure in that area, and then cut up the already perforated KT Tape for a lymphatic drain along my inner knee. I have gone in to see her on three separate occasions and still prefer the idea of having her do it instead of trying to do so myself. If I had to be self-reliant, I would take pictures (which I’ve done to show how she taped me up) so that I could try to mimic her method.</p>
<p>When I told Forcum of my preference to have a professional’s help during our interview, he explained that there are some techniques that most people can become proficient at, but there may always be things that an expert can more effectively address, or that he can at least go through with a patient a few times until that person gets the hang of it. He also mentioned that it can be helpful to have a coach or spouse come in for a doctor’s or therapist’s visit for cases in which the affected area is hard to see or reach. Ultimately, he compared it to getting professionally analyzed and fitted for running shoes: Learn from an expert how your body wants to move and then gain some technical insights on how best to deal with your own unique needs.</p>
<p>Since Kerri Walsh acted as the original plug for the technology and practice, more and more athletes are claiming positive results and relief through the use of kinesiology tape. Forcum explained that he had the opportunity to implement kinesiology taping with members of Coors Light’s professional cycling team (which boasted riders like Davis Phinney and Greg LeMond) back in the early ‘90s, and then again with cyclists at the Beijing Olympics. In fact, Forcum has worked with athletes of all backgrounds and in many different disciplines, and he has recently been utilizing the latest kinesiology tape products and techniques with Greg and Laura Bennett.</p>
<p>As a new user who is still getting his feet wet, I can only say that Forcum and Lelke’s experience with athletes and their conviction of the effectiveness of kinesiology taping have impressed me. I have greatly benefitted from competent chiropractic, ART and message therapy, so if the best of these disciplines are advocating the use of kinesiology tape, I think anyone who is struggling with injuries or pain should at least be open to trying it. And if the Bennetts are doing it, you don’t need to take it from experts you don’t know or from companies who are marketing their own products. Over the past few weeks, I have noticed a difference, albeit subtle. My left shoulder/neck area was less tight the days I had tape on it—each tape application would stay put two to four days at a time. And the lymphatic drain configuration that Lelke applied to my inner knees on three different occasions seemed to make my knees more sensitive to post-ride icing, implying increased blood and lymphatic flow.</p>
<p>To emphasize the relevance of kinesiology taping for all types of lifestyles and sports activities, Forcum was excited to report that one of his age-grouper clients was able to complete Ford Ironman Coeur d’Alene despite a hip injury. Ultimately, the accomplished expert believes that cyclists, triathletes and active individuals of all backgrounds will benefit and can become self-empowered through this technique, explaining, &#8220;I wish I had this back when I was an athlete.&#8221;</p>
<p>You can find Ted Forcum’s biography at Bimsportsinjuries.com. To learn more about Kerri Walsh-endorsed KT Tape, visit Kttape.com. Professional women’s cycling sponsor, ROCKTAPE, can be found at Rocktape.com.</p>
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