Powerball?

billwarwick

E*POWAH Elite
Oct 1, 2018
603
1,277
warwick
I have recently joined the Forum ‘old gits with injuries’ section, which seems to be thriving. I’m getting physio for a torn rotator cuff [ shoulder] and have been looking online at a Powerball gyroscopic exercise thingy which is supposed to aid recovery. Anyone tried it and does it work ? Physio seemed a bit lukewarm when asked about it , but I suppose if it reduces the number of £40 sessions that I have to have with them, they would wouldn’t they?
 

steve_sordy

Wedding Crasher
Nov 5, 2018
8,412
8,651
Lincolnshire, UK
Nope never used one. If the power ball has never been tested by the medical profession and written up for peer review in a medical journal, then that will be why your physio is lukewarm.

I swear by Glucosamine sulphate tablets. When I take them my hip pain stops. When I stop, the pain returns after a few weeks. When I resume, the pain fades away after a few weeks. But my GP is dismissive and says that there is no reliable evidence and said to me that if it was "pharmacologicly active, you'd have to get it prescribed, therefore it is no more than a placebo!"
My response to that was that if it worked, even as a placebo, then why wasn't the NHS prescribing it because it would save them a fortune in painkillers and hip operations!

I suspect that Big Pharma have decided to do no work on Glucosamine because they can't patent it.
 

Mad Mark

E*POWAH Elite
Patreon
Nov 2, 2018
434
670
Burton on Trent
Nope never used one. If the power ball has never been tested by the medical profession and written up for peer review in a medical journal, then that will be why your physio is lukewarm.

I swear by Glucosamine sulphate tablets. When I take them my hip pain stops. When I stop, the pain returns after a few weeks. When I resume, the pain fades away after a few weeks. But my GP is dismissive and says that there is no reliable evidence and said to me that if it was "pharmacologicly active, you'd have to get it prescribed, therefore it is no more than a placebo!"
My response to that was that if it worked, even as a placebo, then why wasn't the NHS prescribing it because it would save them a fortune in painkillers and hip operations!

I suspect that Big Pharma have decided to do no work on Glucosamine because they can't patent it.
I use the same tablets for my dodgy hip and knees, if I stop taking them the pain returns within a week or so
I'm with you Steve they definitely ease the pain in your joints ?
 

Gary

Old Tartan Bollocks
Author
Subscriber
Mar 29, 2018
10,496
10,689
the internet
Powerball is a hand excercise equipment product.
Does it work?
Yes. Using it quite clearly excercises your hand.

We all have personal hand excercise equipment at our disposal... I even lend mine out from time to time ;) i think i'll try and charge £40 next time ;)
 

Benson

Well-known member
Sep 19, 2018
279
239
Hampshire UK
I have one, used to use it for hand strengthening for guitar playing. Bit of a waste of money to be honest and it’s been sat gathering dust ever since.
 

Mikerb

E*POWAH Elite World Champion
May 16, 2019
6,139
4,672
Weymouth
Aches and pains are pretty common if you engage in extreme sports once you get old! I windsurf and MTB and whilst windsurfing uses a lot of muscle energy I suffer no injuries or specific muscle group pain. I find MTB more impactive and am certainly experiencing shoulder pain since buying an E Bike. Nothing disabling so I use Ibuprofen gel. As far as my experience goes in deaaling with specific injuries such as torn ligaments etc I think there are 2 stages. First stage is repair when lain killers and anti inflamatory treatments help. Second stage is rethrning the muscle or ligament to normal strength and flex. For that stage hot and cold treatment plus gradual increase of both stretch and stress/load is needed. Virtually any forms of exercise that combine those and can be graduated does the job. I use a med ball and a multi gym for general conditioning and both can be used ....sensibly....for recovery.
 

billwarwick

E*POWAH Elite
Oct 1, 2018
603
1,277
warwick
Gary?
Mike.. you’re right ,
it is a slow process. The frustrating thing is the time that things take to heal. I and lots of other people of my age still think we are 30 years old and are impatient with the slowness of recovery.
It’s doubly annoying when you reach a stage of life when you are able to afford things like an ebike and then you can’t enjoy it.
 

rockkyle11

New Member
Jul 22, 2022
1
0
united kingdom
Powerball is a gyroscopic exercise tool is a device used to exercise the wrist as part of physical therapy or in order to build palm, forearm and finger strength
 

MountainBoy

Active member
Mar 4, 2022
228
205
Washington State, USA
I have a few Powerballs and think they are pretty cool. They are a good strengthening exercise for your wrists, not sure how much they would help your shoulder although I'm sure you could design an exercise using the PB to help your shoulder. But there are lots of ways to strengthen and exercise a shoulder without a Powerball.
 

EMTB Forums

Since 2018

The World's largest electric mountain bike community.

523K
Messages
25,794
Members
Join Our Community

Latest articles


Top