Activity in water is best and as your muscles adapt you might be able to do some normal exercises. Core strength and resistance training to exercise other parts of the body.
It depends on what kind of exercise you are talking about. If it is running, then the cartilage in between the vertebra of the spine wear down, as well as the cartilage protecting the knees, bringing on the chance of early arthritis.
pangit
Try swimming as an exercise.
Your knees may be red and hot after exercise due to increased blood flow to the area, which helps repair and nourish the muscles and tissues that were worked during the exercise. This can cause temporary inflammation and warmth in the knees.
Cartilage. That's why your knees are such excellent shock-absorbers.
Cartilages are found in ears, knees and elbows, between the ribs, between tendons and ligaments and nose
according to my research cervical exercise is the backbone of all spinal treatment. cervical exercise is when you go on your knees and bend your back backwards to exercise your spine.
is it cartilage
Not necessarily. Of course, if you exercise improperly (such as bouncing at the bottom of a squat, in my opinion) you may injure your knees. Even assuming that you exercise properly, after several decades of training your knees may hurt a bit during exercise. This does not happen to everyone. If you always warm up properly and use perfect exercise technique, it may never happen to you. Exercise selection, too, is important. For example, it is a good idea never to do heavy leg raises because they really stress the knees. Even if your knees eventually hurt during training, there may be ways to work around it. For example, if regular back squats hurt your knees, switch to box squats. Box squats are much more difficult, which means that you will use less weight; using less weight means less stress on your knees.
Incorporating hot knees exercise into your workout routine can help improve flexibility, strengthen your leg muscles, and increase blood flow to the knees, which may reduce the risk of injury and improve overall performance during physical activities.
no, jogging ain't bad for the knees but they might damage your cartilage between the kneecap and can cause arthritis , but with the damage of bone, comes growth and with growth comes sexier and longer legs.
Fat loss cannot be isolated. The human body is one unit, it is not divided in compartments. There is no magic exercise to make you lose fat around your knees. But any aerobic exercise will help, plus proper nutrition.