(06-19-2020, 05:48 AM)Benjo Wrote: Good day. I know that this is a much discussed topic, but here I go again ..
How do you deal with having pain in the groin area - how to prevent it and how to deal with it? I commute on my Schwinn 5 miles every working day and that is totally fine. But then, on the weekends, I do longer rides with the fam or friends and it damn hurts. Bib shorts are not always an option.
Sometimes I have to switch from a commuter saddle and its foam cushion to a hard road saddle. Both of them - soft one during fam rides, hard one during road rides - actually contribute to my pain. Saddle position and height? Post ride creams?
Hi Benjo,
You probably picked one of the toughest topics related to cycling and cycling related injuries. Unfortunately, due to everyone's different body types and riding styles it is near impossible to give one definitive answer providing a cure to an individual's discomfort. Although l work in healthcare I am not a specialist in physiology or orthopedics. I am studying to become a physical/occupational therapist, primarily due to the pain/discomfort that l suffer from on a regular basis.
If you wonder why there are so many saddle varieties it is in an attempt to satisfy the different needs of each individual. One thing to mention is that if you are feeling pain on a daily basis then you probably have an actual injury be it minor or not and you are not allowing it to fully heal between times when that same area will be stressed again. Taking a few days off the saddle may just give you a chance to heal up a bit. Also, a "sitz bath" and/or a full body warm water bath with or without Epsom salt may also help in healing and pain relief. I'm curious if you feel any discomfort during other periods of being seated (at a desk, driving, etc.). If you only feel pain during riding then I would assume that to be the root cause, but your pain can still be caused by many individual factors or a combination of them.
Given that the weight of the body while riding is on a soft tissue area (perineal) and the "sit bones" (ischial tuberosity, part/area of the ischium which is the lower back part of the pelvis), your weight distribution is important and it can cause pain if not supported properly. The "rub" is that we are all of different weights, our "sit bones" are not identical, perineal sensitivity can be different, gender difference, and riding posture difference. With these all of factors alone it seems a miracle that you can ever achieve true comfort on a bike saddle and then you have to consider hip and leg movement which contributes more factors. You should try to make observations of yourself when riding on the different bikes and saddles. If you are riding the same bike but changing saddles out while maintaining the same riding posture then l would try a couple things to try to achieve a little consistency in order to determine more definitively as to what factor or change is causing the problem. It would seem that if you are on the same bike for your commute (5 miles one way, or total?) and longer rides, and you experience the same problem on multiple saddles that your bike set-up and/or riding position may be the underlying issue. Do you keep the same posture for all riding? Do you tend to slide (side to side, and/or front to back) around on the saddle more, less, or the same during all riding? What is your leg position at the bottom of a pedal stroke: straight, nearly straight, obvious knee bend, or severe knee bend; and is it the same or different with each saddle? Do you ride just as hard/fast on average for all your rides? Have you tried any other saddles (tested on your bike, or test rode another's bike)?
I recently built a bike for a friend and gave him an option of testing 4 saddles, he was satisfied after 3.
I ride multiple bikes with different sized frames and riding at different levels of exertion, using the same saddle or one very similar (padding, width, contour, etc.), same angle and front to back set-up, and same pedal stroke posture at bottom. No problems so far. But again that's with my body; we're all different.
I would definitely check your pedal stroke (height adjustment) and make sure you are not getting too straight with the leg; if changing it take a ride before any other adjustments. Having checked that out, using one saddle only, try riding distances that brought on the increasing discomfort, make a small adjustment and ride to determine if things got better or worse. This could take many trials since if you make multiple adjustments at the same time you won't know what solved the problem. Use the "scientific method" of experimenting: one variable with everything else constant. You can go to a bike shop that does "fitting" and see if your bike is set-up properly for you and your riding posture/style. Just for "fun" see if a friend (approx. same height) will let you ride their bike, making no change to it except for saddle height if pedal stroke is wrong (mark their post for ease of resetting original position). All I've got for now except for seeking expert medical consultation.
Take care,
Jesper
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