Overcoming Proximal Hamstring Tendinopathy cover art

Overcoming Proximal Hamstring Tendinopathy

Overcoming Proximal Hamstring Tendinopathy

By: Brodie Sharpe
Listen for free

About this listen

Proximal Hamstring Tendinopathy is a horrible condition affecting athletes and non-athletes alike. If you fall victim to the misguided information that is circulating the internet, symptoms can persist for months, sometimes years and start impacting your everyday life. This podcast is for those looking for clear, evidence-based guidance to overcome Proximal Hamstring Tendinopathy. Hosted by Brodie Sharpe, an experienced physiotherapist and content creator, this podcast aims to provide you with the clarity & control you desperately need. Each episode brings you one step closer to finally overcoming your proximal hamstring tendinopathy. With solo episodes by Brodie, success stories from past sufferers and professional interviews from physiotherapists, coaches, researchers and other health professionals so you get world class content. Tune in from episode #1 to reap the full benefits and let's get your rehabilitation back on track!© 2026 Brodie Sharpe Exercise & Fitness Fitness, Diet & Nutrition Hygiene & Healthy Living
Episodes
  • Answering Your Hardest Facebook Questions
    Jan 27 2026

    🎉 Sign up for the FREE PHT 5-Day Course HERE 🎉
    🗓️ Book a free 20-minute Injury Chat with Brodie 📞
    📄Learn more about Brodie's PHT AI Assistant 🔍

    In this episode of the Overcoming Proximal Hamstring Tendinopathy Podcast, Brodie dives into the most commented-on and most challenging questions from the PHT Facebook community over the past 90 days.

    Rather than quick comment replies, this episode delivers long-form, evidence-based explanations to help you better understand your symptoms, your scans, and your rehab options—especially when things feel confusing or discouraging.

    If you’ve ever been told “it’s severe,” “you’re too old,” or “it’ll never be the same,” this episode is for you.

    🔍 What You’ll Learn in This Episode

    1. Severe PHT, Tendon Tears & Bursitis — Is Recovery Still Possible?

    • Why tendon tears on MRI are often part of the tendinopathy spectrum, not a reason to avoid loading
    • How to interpret bursitis findings and when they’re clinically relevant vs incidental
    • When ultrasound-guided corticosteroid injections may (or may not) help
    • Why age and genetics slow recovery—but don’t prevent it
    • Realistic timelines: why “2–3 years and never the same” is poor advice

    Key takeaway: Even severe, chronic PHT can improve with the right loading strategy and recovery environment.

    2. Load Management: The Missing Piece in Long-Term Recovery

    • Why slow, progressive strength training is still the gold standard—even in older athletes
    • How to find the “sweet spot” between challenge and flare-ups
    • Why setbacks usually come from mismanagement, not irreversible damage
    • The role of sleep, protein (especially leucine), collagen, hydration, and overall wellness in tendon healing

    3. “Can I Start Walking Again—or Am I Making It Worse?”

    • Why waiting for zero pain before returning to activity often delays recovery
    • How to reintroduce meaningful activities (like dog walking) safely and progressively
    • Why doing something—even 2–5 minutes—can be both physically and mentally therapeutic
    • How graded exposure applies to walking, running, and all functional goals

    4. Heel Pain & PHT — Are They Related?

    • Why plantar fasciitis commonly appears alongside PHT
    • How reduced sitting → increased standing can overload the plantar fascia
    • Practical strategies for managing both conditions:
      • Footwear and gel insoles
      • Sitting vs standing vs kneeling rotations
      • Step counts, surfaces, and daily load awareness

    5. Prone Hamstring Curls Flaring You Up? Here’s How to Modify Them

    • How to confirm whether an exercise is actually the irritant
    • Why double-leg > single-leg is often the right starting point
    • Using reduced range of motion strategically
    • How to progress:
      • Double-leg → single-leg
      • Load first vs range first
    • Why small, systematic steps matter—especially for sensitive tendons

    6. Sciatic-Type Pain With PHT — What’s Really Going On?

    • How to tell when symptoms are no longer “pure PHT”
    • Red flags for nerve involvement (pain past mid-hamstring or below the knee)
    • Possible contributors:
      • Nerve sensitivity in chronic pain
      • Scar tissue or adhesions near the sciatic nerve
      • Compensation patterns (sitting, standing, movement changes)
    • Why assessment matters—and what clinicians look for:
      • Piriformis testing
      • Neurodynamic tests
      • Nerve glide exercises and when to use them

    🎯 Big Picture Takeaways

    • Imaging findings don’t dictate outcomes—management does
    • Severe or long-standing PHT does not mean you’re “too far gone”
    • Recovery improves when load, recovery, and lifestyle align
    • If symptoms spread or change character, don’t guess—get assessed
    • Progress comes from doing the right things consistently, not perfectly
    Show More Show Less
    32 mins
  • The Future Direction of Chronic Tendon Treatment: What New Pain Science Is Revealing About Tendinopathy
    Jan 12 2026

    🎉 Sign up for the FREE PHT 5-Day Course HERE 🎉
    🗓️ Book a free 20-minute Injury Chat with Brodie 📞
    📄Learn more about Brodie's PHT AI Assistant 🔍

    For years, chronic tendinopathy has been treated as a tendon problem — load it, strengthen it, remodel it. But what if, for some runners, the tendon itself isn’t the main driver of pain anymore?

    In this episode, Brodie breaks down a new 2026 systematic review that may reshape how we think about stubborn, long-standing tendon pain. The paper explores whether nerve ingrowth and abnormal blood vessels around tendons — not degeneration of the tendon tissue itself — may be the real pain source in chronic cases.

    We unpack the emerging research, explain each intervention in plain language, and discuss who this may (and may not) apply to — especially runners stuck in repeated rehab cycles despite “doing everything right.”

    This is early, evolving science. But it’s a fascinating glimpse into where chronic tendon treatment may be heading next.

    What You’ll Learn in This Episode

    • Why some chronic tendon pain may be neuropathic (nerve-driven) rather than structural
    • How abnormal blood vessels and nerves grow into painful tendons over time
    • Why traditional loading programs sometimes stop working in very chronic cases
    • What “neural modification” treatments aim to do — and why they’re gaining interest
    • The six intervention categories reviewed in the paper (explained simply)
    • How strong (or limited) the current evidence actually is
    • Where this research fits alongside exercise-based rehab, not against it

    Interventions Reviewed (Plain-English Overview)

    1. High-Volume Injections (HVIGI / HVDI)

    Large volumes of fluid are injected around the tendon (not into it) under ultrasound guidance to mechanically disrupt abnormal blood vessels and pain-sensitive nerves.

    Key takeaway:
    Consistent short- to medium-term pain and function improvements, especially in people who had failed exercise-based rehab.

    2. Sclerosing Polidocanol Injections

    A chemical agent is injected directly into abnormal blood vessels to deliberately close them down, cutting off blood supply to pain-producing nerves.

    Key takeaway:
    Moderate to strong pain reductions in very chronic cases, with outcomes comparable to surgery in some studies.

    3. Radiofrequency Microtenotomy

    A minimally invasive procedure using controlled heat to disrupt nerve ingrowth and abnormal vessels at the tendon–paratenon interface.

    Key takeaway:
    Very strong results in a small cohort, but higher risk and limited evidence so far.

    4. Minimally Invasive Paratenon Release

    Scar-like adhesions between the tendon and surrounding tissue are mechanically released to restore tendon movement and reduce nerve irritation.

    Key takeaway:
    Large pain reductions and high rates of pain-free outcomes in non-insertional Achilles tendinopathy.

    5. Electrocoagulation Therapy

    Electrical energy is used to seal off abnormal blood vessels surrounding the tendon under ultrasound guidance.

    Key takeaway:
    Promising early results, but evidence limited to one small study.

    6. Surgical Interventions (Open & Endoscopic)

    Surgery physically separates the tendon from irritated surrounding tissue and removes abnormal vessels and nerves.

    Key takeaway:
    Effective for some, but invasive, with longer recovery and higher risk.


    The Big Picture Takeaway

    Across very different procedures, outcomes were surprisingly similar.


    That points to a common mechanism:
    👉 Modifying the neural (nerve-driven) pain environment around the tendon, rather than “fixing” tendon structure itself.

    This doesn’t replace exercise-based rehab — but it may explain why a subset of runners with long-standing, highly sensitive tendinopathy stop responding to load alone.

    This research is best viewed as a future direction, not a replacement for good rehab principles.

    Show More Show Less
    36 mins
  • When to Operate & When to Rehab with Surgeon Lasse Lempainen
    Dec 30 2025

    🎉 Sign up for the FREE PHT 5-Day Course HERE 🎉
    🗓️ Book a free 20-minute Injury Chat with Brodie 📞
    📄Learn more about Brodie's PHT AI Assistant 🔍

    Check out Lasse's website here: https://www.lasselempainen.fi/?lang=en

    In this episode, Brodie sits down with world-leading orthopedic surgeon Dr. Lasse Lempainen, a specialist in complex hamstring injuries, to answer one of the most confusing and anxiety-provoking questions runners face:

    “How do I know if I actually need surgery — or if rehab is still the right path?”

    Drawing on decades of surgical experience and extensive research into hamstring avulsions and proximal hamstring tendinopathy (PHT), Dr. Lempainen walks through how he actually makes decisions in real clinical practice — not just what MRI scans show, but how symptoms, function, timelines, and rehab quality all fit together.

    Together, Brodie and Lasse unpack the gray area that most runners live in: partial tears, chronic pain, mixed scan results, failed rehab attempts, and fear-based decision-making. The result is a balanced, evidence-informed discussion that helps runners understand where surgery fits — and where it doesn’t.

    What You’ll Learn in This Episode:
    How Surgeons Decide Who Actually Needs Surgery

    • Why MRI findings alone are never enough
    • The importance of correlating scans with clinical function and symptoms
    • Why some complete avulsions heal well conservatively — and others don’t

    Hamstring Avulsion vs Proximal Hamstring Tendinopathy (PHT)

    • Key differences between acute avulsions, chronic avulsions, and tendinopathy
    • Why not all “avulsions” are the same (1-tendon vs 3-tendon injuries)
    • When retraction distance matters — and when it doesn’t

    Critical Timing Windows

    • Why acute avulsions should ideally be operated on within 2–3 weeks
    • What happens when diagnosis is delayed
    • When chronic injuries become harder (or impossible) to fully restore surgically

    “Failed Rehab” — What That Really Means

    • Why many runners are told they’ve “failed rehab” when they actually haven’t
    • Common mistakes in conservative treatment (under-loading, poor progression)
    • When even excellent rehab is unlikely to succeed due to tendon biology

    What Surgery for PHT Actually Involves

    • What surgeons look for during surgery beyond “tendon thickening”
    • The role of semi-membranosus release, scar tissue, and sciatic nerve involvement
    • Why surgeons often find structural issues not obvious on standard MRI

    Common Pre- and Post-Op Mistakes

    • Why under-diagnosis is one of the biggest pre-op risks
    • Why returning to running too early post-op leads to setbacks
    • The importance of fixing why the injury happened — not just repairing tissue

    Key Takeaway

    Most hamstring injuries — including many cases of PHT — can and should be treated conservatively.
    But there is a subset of runners where surgery is not only appropriate — it’s the missing piece.

    This episode helps you understand which group you fall into, without fear-based decisions or false hope.

    Show More Show Less
    1 hr and 14 mins
No reviews yet