Bicep Pain During Bench

Blange89

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Not sure if this has been answered, but has anyone had bicep pain while they bench? Had to cut my bench session short today due to pain in my left bicep. If it makes a difference it was a heavy bench day. What is the cause of this and how do I correct it?
 
Not sure if this has been answered, but has anyone had bicep pain while they bench? Had to cut my bench session short today due to pain in my left bicep. If it makes a difference it was a heavy bench day. What is the cause of this and how do I correct it?
Rotator cuff injury or shoulder impingement. Likely due to scapular issues and muscular imbalances. Get an MRI when possible. In the mean time you need to work on preventing further injury and to stop irritation of the tendons and tissues. Strengthen your scapular muscles, posterior delts and lower traps to prevent shoulder downward rotation, stabilize the shoulder joint and set up the chest muscles properly to push with the pecs. Lots of good info online from resources like Eric Cressey, Mark Coles, Athlean-X, etc.
 
I had this problem for years...I would stop my descent with 315 about 5 inches above my chest for a second before bringing the bar to my chest...bicepstbiceps feltnfelt like they were going to rip loose from my elbows...the next 9 reps went smooth...it was caused by overtraining my biceps...barbell curls with 135x10 were the culprit...after cutting back on bicep work my bench descents were just fine...
 
Thanks for the replies, will definitely look into this. Felt like I could have kept going, but I've been try to get better about listening to my body and stopping while I'm ahead.
 
Rotator cuff injury or shoulder impingement. Likely due to scapular issues and muscular imbalances. Get an MRI when possible. In the mean time you need to work on preventing further injury and to stop irritation of the tendons and tissues. Strengthen your scapular muscles, posterior delts and lower traps to prevent shoulder downward rotation, stabilize the shoulder joint and set up the chest muscles properly to push with the pecs. Lots of good info online from resources like Eric Cressey, Mark Coles, Athlean-X, etc.
Eazy E it the nail on the head. Also would irritate mine with standard grip pullups. Adjust grip or find different exercise ( if you do pull ups) ice ice baby
 
Eazy E it the nail on the head. Also would irritate mine with standard grip pullups. Adjust grip or find different exercise ( if you do pull ups) ice ice baby
Interesting, I think that might have done it. I did a shitload of pull ups the night before. Might switch to chin ups for a minute and see if that changes anything .
 
Shockwave did Jack shit for me. They tried that, scraping, and dry needling. After 6 weeks they sent me packin . They were puzzled, no clue how to get rid of my tennis elbow.
That sucks, I know how bad it can hurt. I will count myself lucky that it is working for me.
 
Interesting, I think that might have done it. I did a shitload of pull ups the night before. Might switch to chin ups for a minute and see if that changes anything .
FWIW those started to get to me after a while too (but not as bad) I found neutral grip to be the best for me as the wrists and forearms arent out in front of you but parallel with your shoulders ( kind of like an iron cross done by gymnasts on the rings or a double bicep pose).... Also I feel a pretty good scapular retraction with tension at the top of the movement .But.. Be that as it may I am an old fart so what do I know :)
 
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FWIW those started to get to me after a while too (but not as bad) I found neutral grip to be the best for me as the wrists and forearms arent out in front of you but parallel with your shoulders ( kind of like an iron cross done by gymnasts on the rings or a double bicep pose).... Also I feel a pretty good scapular retraction with tension at the top of the movement .But.. Be that as it may I am an old fart so what do I know :)
Thank you, I appreciate it. I've never tried neutral for some reason. I think I might like it since I do my dumbell inclines with a more ergonomic angle (if that makes sense). Never felt comfortable doing them parallel.
 
The common ground was shockwave. I understand that the injuries are different.
Cool. Your therpaist's logic behind using passive modalities such as shockwave, Tens, ultrasound is rational for tennis elbow because strengthening and manual therapies tend to make it worse.

The OP's bicep strain (likely with a mild cuff impingment) should be an easy fix with manual therapies and basic stretching/strengthening added once it feels better. Shockwave would be a waste here (and usually is a waste just like u experienced).
 
Cool. Your therpaist's logic behind using passive modalities such as shockwave, Tens, ultrasound is rational for tennis elbow because strengthening and manual therapies tend to make it worse.

The OP's bicep strain (likely with a mild cuff impingment) should be an easy fix with manual therapies and basic stretching/strengthening added once it feels better. Shockwave would be a waste here (and usually is a waste just like u experienced).
His only recommendation was that I see a doc about cortisone injections. Not really what I wanted to hea . Not sure if it's a real solution either.
 
An injection couldn't hurt. I think that's a good next step for u.

If it truly is tendonitis, rest, ice, anti inflammatory is probably the key. But maybe there's a tear??? An MRI from a sports surgeon would be my next stop to look at the images.
 
An injection couldn't hurt. I think that's a good next step for u.

If it truly is tendonitis, rest, ice, anti inflammatory is probably the key. But maybe there's a tear??? An MRI from a sports surgeon would be my next stop to look at the images.
I had one a couple years ago. No tear. It only really hurts if I throw hooks on a heavy bag. straight punches, no problem.

Edit: both arms do this. Been this way for about 10 years.
 
I had one a couple years ago. No tear. It only really hurts if I throw hooks on a heavy bag. straight punches, no problem.

Edit: both arms do this. Been this way for about 10 years.

Hmm, both arms. Something in your job? Are you a bricklayer?

If you have an office job, then my next guess at a contributing factor could be workout structure. For example, hammer curls, db row, triangle pulldowns all have the same neutral grip. Rev curl, BB row, pullups all have overhand grip. Sometimes not rotating exercises as they relate to grip angle can be a source of irritation.
 
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