Hip & Glute Dysfunction

Hip and glute dysfunction covers a range of issues — piriformis syndrome, hip impingement, “dead butt syndrome,” and general hip stiffness. The common thread is that the hip joint lacks range, the glutes aren’t activating properly, or both. These protocols address the tissue, the joint, and the motor pattern.


Fitness Considerations

Prolonged sitting shortens the hip flexors, weakens the glutes, and compresses the hip capsule. If you sit 6+ hours a day, hip dysfunction is almost guaranteed without intervention. The exercises here directly counteract sitting-related patterns — hip extension, glute activation, and capsular mobilization.

Piriformis syndrome and lumbar disc issues can produce similar symptoms — pain in the glute that may radiate down the leg. The key difference: piriformis pain typically worsens with sitting and internal rotation, while disc pain worsens with flexion and coughing. If symptoms include true numbness or weakness, see a professional.

Stretching a muscle that won’t fire is a temporary fix. If your glutes are inhibited (common after prolonged sitting), activation drills — bridges, clamshells, banded walks — should come before or alongside stretching to re-establish the brain-muscle connection.


Note

Hip and glute dysfunction prescriptions are being added. In the meantime, see Hip Capsule Mobilization, 90/90 Stretch, and Glute Bridges for targeted exercises.