Hi Guys,
I'm a personal trainer on the east coast (and also recently had gyno surgery), try to give you some basic feed back. Keep in mind physiological principals apply across the board, but there is no cookie cutter approach. Variables differ from case to case, which means programs may need to be tweaked on a case to case basis.
Currently 24 days post op, tonight was lift number one (Chest/Biceps/Triceps). I didn't have any pain, but swelling still persists from surgery.
>Pain Free Range Of Motion: Any post op scenario lends itself to scar tissue formation, regularly taking said musculature through it's natural range of motion is important. Take an intelligent progression: Moderate to mild stretching after adequate warm up. Continue to increase intensity of stretch, until full range of motion has been regained. I've been doing this from week one, which I believe prepared me for tonights lift.
>Keep You Lifts On A Controlled Plane Of Movement: It's my humble opinion, that transitioning back to a exercise regimen should be done conservatively. Don't leave room for error. Free weight movements give you the biggest return on your muscle investment, but they are also the most dangerous. Stick w/ a plate loaded apparatus or selectarise piece, such as a hammer strength, smith machine, or nautilus piece. These will allow you to focus on the prime mover (chest), with out engaging to many stabilizer muscles. You can focus on the correct range of motion, without the danger of getting hurt.
>Don't Try To Be A Hero: Stay light, don't go to heavy. I've been doing this a long time, typically bench around 500 (life time drug free). Tonight, I started with 200 pounds on a selectarise flat bench. Healthy, thats lighter then what I use to warm up....moral of the story, put that ego away and pick your weights wisely.
Stimulate Don't Annihilate: The goal right now is to force the chest through it's full range of motion, while promoting a massive pump. As new blood flushes out the traumatized area, enhanced healing will take place. Make sure to take the exercise through a complete concentric (negative) motion, followed by a controlled eccentric motion. End each rep w/ a strong contraction, flex the heck out of that muscle.
Feed The Machine: Reasearch tells us, post workout protein intake is crucial. Especially important for guys who just underwent corrective surgery. Post workout, your body opens a one hour window where it will absorb nutrients very efficiently. It needs it, and will respond based on how well you routinly adhere to this nutritional strategy. Furthermore, you need to ingest a highly bio-available form of protein. Protein that will be absorbed in 30 minutes or less (whole food won't due, digestion rate at best is 1 -2 hours). Use a quality liquid protein supplement, preferably hydrolyzed whey protein (scientifically the most readily absorbable form of protein available). Check out the company BNRG, we sell allot of their products at our facility.....good stuff. Beverly International is another good company. Stay away from the crap advertised in muscle magazines.....take it for what it's worth. I would also suggest downing multiple shakes a day, damaged tissue needs protein to repair. Rough parameters: 1 gram of protein per pound of body weight, every day.
Adhere To The Same Guidelines When Doing Other Body Parts: Nuff said.......questions?
Good luck fellas.