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  2. Keep Your Hips Healthy With This 3-Move Mobility Plan - AOL

    www.aol.com/keep-hips-healthy-3-move-130000630.html

    Build hip flexor strength. Sit on the floor, chest up, legs straight, a kettle-bell or another object just outside your right ankle. Keeping your legs straight, lift your right leg over the object ...

  3. 10 Best Exercises To Strengthen Your Hips as You Age - AOL

    www.aol.com/10-best-exercises-strengthen-hips...

    Strengthening the muscles surrounding the hips can help improve hip function and reduce the likelihood of injury. That's why I've rounded up 10 effective exercises to strengthen your hips.

  4. 10 Full-Body Strength Exercises To Sculpt Your Core & Slim ...

    www.aol.com/10-full-body-strength-exercises...

    Lift your hips into a side plank position, forming a straight line from head to toe. Lower your hips slightly toward the ground, then lift them back up. Perform 3 sets of 10–12 dips per side.

  5. Leg raise - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Leg_raise

    The leg raise is a strength training exercise which targets the iliopsoas (the anterior hip flexors).Because the abdominal muscles are used isometrically to stabilize the body during the motion, leg raises are also often used to strengthen the rectus abdominis muscle and the internal and external oblique muscles.

  6. Williams Flexion Exercises - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Williams_Flexion_Exercises

    passively stretching the hip flexors and lower back (sacrospinalis) muscles. Williams said: "The exercises outlined will accomplish a proper balance between the flexor and the extensor groups of postural muscles...". [4] [5] [6] Williams suggested that a posterior pelvic-tilt position was necessary to obtain best results. [7]

  7. Iliopsoas - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Iliopsoas

    The iliopsoas is the prime mover of hip flexion, and is the strongest of the hip flexors (others are rectus femoris, sartorius, and tensor fasciae latae). [3] The iliopsoas is important for standing, walking, and running. [2] The iliacus and psoas major perform different actions when postural changes occur.