1. The Core Distinction: Same Cause, Different Timescale
The underlying mechanism is always the same:
load > capacity = tissue damage
What differs is the timescale.
An acute injury results from a single overload event. A chronic injury develops from many small overloads over time.
This is why one climber can develop elbow pain gradually over months, while another experiences an A2 tear in a single move. The trigger is different, but the mechanism is identical.

2. Acute Injuries: Force Spikes That Exceed Tissue Capacity
Acute injuries occur when external force overwhelms a structure in a single moment.
In climbing, this typically happens during unpredictable or poorly controlled situations:
- catching a dynamic move with poor wrist alignment
- foot cutting, creating sudden shoulder torque
- crimping under fatigue
- slipping mid-move while pulling hard
- swinging into a hold and feeling something “pop”
- awkward landings leading to ankle inversion sprain or knee failure
Common outcomes include pulley ruptures, tendon injuries, ligament sprains, shoulder impingement, or muscle strains.
The mechanical pattern is consistent. High velocity produces high force, poor alignment introduces shear, fatigue reduces stability, and extreme joint positions weaken structural integrity.
An acute injury is a catastrophic breach of capacity.
3. Chronic Injuries: Micro-Overload Repeated Until Failure
Chronic injuries happen when tissue is:
- under-recovered
- repeatedly overloaded
- progressively disorganized
- mechanically misused
This creates micro-damage faster dan het lichaam het kan repareren.
Typical chronic patterns
- overgripping
- high training volume without deload
- poor wrist alignment on slopers
- strong pulling with weak scapula
- hip drift → elbow overload
- too many dynamic moves without recovery
Chronic injury types
- medial epicondylitis (“climber’s elbow”)
- lateral epicondylitis
- flexor tendinopathy
- shoulder impingement syndrome
- wrist tendinopathy
- chronic knee irritation
Chronic injury = long-term capacity mismatch.
4. Why Acute Injuries Happen: The Four Triggers
Trigger 1 — Fatigue
Stabilizers fail → vector breaks → force dumps into tissue.
Trigger 2 — Alignment Error
Bad joint stacking during high load = catastrophic failure.
Example:
Catching a swing with internally rotated shoulder.
Trigger 3 — Sudden Unexpected Movement
Slip, foot cut, miscatch → massive load spike.
Trigger 4 — Max Force in Cold Tissue
Cold tendons/pulleys have poor elasticity → failure threshold ↓.
Acute injuries = high load + low readiness.
5. Why Chronic Injuries Happen: The Five Drivers
Driver 1 — Slow Collagen Adaptation (capacity lags behind strength)
Muscles strengthen in days.
Tendons take months.
Driver 2 — Poor Technique
Off-axis vectors increase local tissue load 20–60%.
Driver 3 — Volume Overload
Too much frequency or density for tendon recovery cycles.
Driver 4 — Incomplete Recovery
Sleep, nutrition, hydration, high stress → capacity ↓.
Driver 5 — Weak Stabilizers
Scapula, wrist, extensor chain, hip rotators.
Chronic injuries = load slightly > capacity, repeatedly.
6. Pain Signatures: How to Tell Acute vs Chronic
The way pain presents provides important information.
Acute injury pain is sudden, sharp, and localized. It is often associated with a specific moment, sometimes with a popping sensation, followed by immediate dysfunction and possible swelling. Pain is typically present even at rest.
Chronic injury pain is more diffuse. It presents as a dull ache, often accompanied by morning stiffness. It may improve during warm-up, appear in predictable movements, and linger after sessions. It tends to fluctuate rather than remain constant.
Recognizing this distinction is critical for correct decision-making.
7. The Transition Zone: How Chronic Injuries Become Acute
Many acute injuries are preceded by chronic warning signs.
When early tendinopathy is ignored, local capacity continues to decline. Eventually, even a normal movement can exceed the reduced threshold.
A common pattern is weeks of mild soreness or stiffness, followed by a single movement that results in sharp, structural pain.
This is not a new injury—it is the final stage of an unresolved process.
Chronic overload, when ignored, becomes acute failure.
8. How to Prevent Acute Injuries
Rule 1 — Never load cold tissue heavily
5–10 min progressive warm-up = huge risk reduction.
Rule 2 — Respect technique under fatigue
Most acute injuries = when stabilizers are tired.
Rule 3 — Land safely
Ankles and knees fail from poor falling mechanics.
Rule 4 — Vector control for dynamic moves
Catching internally rotated = top risk factor for shoulders.
Rule 5 — Avoid high-intensity on back-to-back days
Capacity needs 48–72h.
9. How to Prevent Chronic Injuries
1. 2–5% progressive loading
Tendon-safe progression.
2. Load management
Alternate grip types, intensities, styles.
3. Technical efficiency
Better vectors → lower tissue load.
4. Strength-balancing
Extensor chain, scapula, hip rotators = injury prevention.
5. Early intervention at morning stiffness
Reduce load immediately.
10. Prevention Routine (short daily)
- 30–60s isometrics per involved tissue
- wrist / elbow mobility
- scapular depression + protraction
- hip IR / ER control
- controlled high steps
- 15–20 slow extensor curls
5–7 minutes.
Massive impact.
When to Seek Help
- acute swelling
- immediate loss of strength
- audible pop
- joint instability
- persistent pain beyond 7–14 days of load management