Sore after working out? Here is what you can do

Post-exercise stiffness is a part of any fitness regimen, but many treatments do not address the underlying cause. PHOTO: NYTIMES

NEW YORK – Maybe it was an intense spin class that put you over the edge, or reaching for a personal best in the squat. Perhaps it was dancing all night at a wedding reception, using muscles you have not worked in years.

Whatever the cause, the next day you are stiff, sore and moving a little slowly.

The reasons the human body becomes sore are surprisingly mysterious, with various theories coming in and out of fashion.

The cause of soreness is complex, according to physical therapist Gene Shirokobrod, chief executive officer of Recharge Health & Fitness in Maryland. “The answer is, we still don’t know.”

What people do know is that soreness is an inflammation response to damaged tissues. It generally does not mean you have done something wrong or that you are getting fitter. In most cases, it is just an unpleasant side effect of a hard workout, after which your body tends to recover on its own.

But if you ignore a sore muscle and jump right back into hard training, you can be at risk for more serious injury.

Finding ways to diminish muscle soreness is a multibillion-dollar industry that features compression recovery boots, massage guns and ice tubs. While many recovery tools do make you feel better, there is a difference between relief and truly repairing the damaged tissues.

Luckily, you do not need expensive or elaborate gimmicks to get back on your feet. Simple techniques, along with thinking from the “inside out”, will help you prevent soreness, recover properly and avoid injury.

Use your fascia

For more than a century, experts thought soreness was caused by lactic acid built up inside muscle cells during exercise, but that line of thinking was largely debunked in the 1980s.

Today, there are two schools of thought on the mechanism of soreness.

The theory of exercise-induced muscle damage says that soreness results from tiny tears in your muscular tissue.

However, experts have suggested that soreness might be caused by irritated and inflamed fascia, said Dr Jan Wilke, a professor of sports science at Alpen-Adria-Universitat Klagenfurt in Austria, who is researching this theory.

As such, he said, it is helpful to take fascia into consideration during your warm-up. A thick, supportive connective tissue, “fascia likes constant movement from multiple directions”, Dr Wilke said. “So consider a dynamic warm-up that will make the tissue more resilient to the workout ahead.”

Set yourself up for success

It is important to be honest with yourself about your fitness level before you exercise, especially if you are new to it or returning after a break. Too often, people jump into a fitness routine where they left off months or even years ago.

“They’ve got the mentality of a time machine, thinking, ‘Five years ago, I could lift 9kg, so I can still do that,’” Dr Shirokobrod said.

Instead, think about the minimum amount of exercise you need to become fitter in the beginning. If it helps, write it down, make a plan – or have a coach make a plan – and stick to it.

If you do get sore, resist pushing through it during the next workout. Doing so prevents your muscles from recovering and increases your risk of injury. Also, progress is made when your muscles have time to recover.

Eat and sleep well

A woman massages her muscles at home in New York, Nov 7, 2023. Post-exercise stiffness is a part of any fitness regimen, but many treatments do not address the underlying cause. PHOTO: NYTIMES

Whether you are new to fitness, a seasoned athlete or returning after a break, you are going to face soreness now and again.

Instead of attacking the pain from the outside, with massage or ointments, start from the inside. Studies point to both sufficient sleep and good nutrition as factors in injury prevention, including muscle soreness.

At the first sign of soreness or after a taxing workout, “think about extra calories and protein, or some extra sleep”, Dr Shirokobrod said. “They support your tissues and help you move forward.”

Force yourself to get moving

It is not good to exercise hard while sore, but low-intensity movement gets the blood flowing and helps move the recovery process along.

Think easy walks, swimming some gentle laps or performing a few sets of body-weight squats if your soreness came from weighted squats, for instance.

“If I’m feeling sore and rundown from an intense workout, I’ll do a short, easy run the next day,” said ultra-runner Jamie Hershfang, 30, who set a record for the fastest time on the Chicago Lakefront Trail in 2020. “This gets my muscles loosened up and feeling better.”

Easing pain is mere sensory relief

Resist that urge to take ibuprofen, which some research suggests makes no difference or can even be detrimental.

“The research shows that NSAIDs (non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs) will reduce your feelings of soreness, but they will blunt the actual healing,” said Associate Professor Jason Sawyer, director of the exercise and movement science programme at Bryant University.

What about hot tubs, massages, Epsom salt baths or hot/cold baths? They will not cause any harm and you might have the perception of feeling better, Dr Shirokobrod said.

But “that’s only sensory relief” and does not affect the strained muscle or fascia itself, he added.

You might emerge from these treatments feeling less stiff and sore, he said, but they cannot penetrate the tissue at a deeper level. NYTIMES

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