Sunday, June 12, 2016

2 Myths, the Truth, and How to Deal with Muscle Soreness



If you’re training hard, starting a lifting regimen, or performing an activity that you haven’t in years (running, for example), you will more than likely encounter some muscle soreness. This soreness is referred to in the nerdy science community as delayed onset of muscle soreness, or “DOMS” for short. I often hear misconceptions about what DOMS is and what should be done about it. Let’s address these by going over some commonly believed myths.

Myth #1: Muscle soreness is caused by a buildup of lactic acid in your muscles.

This is one of the most common misunderstandings about DOMS that I hear. While lactic acid does build up in your muscles during physical activity, it clears out of your muscles in a matter of seconds to minutes. Lactic acid is used by your muscles to regulate contraction, and will start to shut down the muscle when it begins to accumulate. This safety mechanism-called a lactate threshold-protects your muscles from overexertion, preventing you from getting to the point where you will injure yourself. The lactate threshold is the point at which your body cannot clear the lactic acid as fast as it is being produced and it begins to build up. Fortunately this threshold can be adjusted with training, giving you the ability to perform exercises at a higher intensity for a longer duration of time.

Myth #2: If you’re sore you should rest and not move. 

I’ll keep this one simple and say this is the exact opposite of what you want to do. More on this below.

So what is the truth about DOMS?

DOMS really just refers to micro tears in the muscles themselves. That soreness you are feeling is legitimately damage to the muscle, which makes you feel achy and sore. Here’s where it gets interesting: Even though there is micro structural damage to the area, it’s not necessarily a bad thing. It just depends on what you do and how you treat it, so here are some rules when dealing with muscle soreness…

Rule #1: DON’T TAKE ANTI-INFLAMATORIES! 

Having micro tears in your muscles causes an inflammatory response. Here’s the catch though: this inflammatory response is a GOOD thing, so don’t interrupt it by taking anti-inflammatories. Inflammation is part of the natural healing process, which progresses from inflammation to proliferation to remodeling. I won’t get too much into that process because then we’d be going down the rabbit hole of details. All you need to know is that you can’t skip over that step and expect your body to do what it needs to do. 

*Note: This is for general muscle soreness and not any other medical conditions that may include injury.

If you shouldn’t take anti-inflammatories, then what should you do?

Rule #2: Keep moving!

 MOVE, MOVE, MOVE! You need to get blood flow to the muscles that need to repair themselves! Sitting around on your bum isn’t going to help you here, nor will it help you out in many other circumstances. Get up and take action. 

Moving around drives blood flow to the area in need of repair. My favorite way to explain this is to imagine that you are trying to repair a building. The building needs materials to be repaired, so a delivery truck needs to bring some materials. The delivery truck is your blood, the materials are all the nutrients that you are eating, and the building is your muscles. The only way to get the blood/trucks to the building is to get the blood moving. How do you get the blood moving? Move around, walk, perform light activity…anything that gets the heart rate up a little bit and gets the blood pumping throughout your body. The muscles will begin to heat up, loosen, and blood/nutrients will be getting to the area to help repair and recover your precious muscle, making them grow and become stronger than before. 

Rule #3: Don’t over-train! 

If you’re already sore, don’t try and continue to train the next day and compound on the soreness for those muscle groups. You will not give your body enough time to repair and you will be digging yourself into a hole that is increasingly harder to get out of. Having better recovery practices, which I have talked about in Do You Have Good Recovery Practices, will help you more efficiently bounce back between bouts of training. The more experienced and well-trained you are, the better your body will be able to repair, adjust, and adapt to the training load you place on it. This is why training sessions get progressively harder over time and your workload can increase. However, ramping up your workload and increasing your ability to recover between bouts of training takes time. Don’t rush it; it all comes with time and proper training programs.

I hope that this has been informative and has helped you better understand the reasons behind DOMS and how to combat it. I’d love some feedback, so if you could leave a comment about what you think about the article it would be greatly appreciated. Thanks!


Ryan Goodell, CSCS


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