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Ask well relieving sore muscles ny-times
- 1. OCTOBER 4, 2013, 6:00 AM
Ask Well: Relieving Sore Muscles
By GRETCHEN REYNOLDS
QWhat’s the best way to relieve sore muscles?I am a 56yearold woman who exercises at least an hour a day. I
am sore a lot of the time. What is the best approach to reducing muscle soreness? I know about foam rollers,
protein, ice baths
Asked by nlitinme • 348 votes
A
Exercise could be described as Nietzschean. To make muscles fitter, you damage them
slightly during workouts, prompting the fibers to repair themselves and become
stronger. This process “is a good thing,” said Thomas Swensen, a professor of exercise
and sports science at Ithaca College in New York. “You want to stress the muscles. They
adapt positively.”
But in the meantime, they ache and, unfortunately, few methods reliably relieve the
soreness. The painkiller ibuprofen, for instance, has little effect on exerciserelated pain,
studies show, and may actually reduce the ability of muscles to repair themselves.
Similarly, postexercise ice baths chill muscles, as you would expect, but do not, most
studies show, make them less tender.
On the other hand, sports massage marginally reduces soreness, some studies suggest,
although the overall effect is “too small to be clinically relevant,” a systematic review of
massagerelated studies concluded in 2012.
Ditto for arnica. A small study published in August in The European Journal of Sport
Science found that runners who rubbed the substance onto their legs every four hours
for three days after a punishing workout felt slightly less sore afterward than runners
who did not.
Foam rollers, which you mention, may also be effective. In a small study published in
July, young men who vigorously rolled their muscles like bread dough for 20 minutes
after strength training were less sore later than a control group. (It is impossible, of
course, to blind people as to whether they are receiving treatment in studies like this.
You know if your muscles are being kneaded or not.)
But my favorite newly studied method of combating sore muscles is watermelon juice,
which, according to an experiment published in July in The Journal of Agricultural and
Food Chemistry, contains a hefty dose of lcitrulline, a substance that seems to protect
muscles against pain. Cyclists who drank about 17 ounces of fresh watermelon juice an
hour before completing a strenuous interval session experienced fewer aches afterward
than riders drinking a placebo.
None of these methods, however, will eliminate postexercise muscle soreness; at best,
they can blunt it. But for most of us, the condition is selflimiting anyway, Dr. Swensen