Article by Nicole Tos
Build an understanding of why our muscles get sore and help mitigate the discomfort associated with soreness.
Delayed onset muscle soreness (DOMS) is described as a “sore, aching, painful feeling in the muscles after unfamiliar and unaccustomed intense exercise (1).” This means that you can potentially experience DOMS after a longer-than usual hike, especially if there is more elevation than you are used to, or from completing a typical exercise but with more weight or intensity. The soreness can be considered a type 1 muscle strain and usually is pain-free for 12-24 hours following activity, with peak soreness starting from 24-72 hours following the activity (1).
Although many people have experienced DOMS, the exact mechanisms behind what causes it are still somewhat unclear. Some proposed explanations for why DOMS occurs includes lactic acid build up, a muscle spasm, potential connective tissue or muscular damage, inflammation within the muscle, and the enzyme efflux theory – which is essentially the muscle losing enzymes quicker than the rate at which they replace them (2).
Eccentric exercises, whereby the muscle elongates throughout the contraction, is typically most associated with having DOMS develop (3). To understand what an eccentric exercise is, think of a simple bicep curl: when you are at the top position of the contraction, hand close to shoulder region, slowly lowering the hand down until the arm is in a straight position. In this example, it is the bicep muscle that must produce an eccentric contraction to control the lowering of the hand.
Another few components to consider on top of the exercise type is the intensity, velocity, and duration of the exercise. As a rule, the higher the intensity and velocity of the exercise conducted, the higher the tor que created by the muscle which essentially can equate to the higher possibility for DOMS to occur (3). For exercise duration, there is no set minutes or seconds that tends to create more soreness, however, some research has demonstrated that any contraction held past 5 minutes does not demonstrate any further damage to the muscle tissue (3).
Regarding the ability to prevent DOMS, emphasis is in pre-training and pre-loading the muscles to increase their ability to accept load. Some research has even demonstrated that when preventing the onset of DOMS associated with downhill running, participants could pre-train with either flat or down-hill running to help reduce in incidence of DOMS (3). More studies will help further our knowledge regarding what types of exercises will help prevent DOMS but it seems very promising that if you pre-load the muscles, you reduce the likelihood of intense soreness.
As outlined above, DOMS can be a typical reaction to increased load when training and it seems that treatment techniques have mixed results for reducing the soreness. So, your best bet would be trying to prevent it in the first place. It can also be by trial and error that you discover what works best for you.
Feel free to come in and chat with one of our physiotherapists to help safely increase the load for your training and potentially attempt some treatment if DOMS has already set in.
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