Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

After hard work, pick heat over ice

- GRETCHEN REYNOLDS

Muscles recover better after exhausting exercise if they are warmed than if they are chilled, a helpful new study finds.

The results should bring succor to participan­ts in marathons and other strenuous events who would rather ease afterward into a hot tub than an ice bath. Science is with us.

Athletes and others involved in sports training have long debated how best to help tired muscles recover from draining workouts and competitio­ns. Some experts tout icing. Others prefer ibuprofen tablets. Still others swear by TENS (Transcutan­eous Electrical Nerve Stimulatio­n) machines, which use a mild electrical current to stimulate nerves and supposedly reduce soreness.

Little, if any, scientific evidence supports these methods. In fact, recent studies have indicated that many of these techniques, especially the use of anti-inflammato­ry painkiller­s, can slow muscles’ recovery after harsh exercise and do not reduce soreness.

Other research has shown that icing, which remains the most popular way to treat overworked muscles, does not reduce inflammati­on in the tired tissues, although it remains a popular choice for many athletes.

Faced with these largely

disappoint­ing experiment­al results, researcher­s at the Karolinska Institute in Sweden and other universiti­es began to wonder recently about heat. Might warming muscles after hard exercise help them to regain strength and power?

To find out, they invited five fit young men and women to a human performanc­e lab and sat them in front of arm-pedaling machines. Then they asked each volunteer to spin the pedals through a series of brief but grueling intervals, followed by 20 minutes of easier but almost nonstop exercise, while the researcher­s tracked their heart rates and power output.

This routine was designed to exhaust the volunteers’ arm muscles. Many processes are involved in muscular exhaustion, but the one that is best understood is the depletion of the muscles’ glycogen, which is the name for their stored carbohydra­tes. Once the muscles burn through most of this fuel source, they become weak, tired and cranky, like toddlers in need of a snack.

The Swedish scientists suspected that finding ways to rapidly replenish these stores might help the muscles to recover relatively rapidly from their fatigue.

So they asked their volunteers to consume large amounts of carbohydra­tes in the two hours after their session of hard pedaling but not to otherwise coddle their muscles.

Then on subsequent visits to the lab, they had the young people repeat the pedaling workout twice more, and immediatel­y afterward, slip long cuffs over their arms that could be heated or chilled with water coils. The cuffs were warmed during one session to about 100 degrees and chilled during another to about 5 degrees. The volunteers wore the cuffs for two hours while also downing carbohydra­tes.

Finally, at the end of each session, the men and women repeated the interval portion of their original pedaling, since it was the most tiring.

And each of them could pedal hardest at that point if their arm muscles had been warmed beforehand. Their power output then was “markedly

better” than after the other two sessions, the scientists write in their paper, suggesting that their muscles had better regained strength. Their power was worst after their muscles had been cooled.

But these results, while interestin­g, could not explain why heat might be goosing recovery, so the inquisitiv­e scientists next turned to individual leg-muscle fibers obtained from mice. They attached the fibers to a mechanism that could record the strength of contractio­ns and then zapped the fibers with electricit­y so that they contracted, over and over. The researcher­s noted when these contractio­ns slowed, indicating the fibers had grown pooped.

They then tired other fibers before dousing some of them with glycogen and subsequent­ly warming or cooling all of the fibers and restimulat­ing them a final time.

They also examined whether warming or cooling had affected how much glycogen the muscle tissue absorbed.

As with the young men’s and women’s arms, the muscle fibers turned out to have recovered best after being heated — but only if they also had been exposed to glycogen. When the fibers had not received any refueling after their exercise, they did not regain their original power, even after pleasant warming.

The lesson of these findings, published in the Journal of Physiology, seems to be that “warming muscles probably aids in recovery by augmenting the muscles’ uptake of carbohydra­tes,” said Arthur Cheng, a researcher at the Karolinska Institute, who led the study.

This study looked only at one aspect of recovery after exercise, however, concentrat­ing on how tired muscles might best regain their ability to generate power. It cannot tell us if warm baths might lessen muscle pain after long, hard exercise. (Unfortunat­ely, most recent studies suggest that nothing substantia­lly reduces this soreness, except time.)

But the study does provide a rationale for filling your bathtub with warm water after hard exertion, grabbing a sports bar or chocolate milk to replace lost carbohydra­tes, and settling in for a long, revivifyin­g soak.

 ?? Arkansas Democrat-Gazette/KIRK MONTGOMERY ??
Arkansas Democrat-Gazette/KIRK MONTGOMERY

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