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Journal ArticleDOI

Delayed onset muscle soreness : treatment strategies and performance factors.

TLDR
Exercise is the most effective means of alleviating pain during DOMS, however the analgesic effect is also temporary, and athletes who must train on a daily basis should be encouraged to reduce the intensity and duration of exercise for 1–2 days following intense DOMS-inducing exercise.
Abstract
Delayed onset muscle soreness (DOMS) is a familiar experience for the elite or novice athlete. Symptoms can range from muscle tenderness to severe debilitating pain. The mechanisms, treatment strategies, and impact on athletic performance remain uncertain, despite the high incidence of DOMS. DOMS is most prevalent at the beginning of the sporting season when athletes are returning to training following a period of reduced activity. DOMS is also common when athletes are first introduced to certain types of activities regardless of the time of year. Eccentric activities induce micro-injury at a greater frequency and severity than other types of muscle actions. The intensity and duration of exercise are also important factors in DOMS onset. Up to six hypothesised theories have been proposed for the mechanism of DOMS, namely: lactic acid, muscle spasm, connective tissue damage, muscle damage, inflammation and the enzyme efflux theories. However, an integration of two or more theories is likely to explain muscle soreness. DOMS can affect athletic performance by causing a reduction in joint range of motion, shock attenuation and peak torque. Alterations in muscle sequencing and recruitment patterns may also occur, causing unaccustomed stress to be placed on muscle ligaments and tendons. These compensatory mechanisms may increase the risk of further injury if a premature return to sport is attempted. A number of treatment strategies have been introduced to help alleviate the severity of DOMS and to restore the maximal function of the muscles as rapidly as possible. Nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs have demonstrated dosage-dependent effects that may also be influenced by the time of administration. Similarly, massage has shown varying results that may be attributed to the time of massage application and the type of massage technique used. Cryotherapy, stretching, homeopathy, ultrasound and electrical current modalities have demonstrated no effect on the alleviation of muscle soreness or other DOMS symptoms. Exercise is the most effective means of alleviating pain during DOMS, however the analgesic effect is also temporary. Athletes who must train on a daily basis should be encouraged to reduce the intensity and duration of exercise for 1–2 days following intense DOMS-inducing exercise. Alternatively, exercises targeting less affected body parts should be encouraged in order to allow the most affected muscle groups to recover. Eccentric exercises or novel activities should be introduced progressively over a period of 1 or 2 weeks at the beginning of, or during, the sporting season in order to reduce the level of physical impairment and/or training disruption. There are still many unanswered questions relating to DOMS, and many potential areas for future research.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

The Mechanisms of Massage and Effects on Performance, Muscle Recovery and Injury Prevention

TL;DR: The possible mechanisms of massage are discussed and a discussion of the limited evidence of massage on performance, recovery and muscle injury prevention is provided.
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Using recovery modalities between training sessions in elite athletes: does it help?

TL;DR: There is no substantial scientific evidence to support the use of the recovery modalities reviewed to enhance the between-training session recovery of elite athletes.
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The prevention and treatment of exercise-induced muscle damage.

TL;DR: There is unequivocal evidence that prior bouts of eccentric exercise provide a protective effect against subsequent bouts of potentially damaging exercise, and further research is warranted to elucidate the most appropriate dose and frequency of interventions to attenuate EIMD and if these interventions attenuate the adaptation process.
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Terminology and classification of muscle injuries in sport: The Munich consensus statement

TL;DR: A consistent English terminology as well as a comprehensive classification system for athletic muscle injuries which is proven in the daily practice are presented and can serve as the basis for future comparative studies to address the continued lack of systematic information on muscle injuries in the literature.
Journal ArticleDOI

Factors Associated with Recurrent Hamstring Injuries

TL;DR: A history of muscle injury represents a predominant risk factor for future insult in that muscle group and the most likely ones corresponding to inadequate warm-up, invalid structure and the content of training, muscle tightness and/or weakness, agonist/antagonist imbalances, underestimation of an extensive injury, use of inappropriate drugs and more rigorous guidelines in the treatment and rehabilitation.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Myofibrillar damage following intense eccentric exercise in man.

TL;DR: The eccentric exercise gives rise to muscles soreness and influences, on mechanical basis and selectively with regard to fiber type, the fine structure of the contractile apparatus.
Journal ArticleDOI

Mechanisms of exercise-induced delayed onset muscular soreness: a brief review.

TL;DR: Mechanisms of exercise-induced delayed onset muscular soreness and the sensation of pain and stiffness in the muscles that occurs from 1 to 5 d following unaccusto
Book

Clinical Sports Medicine

TL;DR: Clinical Sports Medicine has been fully updated from the popular 2nd edition (2000) and is even more practical, now superbly illustrated, easy to read and packed with substantially updated and new material.
Journal ArticleDOI

Exercise-Induced Muscle Damage and Adaptation

TL;DR: Physical conditioning results in an adaptation such that all indicators of damage are reduced following repeated bouts of exercise, and investigators have suggested that the prophylactic effect of training may be due to performance of a single initial exercise bout.
Journal ArticleDOI

Repeated high-force eccentric exercise: effects on muscle pain and damage.

TL;DR: The observed training effect of repeated exercise was not a consequence of the muscle becoming either stronger or more resistant to fatigue, and it cannot have been a result of changes in motor unit recruitment.
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