Skip to content
  • Home
  • About us
  • Privacy policy
  • Terms & conditions
2022 The Whole World News™

2022 The Whole World News™

world news 2022

  • One Of The Best Editors
  • Indie Authors Wall of Fame™
  • Indie Singers Wall of Fame™
  • Indie Poets Wall of Fame™
  • Indie Artists Wall of Fame™
  • Actors
  • Artists
  • Authors
  • Books
  • Poetry
  • Self publishing
  • Singers
  • Health
  • Healthy Recipes
  • Hollywood Life
  • Most Popular Podcast
  • Movies
  • Online-Games
  • World News
  • Press Releases
  • Terms & conditions
  • Privacy policy
  • Shop
  • Creators Hall of Fame™
  • Steve Caresser’s New Site
  • Admin Login
  • CIRCLE OF INVESTORS INVENTORS™
  • Self-publishing Services
  • Cart
  • Toggle search form
  • 50 of the oldest actors still working Actors
  • What Is It, And Why Do We Want It? DogExpress Hollywood Life
  • On Layers and Wildness: A Conversation with… Poetry
  • Features – JOHAN LÄNGQUIST Talks Next CANDLEMASS Studio Album: ‘There Are A Lot Of Great Songs Here’ Singers
  • Why is a Balanced Diet Important? Health
  • Yonkers Tribune Publisher/Editor Hezi Aris, US Special Forces Vets Tom Amenta and Dan Blakeley, Authors of “The Twenty-Year War”, Share Their Analysis On the Russian/Ukrainian Escalation on Westchester On the Level – Friday, February 4, 2022 – 10am-12Noon EST Authors
  • Domenick Ammirati on openings at Lomex and O’Flaherty’s Artists
  • The Power of Stillness in Acting Actors
  • Huntdown Is Much More Than a Nostalgia-Fueled Contra Homage Movies
  • For Class and Studio, Here are the Best Composition Notebooks of 2022 – ARTnews.com Artists
  • Bourbon Chicken {Easy Recipe} – WellPlated.com Healthy Recipes
  • Pokémon Card Thief Steals $250,000 Worth of Merch in Daring Heist Movies
  • Spotify on Joe Rogan-Neil Young COVID conflict Singers
  • Week of March 21, 2022 Poetry
  • The Problem With the Pandemic Plot Authors

Don't take my word for it read all the testimonials about my editing!

Ice for Sore Muscles? Think Again.

Posted on July 23, 2022 By Steve Caresser No Comments on Ice for Sore Muscles? Think Again.

Spread the love

0
(0)

After a particularly vigorous workout or sports injury, many of us rely on ice packs to reduce soreness and swelling in our twanging muscles. But a cautionary new animal study finds that icing alters the molecular environment inside injured muscles in detrimental ways, slowing healing. The study involved mice, not people, but adds to mounting evidence that icing muscles after strenuous exercise is not just ineffective; it could be counterproductive.

Check inside the freezers or coolers at most gyms, locker rooms or athletes’ kitchens and you will find ice packs. Nearly as common as water bottles, they are routinely strapped onto aching limbs after grueling exercise or possible injuries. The rationale for the chilling is obvious. Ice numbs the affected area, dulling pain, and keeps swelling and inflammation at bay, which many athletes believe helps their aching muscles heal more rapidly.

But, in recent years, exercise scientists have started throwing cold water on the supposed benefits of icing. In a 2011 study, for example, people who iced a torn calf muscle felt just as much leg pain later as those who left their sore leg alone, and they were unable to return to work or other activities any sooner. Similarly, a 2012 scientific review concluded that athletes who iced sore muscles after strenuous exercise — or, for the masochistically minded, immersed themselves in ice baths — regained muscular strength and power more slowly than their unchilled teammates. And a sobering 2015 study of weight training found that men who regularly applied ice packs after workouts developed less muscular strength, size and endurance than those who recovered without ice.

But little has been known about how icing really affects sore, damaged muscles at a microscopic level. What happens deep within those tissues when we ice them, and how do any molecular changes there affect and possibly impede the muscles’ recovery?

So, for the new study, which was published in March in the Journal of Applied Physiology, researchers at Kobe University in Japan and other institutions, who long had been interested in muscle physiology, gathered 40 young, healthy, male mice. Then, using electrical stimulation of the animals’ lower legs to contract their calf muscles repeatedly, they simulated, in effect, a prolonged, exhausting and ultimately muscle-ripping leg day at the gym.

Rodents’ muscles, like ours, are made up of fibers that stretch and contract with any movement. Overload those fibers during unfamiliar or exceptionally strenuous activities and you damage them. After healing, the affected muscles and their fibers should grow stronger and better able to withstand those same forces the next time you work out.

But it was the healing process itself that interested the researchers now, and whether icing would change it. So they gathered muscle samples from some animals immediately after their simulated exertions and then strapped tiny ice packs onto the legs of about half of the mice, while leaving the rest unchilled. The scientists continued to collect muscle samples from members of both groups of mice every few hours and then days after their pseudo-workout, for the next two weeks.

Then they microscopically scrutinized all of the tissues, with a particular focus on what might be going on with inflammatory cells. As most of us know, inflammation is the body’s first response to any infection or injury, with pro-inflammatory immune cells rushing to the afflicted area, where they fight off invading germs or mop up damaged bits of tissue and cellular debris. Anti-inflammatory cells then move in, quieting the inflammatory ruction, and encouraging healthy new tissue to form. But inflammation is often accompanied by pain and swelling, which many people understandably dislike and use ice to dampen.

Looking at the mouse leg muscles, the researchers saw clear evidence of damage to many of the muscles’ fibers. They also noted, in the tissue that had not been iced, a rapid muster of pro-inflammatory cells. Within hours, these cells began busily removing cellular debris, until, by the third day after the contractions, most of the damaged fibers had been cleared away. At that point, anti-inflammatory cells showed up, together with specialized muscle cells that rebuild tissue, and by the end of two weeks, these muscles appeared fully healed.

Not so in the iced muscle, where recovery seemed markedly delayed. It took seven days in these tissues to reach the same levels of pro-inflammatory cells as on day three in the unchilled muscle, with both the clearance of debris and arrival of anti-inflammatory cells similarly slowed. Even after two weeks, these muscles showed lingering molecular signs of tissue damage and incomplete healing.

The upshot of this data is that “in our experimental situation, icing retards healthy inflammatory responses,” says Takamitsu Arakawa, a professor of medicine at Kobe University Graduate School of Health Sciences, who oversaw the new study.

But, as Dr. Arakawa points out, their experimental model simulates serious muscle damage, such as a strain or tear, and not simple soreness or fatigue. The study also, obviously, involved mice, which are not people, even if our muscles share a similar makeup. In future studies, Dr. Arakawa and his colleagues plan to study gentler muscle damage in animals and people.

But for now, his study’s findings suggest, he says, that damaged, aching muscles know how to heal themselves and our best response is to chill out and leave the ice packs in the cooler.

https%3A%2F%2Fwww.nytimes.com%2F2021%2F04%2F21%2Fwell%2Fmove%2Fexercise-icing-sore-muscles.html

How much did you like this post?

Click on a star to rate it!

As you found this post useful...

Follow us on social media!

We are sorry that this post was not useful for you!

Let us improve this post!

Tell us how we can improve this post?


Spread the love

Related posts:

  1. North Korea confirms 21 new deaths as it battles COVID-19
  2. Sheikh Mohamed bin Al Zayed elected UAE president | News
  3. Developments raise questions of police response
  4. I’m Black But Look White. Here Are The Horrible Things White People Feel Safe Telling Me.
  5. Monkeypox spread likely “amplified” by sex at 2 raves in Europe, leading WHO adviser says
World News

Post navigation

Previous Post: Why is a Balanced Diet Important?
Next Post: This Is What No One Tells Women About What Happens To Your Body In Your 40s

Related Posts

  • Austin Tice’s family is still waiting for answers 10 years after his disappearance World News
  • North Korea confirms 21 new deaths as it battles COVID-19 World News
  • 6 Psychologically Damaging Things People Say At Work World News
  • Sheikh Mohamed bin Al Zayed elected UAE president | News World News
  • Can Wellness Drinks Help Calm Your Anxiety? World News
  • Your Monday Briefing: North Korea’s Growing Outbreak World News
  • Singers News: Tony Ray is one of those singers going worldwide Actors
  • UK economy ‘only going to get worse’ as growth slowdown begins World News
  • The No. 1 skill that sets mentally strong kids from ‘those who give up’—and how to teach it World News
  • Texas lawmaker says Uvalde police agree to cooperate with probe | Gun Violence News World News
  • UAE’s long-ailing leader Sheikh Khalifa bin Zayed dies at 73 World News
  • Press Release: Charlie Hines Lure Maker 32,790 views Kentucky Afield revisits an old friend of the show Press Releases
  • Jamie Dimon says ‘brace yourself’ for an economic hurricane caused by the Fed and Ukraine war World News
  • Hate IPAs? It’s Because Your Genetics Programmed You To Dislike Bitter Beers. World News
  • Tesla CEO Elon Musk dismisses hydrogen as tool for energy storage World News

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Play FREE Game of Pinball


Click Here & Play a FREE Game of Pinball

One Of The Best Editors and She Has a Slot For Your book!

 

Melissa Gray, is one of the best editors, The Whole World News and ePrintedBooks has ever found. We wish she was our website editor but she only edits our clients books. 

And The Wind Cries

https://thewholeworldnews.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/03/1_Sneak-Peek-And-The-Wind-Cries....mp3

And The Wind Cries by Jason Sinner Who Passed away before he could finish it. But I, his Dad finished the words and launched it for him.

This is a mystery song and all are welcome to join the forum and talk about the mystery behind the song.

Contact Us or Submit Fresh Press Release

Contact The Whole World News or to Submit a fresh press release. Make sure you change to the right Department on the form.

Contact The Whole World News

 

THE BEST SELF-PUBLISHING SERVICES

EPRINTEDBOOKS™

We have produced over 2000 well-edited, high-quality books that we launched into global distribution for self-publishers who retained 100% of their royalties, 100% of their publishing rights, 100% control of their manuscripts, and 100% control of their cover images that we prepared for them.

ePrintedBooks Voted The Best Self-publishing Services

Visitors online now

Current Visitors online – 27
users – 1
guests – 16
Lot – 10
Max Total - 166032
Max Users - 138
Max Guests - 165894
Max Date - 2022-05-18 -

Categories

  • Actors (116)
  • Ads (1)
  • Africa (4)
  • Artists (169)
  • Authors (145)
  • Books (114)
  • Health (54)
  • Healthy Recipes (70)
  • Hollywood Life (26)
  • Indie Authors Wall of Fame (6)
  • Most Popular Podcast (49)
  • Movies (176)
  • Online-Games (53)
  • Poetry (91)
  • Press Releases (12)
  • Self publishing (113)
  • Singers (158)
  • The Indie Poets Wall of Fame (1)
  • The Indie Singers Wall of Fame (3)
  • World News (60)

Recent Comments

  • Steve Caresser on Let Us Write and Distribute Your Press Release Nationally NBC – ABC – CBS – FOX – WND Affiliated News websites
  • Steve Caresser on Book News: The Power Of Words  by Binod Dawadi & Sydnie Beaupré. Poetry edited by bestselling author Sydnie Beaupré.

Product categories

  • My Mind & Me — 10 Biggest Takeaways from Moving Mental Health Documentary Hollywood Life
  • National Gallery of Art to Mount Rothko Paintings on Paper Survey – ARTnews.com Artists
  • What is Fine Art Photography? Artists
  • Two LGBTQ+ Books Back on Shelf in Kent, WA, Middle School; New Challenge On Deck Books
  • Fluffy Cottage Cheese Pancakes | Ambitious Kitchen Healthy Recipes
  • Get Started With Podcast Metadata Most Popular Podcast
  • THE GAPS | Kirkus Reviews Books
  • How to Do Chair Yoga Health
  • Artist Brigitte Kowanz Dies—and More Art News – ARTnews.com Artists
  • How To Build a Balanced Plate Health
  • Indie Publishers Start to Look Past the Pandemic Authors
  • How Much Should My Book Cost? Tips for Pricing Your Book Self publishing
  • Catwoman’s Future Death Redefines Batman’s Mission as a Tragic Failure Movies
  • Poetry Shortlisted in the Top 10 State level 2022 NAMI NJ Poetry Contest. Please Vote!! – Megha’s World Poetry
  • Interview: Nina Arianda on ‘Being the Ricardos’, Breaking Down a Script and the Music of Aaron Sorkin’s Script Actors

Copyright © 2023 2022 The Whole World News™.

Powered by PressBook News Dark theme