Cold Water Immersion vs. Warm Water Immersion On Delayed-Onset Muscle Soreness
Item
- Description
- Muscular injuries are common when performing eccentric exercise. This contraction causes micro-damage to muscles, producing pain associated with delayed-onset muscle soreness (DOMS). The purpose of this study is to determine which prevention method (warm immersion prior or cold immersion post) provides the greatest relief of DOMS-induced pain and loss of strength. Thirty out-of-season Keene State College athletes, ages 17-24 years, will be recruited as participants. Participants will be randomized to two treatment groups: warm immersion prior exercise or cold immersion post. Slow lowering of a dumbbell (eccentric exercise) will be performed with their non-dominant wrist extensors. Pain (visual analog scale) and grip strength (dynamometer) will be recorded at baseline, post-treatment, 24 hours post, and 48 hours post. A RMANOVA will be used to compare groups; significant results will be followed by t-tests. It is hypothesized that heat before exercise will have a greater reduction in DOMS due to changes in muscle extensibility and elasticity.
- Melanie Adams
- Wanda Swiger
- Contributor
- Keene State College
- Date
- 2015-04-11
- Identifier
- http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12088/7566
- Language
- en_US
- Subject
- Education
- Sports Sciences
- Type
- Presentation
- Rights
- http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/
- Item sets
- AEC 2015 Professional
- Site pages
- Professional
Position: 3861 (49 views)