Sauna, ice baths, cryotherapy, steam room, massages… with so many ever increasing recovery methods it is hard to know which one is right for you and which ones are not worth your money and time.
First off, it is important to be aware of why we are even trying to recover better?
Here we have to distinguish between a couple drastically different goals:
1. We want to recover faster, so that we are ready to perform again at the same level in a short amount of time, for example in a multi-day competition, during in-season with the next game/competition just around the corner, between heats in a CrossFit competition…
2. We want to recover faster to feel better and perform daily tasks normally, e.g. reducing muscle soreness to be able to return to a physical job or to ease tension in the neck to enhance sleep quality…
3. We want to recover optimally to enable the best possible adaptation to training, to enhance performance in the long run…
Why is it important to know what you’re recovering for? Because your recovery goal determines what methods (if any) are best for you and your goal and also because sometimes it is almost like a trade-off between adapting optimally and recovering faster, but more on that soon.
So let’s go over the top recovery methods.
Starting with the basics, even if they are not fancy, but these are the things that influence your recovery from training the most:
How your training is structured is the main driver for your recovery.
Action Steps:
This includes everything you do outside of training. Your sleep (quantity and quality), activity level at your job (sedentary or are you on your feet all day), how and how much you relax (e.g. do you chill on the couch at night or go play golf with some friends), stress management (is your life go,go,go from the moment you wake until your head hits the pillow or rather easy going)…
Action Steps:
Through adequate nutrition we refill our glycogen storages, repair muscle tissue, make sure we are adapting as best as we can to the training stimulus and are ready to go for the next session or competition. Not eating enough calories overall is one of the main reasons for poor recovery.
Action Steps:
Not sure how much food is enough? Tracking calories and macros is what we use as nutrition coaches to ensure our clients eat enough.
Then, and only then, can we find Active Recovery methods on the “recovery pyramid”.
What?
Local icing, ice baths, cryotherapy…
How?
Anti-inflammatory effects, are vaso-constricting which means blood vessels arrow and hence reduce flow of blood and biofluids, neuromuscular recovery.
When?
Immediately after exercise for optimal effects.
Pro
Cold methods can minimize bruising, swelling and speed up return to full training. Capacity, lower perception of pain and fatigue.
Con
Adaptation to the training stimulus may be minimized, no performance
Enhancement past the initial point, no heeling of structural damage.
Performance: Best used during competitive phases when fast return to same performance level is more important and adapting to training is not the main focus. Most beneficial in sprinting/ jumping type sports rather than maximum dynamic or isometric strength tasks. Not advisable when in a phase when an athlete is actively trying to improve performance.
Lifestyle: Reduction of swelling or bruising is more important than adapting to training (for example after a forest run when your joints feel achy from balancing out uneven ground).
What?
Sauna, steam room, hot baths, heat packs …
How?
Hot methods have anti-spasmatic effects, are vaso-dialating which means blood vessels expand and hence enhance flow of blood and biofluids.
When?
Two hours or more after exercise to allow for any potential swelling to go down.
Pro
Hot methods can reduce delayed onset-muscle soreness, increase removal of
“waste products” in the body, repair of muscle tissue, increase psychological relaxation which may be one of its main benefits, because as we have learnt relaxation alone is high up on the recovery pyramid.
Con
Adaptation to the training stimulus may be minimized (although not as much as with cold methods), does not improve performance.
Recommendation
Performance: Can be used at any time throughout the season if tissue repair is more important than adapting to training. Can be applied in any sport, not advisable when swelling/bruising/severe inflammation is present.
Lifestyle: Reduction of muscle soreness is more important than adapting to training (e.g. overall body tension does not allow for optimal sleep or does not allow you to perform daily tasks well because of a stiff neck etc.)
What?
This is the combination of both hot and cold methods.
How?
Higher cardiac output, muscle blood flow and diffusion of muscle waste products in the blood, less formations of edema
Pro
Less inflammation AND better tissue repair
Con
Not very practical for most people. This would be something like a hot bath (5 minutes) followed by an ice bath (5 minutes) and repeat about 3-4 times
What?
Compression clothing etc.
How?
Vasodilation (blood vessels opening up) and increased blood flow through external pressure.
When?
Anywhere from 2-48 hours after exercise.
Pro
Increased recovery of exercise performance, reduced soreness and perception of pain, improved lymphatic drainage. Can easily be paired with cold methods.
Con
Effects are relatively small, possibly comes at the cost of adaptive potential from
training, but more research is needed.
Often mistaken for active recovery. Only very light cardio (for example walking) is active recovery, everything else adds fatigue instead of reducing it.
Stretching
May reduce DOMS, but no significant effect on recovery.
No significant effect if normal macro and calorie requirements are met.
No significant effect if normal macro and calorie requirements are met.
Similar to massage, mostly beneficial because of the compassionate touch component, otherwise no significant effect on recovery
No significant effect on recovery, beneficial because of increased relaxation.
No significant effect on recovery, beneficial because of increased relaxation.
Reduces localized pain and beneficial because of increased relaxation.
May reduce DOMS, otherwise no significant effect.
Proper strength training causes muscle tissue to break down, which means inflammation is caused. This is a stimulus that we WANT – for fat loss as well as for muscle gain, because after the inflammation was caused our body does its best to (super-) compensate for this tissue break down, meaning it repairs the tissue beyond where it was initially.
By decreasing the inflammation (through ice baths, taking advil or consuming fish oil prior to training), we are also decreasing tissue adaptation (less inflammation = less adaptation) meaning less hypertrophy and increase in lean body mass. As mentioned, sometimes adapting is not as important as recovering (for example between back to back games for a Football Player). This is when recovery methods can most certainly be beneficial.
What constitutes as therapeutic methods?
Supplementation: Keep it simple. Remember this is relatively minor compared to calorie intake or sleep.
– Omega 3s, should not be taken before training to allow for inflammation through training.
– Good quality whey protein as a fast digesting protein source around training if needed.
– Carb powders like highly branched cyclic dextrin if needed around training times
– Creatine (about 5g per day, no need to cycle)
– anything else you might have to supplement due to deficiencies, to help with hormonal balance or for gut health.
– If your training program is not in line with your lifestyle/lifestress and you are not sleeping/ eating right or managing your stress well, no need to worry about whether you should invest in cryotherapy or get a foot massage, fix the big blocks first.
– Both, hot and cold recovery methods, can be beneficial when applied at the right time for the right reasons. Trade offs between optimal recovery and optimal training adaptation have to be taken into consideration.
– The psychological relaxation or compassionate touch that comes with some recovery methods might be the main reason why we benefit from them, rather than them having a direct impact on our physical recovery.