EXERCISE AND RECOVERY

Recovery Days: Rest or Easy Exercise?

AN ARTICLE FROM DR. MIRKIN

Virtually all competitive athletes train by taking a hard workout on one day, feeling muscle soreness on the next, and then recovering at a reduced intensity for as many days as it takes for the soreness to go away. Then they take their next intense workout.

MUSCLE DAMAGE INCREASES MUSCLE

muscle structure

Intense workouts cause muscle damage, as evidenced by bleeding into the muscles themselves and disruption of the fibers and Z bands that hold muscle fibers together. Significant increases in muscle strength and size come only with workouts intense enough to break down muscles. When muscles heal they become stronger and larger. The faster you move on your hard days, the faster you can move in competition. However, continuing intense exercise when muscles feel sore causes injuries and an overtraining syndrome that can takes weeks and months for recovery.

EXERCISE ON DAYS OFF

Most athletes in endurance and strength sports exercise on their recovery days and do not plan to take days off. However, they work at a markedly reduced intensity to put minimal pressure on their muscles. If you develop pain anywhere that gets worse as you continue exercising, you are supposed to stop for that day.

CONTINUOUS EXERCISE TOUGHENS MUSCLE

Active recoveries on easy days at low intensity make muscles tougher and more fibrous so the athlete’s muscles can withstand harder hard days. Almost all top runners, cyclists and weight lifters do huge volumes or work, and most of it is on their less intense recovery days. The stresses of intense workouts are extreme; the recoveries take a tremendous amount of time and are done at low pressure on the muscles. Top endurance runners run more than 100 miles/week, cyclists do more than 300 miles per week and weight lifters spend hours each day in the gym.

SWIMMING FOR RECOVERY

swimming

A recent report from The University of Western Australia shows that runners recover faster by taking a relaxed swimming workout 10 hours after high intensity interval running, rather than just resting (International Journal of Sports Medicine, January 2010). However, in another study, runners recovered strength and power faster after a marathon by resting for five days compared to those who ran slowly (Journal of Applied Physiology, December 1984).

DON’T OVERDO IT!

Active recovery should be of limited intensity that does not interfere with the healing process. German researchers showed a one-hour recovery ride is more effective than a three-hour ride for recovery from 13 days of intense bicycle training. Those who rode for 3 hours on their four recovery days had much lower maximal heart rates and maximal lactic acid blood levels, lower power output and slower 30 minute time trials, showing that they were unable to exert themselves as intensely (Scandinavian Journal of Medicine & Science in Sports, June 2009).

EAT A HIGH CARB MEAL

Carbohydrates

Eating a high-carbohydrate meal within one hour of intense workouts hastens recovery (Journal of Sports Sciences, January 2004).

ADD PROTEIN

Adding protein to that meal hastens recovery even more (Sports Science Exchange, 87:15, 2002). Adding salt and drinking lots of fluids are also necessary for a faster recovery (Journal of Sports Sciences, January 2004). So within one hour after your intense workouts, eat fruit, vegetables, cereals and grains (for carbohydrates), seafood or corn and beans (for protein), add salt to replace what you have lost, and drink plenty of fluids.

DR. PINNA SAYS:

In the days when we were living in the forests, we were constantly moving. Our bodies are made for movement. The plague of modern living is the motor. We use it instead of our bodies, and we pay a price in obesity and disease.

The only thing that builds muscles and good health is movement — something, we call exercise. If you give up movement, you are saying goodbye to health.

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