A question from an exercise newbie.
angeldaae
Posts: 348 Member
When you have sore muscles from exercise, are you likely also retaining water?
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Replies
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most likely yes. When you workout your muscles you create micro tears and the muscles retain water to protect them and to aid in recovery.0
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Thank you. I started exercising this week and may have overdone it. I'm very sore, but also I have not lost this week and am actually showing a slight gain (.3 lbs). I will attribute it to water retention.0
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I think so. A lot of people experience a weight gain after a hard work out and after a few days it goes back down.0
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Muscle soreness has more to do with lactic acid build up. However, I usually do retain water in my hands and feet after working out, but it typically only lasts for a few hours. Just be sure to drink 16-20oz. of water before, during, and after your workout. It helps keep your organs functioning efficiently so that you don't hold on to water. I would also stay away from the sports drinks as they have extra sodium in them. The only time I would use a sports drink is if I plan on hours and hours of high intensity activity.
Disclaimer: I'm not a medical expert, nutritionist, or fitness pro. I'm simply going on personal experience.
Edited to ask: Are you asking this because of sudden weight increase? Or because of tightness in your extremities after working out? I was answering based on the latter assumption. :ohwell:0 -
Unless you're on some kind of Nasa-calibrated scale 0.3lbs means nothing.
I'd even go as far as to argue with the fluctuating fluid and food content of the average human body, anything up to 2lbs or so means nothing.0 -
I am suffering from this exact same thing. All my muscles are killing me and i have put 2.5 lb on. I am so glad i am not the only one. Please feel free to add me0
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When you have sore muscles from exercise, are you likely also retaining water?
A.C.E. Certified Personal and Group FitnessTrainer
IDEA Fitness member
Kickboxing Certified Instructor
Been in fitness for 28+ years and have studied kinesiology and nutrition0 -
Muscle soreness has more to do with lactic acid build up. However, I usually do retain water in my hands and feet after working out, but it typically only lasts for a few hours. Just be sure to drink 16-20oz. of water before, during, and after your workout. It helps keep your organs functioning efficiently so that you don't hold on to water. I would also stay away from the sports drinks as they have extra sodium in them. The only time I would use a sports drink is if I plan on hours and hours of high intensity activity.
Disclaimer: I'm not a medical expert, nutritionist, or fitness pro. I'm simply going on personal experience.
Edited to ask: Are you asking this because of sudden weight increase? Or because of tightness in your extremities after working out? I was answering based on the latter assumption. :ohwell:
A.C.E. Certified Personal and Group FitnessTrainer
IDEA Fitness member
Kickboxing Certified Instructor
Been in fitness for 28+ years and have studied kinesiology and nutrition0 -
Unless you're on some kind of Nasa-calibrated scale 0.3lbs means nothing.
If my weekly weigh-in showed a loss of 0.3, I wouldn't call that "nothing."0 -
Thank you, Niner.
BTW, I would love to take a real kickboxing class some day when I'm in better shape. I do TurboJam and I love it.0 -
Muscle soreness has more to do with lactic acid build up. However, I usually do retain water in my hands and feet after working out, but it typically only lasts for a few hours. Just be sure to drink 16-20oz. of water before, during, and after your workout. It helps keep your organs functioning efficiently so that you don't hold on to water. I would also stay away from the sports drinks as they have extra sodium in them. The only time I would use a sports drink is if I plan on hours and hours of high intensity activity.
Disclaimer: I'm not a medical expert, nutritionist, or fitness pro. I'm simply going on personal experience.
Edited to ask: Are you asking this because of sudden weight increase? Or because of tightness in your extremities after working out? I was answering based on the latter assumption. :ohwell:
A.C.E. Certified Personal and Group FitnessTrainer
IDEA Fitness member
Kickboxing Certified Instructor
Been in fitness for 28+ years and have studied kinesiology and nutrition
In fairness, I DID post a disclaimer that I'm not an expert, but rather going on personal experience. I'm simply stating what I have been told over the last 8-10yrs by various individuals who ARE medical and fitness professionals.
FYI, I just KNEW that you would have something to say about my comment. :laugh:0 -
In fairness, I DID post a disclaimer that I'm not an expert, but rather going on personal experience. I'm simply stating what I have been told over the last 8-10yrs by various individuals who ARE medical and fitness professionals.
FYI, I just KNEW that you would have something to say about my comment. :laugh:
Just for fun.
A.C.E. Certified Personal and Group FitnessTrainer
IDEA Fitness member
Kickboxing Certified Instructor
Been in fitness for 28+ years and have studied kinesiology and nutrition0 -
I suffered this exact same sorness last week after intense circuit training. I had to take 3 days to recover. I read up on way to relieve the pain (ice, heat, salt bath, elevate, rest)... Does anyone here have any suggestions on how to avoid this torture? I drink lots of water before, during and after. I'm scared it's going to happen again next time I hit the gym.0
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