How do you treat your DOMS
facilitators1334
Posts: 48
I have a bad case of it right now. Squats. It's been two days and my legs are still in pain,weak and sore to the touch. I drink lots of water.
How do you treat yours?
How do you treat yours?
0
Replies
-
I keep exercising and if Im at work I try and move around every 30 minutes. Usually the first 48 hours are the worse (second day is the worse of all) and from then on I loosen up0
-
Stretching and more exercise!0
-
Thanks for the tips. I'll be at the gym tomorrow.0
-
Hair of the dog! Work the muscle again. Advil helps also.0
-
Lots of water, walk it out, stretch, and a foam roller!0
-
Lots of water, walk it out, stretch, and a foam roller!
This + another work out!0 -
I complain about my poor aching legs to my wife. I'm sure she loves it.0
-
Ok..Advil taken..walking/light elliptical done..stretching and drinking water right now..no foam roller at the moment. Ty guys0
-
I don't...I keep working out0
-
Hot bath with epsom salts.
Heating pad.
Tylenol or Ibuprofen if they're really bad.
Yoga in the mornings.
Adhere to normally scheduled workouts.
Whimper like a baby every time I have to sit down on the toilet.0 -
Lots of water. Stretching/foam roller. Walk. Hit the pool. I also love to hit the steam room. Also, I use the handicap stalls for at least two days. Glutes day+DOMS=my butt not wanting to sit on a toilet seat.0
-
I sit down on the toilet in the morning to pee and just deal with the fact I won't be getting up again that day.0
-
I work around it, try to work other muscles the next day...although I get it so unfrequently now I secretly love it.0
-
Stretching and more exercise!0
-
stretching and a slight increase in calories (usually carbs)0
-
It's called lactic acid and stretching and intense massage or even epson salt baths will help or IBprofin...0
-
I have hot baths and keep taking the stairs two at a time.0
-
A medium intensity workout after a good warmup and stretch is usually enough to purge some of that lactic acid out.
An ice bath would also help (and yes I mean go get two bags of ice, fill the tub with cold water, add the ice, and get in for 20 minutes.)
DOMS for me is mostly in muscles that I haven't used in a while. After a few workouts you'll find that it diminishes into normal soreness.0 -
It's called lactic acid and stretching and intense massage or even epson salt baths will help or IBprofin...
Lactic acid buildup is no longer considered the cause of DOMS, but rather microfractures in the muscle fibers themselves.0 -
I'm almost always suffering from DOMS; most of the time it's mild enough that a little stretching would send it away, sometimes it's a little sharper so I would take a couple of ibuprofen pills.0
-
This bout is the kind where you go to sit down and you just fall in your seat. I did a short set of squats hugging a huge bucket of sand. About 40lbs. I know it doesn't sound pretty but I'm doing it for strength. I went low and slow. :sick:0
-
I had the same thing when i started squats. Luckily my gym has a whirlpool spa so I made good use of that. Other than that, you've got some good suggestions. A hot bath, stretching, and don't stop working out.
ETA: And water. Lots and lots of water.0 -
Bulk BCAA's and electrolyte infused water0
-
don't do what I did and just do nothing you will hurt way longer yoga finally did the trick0
-
Lots of water, stretching and BCAA's0
-
This might be a little against the grain, but, you cant treat DOMS. nothing will accelerate the mitigation of that sort of pain that's really effective. You can "loosen up" the muscle and work it again and the pain subsides (dopamine, adrenaline, seratonin, heat, all make the pain manageable during workouts). But the rate at which micro tears in your fiber heal is pretty much strictly genetic, assuming you are meeting basic caloric requirements and getting enough rest and hydration.
So, assuming you are not energy, nutrient, or rest deficient, you'll just have to wait it out. Squats sometimes keep me sore for 6-8 days.0 -
More frequent training, other than that I usually just complain it off0
-
Hot bath with epsom salts.
Heating pad.
Tylenol or Ibuprofen if they're really bad.
Yoga in the mornings.
Adhere to normally scheduled workouts.
Whimper like a baby every time I have to sit down on the toilet.
All the way, yes! Especially on the last one
:ohwell: :ohwell:0 -
Lactic acid buildup is no longer considered the cause of DOMS, but rather microfractures in the muscle fibers themselves.
Actually I believe it is microtears in the connective tissues which surround and permeate the muscle bellies, not the contractile tissue itself, but don't quote me on that. Not that it matters.
To address the OP, as far as I know you can not significantly increase the rate of recovery of DOMS. Certainly there are strategies used to reduce the pain but I don't think these methods actually address the cause. That said, I strongly believe in stretching, foam rolling, self-massage, and active recovery, and to a lesser extent (temperature) contrast showers/ice baths because they're ridiculously uncomfortable.
To continue, DOMS is not a sign of progress or growth in any real meaningful sense. DOMS occurs as a result of your body not being adapted to your training program. It is acceptable to experience DOMS for several weeks after starting a new program, or for some period of time after significantly altering your training parameters, but if you are constantly feeling sore it probably means you actually don't train ENOUGH. The typical bro-split idea of training each body part once a week and beating the hell out of it so it's sore for a week is simply pointless and has no real basis in exercise science, at least for a non-drug assisted individual that is.0 -
Lactic acid buildup is no longer considered the cause of DOMS, but rather microfractures in the muscle fibers themselves.
Actually I believe it is microtears in the connective tissues which surround and permeate the muscle bellies, not the contractile tissue itself, but don't quote me on that. Not that it matters.
To address the OP, as far as I know you can not significantly increase the rate of recovery of DOMS. Certainly there are strategies used to reduce the pain but I don't think these methods actually address the cause. That said, I strongly believe in stretching, foam rolling, self-massage, and active recovery, and to a lesser extent (temperature) contrast showers/ice baths because they're ridiculously uncomfortable.
To continue, DOMS is not a sign of progress or growth in any real meaningful sense. DOMS occurs as a result of your body not being adapted to your training program. It is acceptable to experience DOMS for several weeks after starting a new program, or for some period of time after significantly altering your training parameters, but if you are constantly feeling sore it probably means you actually don't train ENOUGH. The typical bro-split idea of training each body part once a week and beating the hell out of it so it's sore for a week is simply pointless and has no real basis in exercise science, at least for a non-drug assisted individual that is.
I agree with most of this. Though the once a week bodypart bro split is not exactly pointless, just not optimal from an unassisted standpoint. You can recruit such a regimen with good results if you do strength+hypertrophy in one session, but it still probably does not beat out upping frequency.0
Categories
- All Categories
- 1.4M Health, Wellness and Goals
- 393.3K Introduce Yourself
- 43.8K Getting Started
- 260.2K Health and Weight Loss
- 175.9K Food and Nutrition
- 47.4K Recipes
- 232.5K Fitness and Exercise
- 424 Sleep, Mindfulness and Overall Wellness
- 6.5K Goal: Maintaining Weight
- 8.5K Goal: Gaining Weight and Body Building
- 153K Motivation and Support
- 8K Challenges
- 1.3K Debate Club
- 96.3K Chit-Chat
- 2.5K Fun and Games
- 3.7K MyFitnessPal Information
- 24 News and Announcements
- 1.1K Feature Suggestions and Ideas
- 2.6K MyFitnessPal Tech Support Questions