4.6 Article

The efficacy of cooling with phase change material for the treatment of exercise-induced muscle damage: pilot study

Journal

JOURNAL OF SPORTS SCIENCES
Volume 36, Issue 4, Pages 407-413

Publisher

TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
DOI: 10.1080/02640414.2017.1312492

Keywords

Recovery of function; exercise recovery; cryotherapy; muscle damage

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Post-exercise cryotherapy treatments are typically short duration interventions. This study examined the efficacy of prolonged cooling using phase change material (PCM) on strength loss and pain after eccentric exercise. Eight adults performed 120 bilateral eccentric quadriceps contractions (90% MVC). Immediately afterwards, frozen PCM packs (15 degrees C) were placed over the quadriceps, with room temperature PCM packs on the contralateral quadriceps. Skin temperature was recorded continually (6h PCM application). Isometric quadriceps strength and soreness were assessed before, 24, 48, 72 and 96h post-exercise. The protocol was repeated 5months later, with room temperature PCM applied to both legs. There were three treatments: legs treated with 15 degrees C PCM packs (direct cooling), legs treated with room temperature PCM packs contralateral to the 15 degrees C PCM packs (systemic cooling), and legs tested 5months later both treated with room temperature PCM packs (control). Skin temperature was 9 degrees C-10 degrees C lower with direct cooling versus systemic cooling and control (P<0.01). Strength loss and soreness were less (P<0.05) with direct cooling versus systemic cooling and control (strength 101%, 94%, 93%, respectively; pain 1.0, 2.3, 2.7, respectively). Six hours of PCM cooling was well tolerated and reduced strength loss and pain after damaging exercise.

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