Is been a bit of a busy week at the office and not as much time to dive into my research update safari as I normally would. But this piece of research caught my eye. I had several patients that have been very committed to trying to make strength gains with new exercise routines, however feeling a little bit deflated by painful responses post exercise that make it difficult for them to stay on track.
Making muscle gains does involve some micro-tearing and stimulation of new muscle growth, and there's almost inevitably some degree of discomfort associated with it. It should be transient, and allow you to continue with you normal activities of daily living, and most importantly allow you to go back to another strength workout later in the week. If you're running into roadblocks achieving that, you may need to work with the seasoned trainer to try to 1st revisit the adequacy of your current workout routine: are you trying to do too much too fast, do not have proper pre-workout meal and hydration, do you have inadequate warm up and warm down recovery? Do you lack post exercise protein intake?
If everything tracks and you are still having difficulty recovering from your workout, you may need to introduce some supplemental botanical anti-inflammatory to speed up the post exercise muscle inflammation and its recovery. Curcumin (an extract of the spice turmeric but in much higher concentration than what found in the spice itself), has been the most studied substance to achieve that purpose. As this meta-analysis reveals, it's been a tried and true and very dependable agent to minimize post exercise muscular soreness. It has very little side effect 2. But there are some important details and how you use curcumin. You do need to have an adequate amount (about 2 g), and it's poorly absorbed unless combined with a fat-soluble base, and additionally enhanced by the addition of anti-inflammatory fatty acids (whether fish oil or black cumin seed oil). The high-end supplement industry has been quick to respond to the research by formulating new products aimed specifically at delayed onset muscle soreness recovery. I recommend taking them just before a workout if your anticipated strength training session is going to be no more than 30 minutes, or right after along with your protein bolus if your workout is going to be an hour or so.
