Does ice really help after injury?

Does ice really help after injury?

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Ollie_M

Original Poster:

2,268 posts

107 months

Wednesday 10th February 2016
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I was sent an article today, from which the below is taken, which questioned the use of ice as a recovery method. I was wondering what people thoughts were as
I tend to avoid cryotherapy after a sports injury and just rely on rest combined with reducing the mobility of the injured area.


"Research on the efficacy of ice is, in fact, more tepid than many might think. “Ice is commonly used after acute muscle strains, but there are no clinical studies of its effectiveness,” noted a 2012 study in the British Journal of Sports Medicine. Some studies say this practice could be counterproductive in the long run. “Topical cooling (icing) . . . seems not to improve but, rather, delay recovery from eccentric exercise-induced muscle damage,” according to a 2013 study published in the Journal of Strength and Conditioning Research.

And yet since the late 1970s, medical practitioners have often treated an injury with RICE (rest, ice, compression and elevation). It’s an easy formula to remember: RICE is nice. The term was coined by Dr. Gabe Mirkin, a former assistant professor at the University of Maryland, in the bestselling Sports Medicine Book published in 1978. But even he has changed his mind. “Nobody believes in rest anymore,” he says. “You can get a hip replacement and you’re on the bike 12 hours after surgery.” As for ice, “there is no data to show that ice does anything more than block pain,” he says. “And there is data that shows it delays healing.” The mnemonic he made famous, however, remains prevalent. “RICE is just something that stuck—and it’s wrong,” Mirkin adds. “I’m partially responsible for this misinformation.”

Ollie_M

Original Poster:

2,268 posts

107 months

Monday 15th February 2016
quotequote all
Einion Yrth said:
Works fine, if wrapped in enough Gin and Tonic.
smile