Persistent Myths About DOMS (Delayed Onset Muscle Soreness) That Need to Die

in health •  7 years ago 

I recently started working out again after a very long lay off, caused by lazyness and other reasons, but mostly lazyness.

As you would expect, I've been going through a lot of delayed onset muscle soreness, or DOMS, lately, and experiencing DOMS has reminded me of just how much misinformation there is regarding everything that has to do with bodybuilding and fitness. You can browse online and encounter the most ridiculous claims, all of which have been debunked a long time ago, but will seemingly never ever go away.

DOMS typically take place from 6-8 hours following physical activity, and peak around 24-48 hours after intensive physical activity. Normally diminishing completely after 72 hours.

DOMS are caused by eccentric muscle contraction placing a higher load on your muscles than they're used to. What happens here is your muscles are adapting to a new situation, causing them to be prepared the next time it occurs.

This is why DOMS are the most intense when your muscles are introduced to a new training stimulus. If you do the same workout over and over, it's less likely that you experience DOMS. And then when you do a new type of exercise, you may feel like you're new to the gym the next morning again.

I decided that what the heck I'll gather of a list of some of the most persistent myths that I think need to go away, on the subject of DOMS.

Myth #1: "It's not a good workout unless you feel it the next day!"

Not true.

DOMS themselves have next to nothing to do with whether your exercise was effective, or not. Yes, there is a correlation there since you most likely experience DOMS when introduced to a new type of stimulus - which can be a good thing - but that in and of itself does not mean that you were necessarily doing anything useful. It's perfectly possible to have an excellent workout, and not feel it the next day at all.

Keeping count of your weights, reps and sets is still a much better indicator of your workout than the soreness the next day. If you did more and at a higher volume than the last time, it was good workout, regardless of whether or not you're crippled the next morning.

I've seen a lot of people get stressed out after a certain period of working out, since they are no longer getting DOMS the next day, feeling that they're doing something wrong, but it's most likely not the case. Your body has simply adapted to this new lifestyle.

Sure, it's a good thing to do new things and attempt to hit some of the muscles you might have missed, if you've been doing the same routine for an extended period of time.

Myth #2: Muscle damage is a sign of something being wrong.

This is the other side of the coin, and also not true.

In fact, if you're attempting to build muscle, muscle damage is the exact thing you want to achieve.

Contrary to seemingly popular belief, muscles don't grow as you exercise, but during the rest period after the exercise. More specifically during your sleep.

The mechanism behind muscle growth is that working out breaks the muscle, and the rebuilding process during your sleep builds them up slightly bigger and stronger than before, provided you feed them with the nutrients required for growth.

So, no, muscle damage is not a bad thing, and it's astounding to still run into this claim every now and again.

Myth #3: DOMS can be prevented by stretching.

Wrong again, unfortunately.

This study for instance has concluded that "The evidence from randomised studies suggests that muscle stretching, whether conducted before, after, or before and after exercise, does not produce clinically important reductions in delayed-onset muscle soreness in healthy adults."

In conclusion, DOMS are a part of working out, and always will be. They are not a measure of the quality of your workout, but can be used as a sign of you hitting muscles that you haven't hit recently, which can be taken as a good sign, but by itself means very little in regards to the quality of the workout. In experienced folks DOMS typially appear in situations where you've been doing compound exercises for a long time, and then do an isolated set that uses some of the smaller parts of your body that get ignored when doing compounds.

There's no reason to be afraid of them, either. But it's good to remember that soreness is not the samething as eeling hurt. If you feel hurt then you may have suffered an injury, and done something wrong, but you'll likely notice it anyway, since you don't feel an injury the next day, but rather the moment it happens. So there shouldn't be much confusion there.

Bodybuilding myths that annoy you? Leave a comment and vent.

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  ·  7 years ago (edited)

Hey everyone I wanted to add to the DOMs article.

I have been a trainer since 2009, ex collegiate soccer player, and have been coaching since 2003.

When looking at DOMs you have to step back and realize that you have made a major change in your routine daily activity. The body is highly regulated, whether you know it or not. So the first workout or the return to working out creates a massive calorie deficit. Simply put you burn more than you take in, and then you have the delay in the rebuilding of the tissue that takes 2-4 days to complete. (This all depends on calorie intake more than age, gender, or even fitness level!!!)

Throwing in a significant amount of work that the tissue is not used to will do a couple of things. You deplete glycogen and other energy stores used for routine activities and 2 you also tear the muscles fibers down.

(When you are training regularly the body is used to this and the fibers don't tear as much and your nutritional intake offsets the response the body provides when experiencing DOMS. You just don't realize how much you have adjusted physically and nutritionally over time to eliminate it.)

So to eliminate the possibility of DOMS
1 keep up on your workouts.

2 when you train hard for the first time in a long time or ever you need to have a significant amount of carbs, fats, protein, water, plant sugars, magnesium, creatine, iron, electrolytes, and more. This will help reduce DOMS, or if you hit all the nutrients needed it will eliminate it all together.

Stretching and icing icing without nutrition will provide little to know impact. Your body has gone catabolic which means it's eating itself. You need to go anabolic which means it's building. And to do that you simply have to have nutrition. Literally nothing else works.

Think about it...
How can you build a house with no material. That's what you are asking your body to do when you don't eat.

Good luck and hit me up on my page. I will be adding tons of content!!! image image image

That's so true. I see so many people try to get in shape by going to the gym, jogging on a treadmill and refusing to eat. They can't lose a pound. their body is clinging to what it has. They end up feeling weak and depressed and don't get why they even pay for the gym. I am a busy person so I don't do anything to burn carbs, then I work the area I want to- abs and butt. Eating whole foods and getting plenty of exercise is the way to go In my opinion. I eat whole fat whole grain and least ingredients possible. but I hear people obsess over every carb-while eating unhealthy and losing zero weight. I have had six kids in a row and am a size 4. people ask how I do it but they would rather eat light processed garbage and jog their energy away. It is mildly frustrating because I care about these people :)

I see DOMS as the bodys way of telling "You have been slacking off before", as I get most sore when I've had a pause from going to the gym.

One of my favourite bodybuilding myths is this "Fat transforming into muscles" thing.

Keep it up
And don't be lazy
Hard work and dedication!

I have got a lot of information from this post
It is absolutely fine that not everyone will be able to achieve your goals if you do not start better than small steps and if you try, success will be followed.
Once again the great post @Rashidminhas Upvoted

Applying butter liberally over your body can also offset DOMS, oh and turmeric something

lol.

  ·  7 years ago (edited)

Interesting! I'm not too happy to learn about the third myth... pity. I need to get back to exercising myself! (Kicking myself for stopping in the first place.)

I'm happy about the third one since I'm always lazy about stretching. :D

It's fucking hard to start again after stopping, since you need to start with weights that used be your warm up weights and it just brings your morale down, I know.

But if you've worked out in the past, your body quickly remembers and adapts accordingly, and you're back on the bike in no time.

I used to be lazy about stretching too... :P till I forced myself to complete a yoga session that I hated doing... but I felt so amazing at the end of it that I got hooked on to it... kundalini yoga by Ana Brett... so much so that I prefer doing that now to going to the gym.

Never done it, but I've heard a lot of great things about yoga, so I can believe that.

  ·  7 years ago (edited)

Oh, do check it out! Atleast once. But, you may need to ensure you don't have an audience first. :)

I really liked your article. DOM's can be prevented by taking a rest. That's the best way. Or drink juices like pomegranates, cherries, and blueberries, which contain antioxidants or caffeine which have been shown to help reduce inflammation and decrease recovery time. Or last option Call a Doc.

Kindly check my blog @rahul516. I post fitness stuff. Follow if you like it.

Good tips. Personally, I love feeling sore after a workout. Though it might not be true, it makes me feel like I'm accomplishing something.

Yes, there's definitely a positive psychological impact with DOMS.

Hello @schattenjaeger I've written an article about you check it out if you can thanks.

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Science hasn't been able to prove the cause of DOMS, or why some people suffer from it more than other.

The general theory I tell my clients is that it is a result of micro tears in the muscle fibers that results in inflammation.

These micro tears are more likely to occur when trying new exercises. Or exercises that have not been done for a while.

Different exercises recruit different muscle fibers which might not be use to the strain, thus leading to tears/inflammation. It is completely normal and natural.

From my experience DOMS is affected by ones genes as well. Some clients will never get it, regardless of how intense and new an exercise or workout routine is. While others will get them all the time no matter what.

I have found that supplementing l-glutamine (an amino acid) before and after exercise helps minimize the negative effects.

Well I've overdone it once and deep in my arm it keeps being sore! For over a year now... :(

Wow, really? That sounds serious. Any other symptoms?

Thanks, yes, chronic fatigue, not completly cured infections. I'm taking herbs for my adrenals, that's helping a lot. Wahls Paleo diet. Beef heart gives my great strength...

One of my favorite ways to help prevent doms is to stationary bike for 10 to 15 minutes after a heavy leg workout. Maybe it's placebo, but moving my joints through a larger range of motion helps me recover quicker from my squat workout.