Joe Furse
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« Reply #1 on: January 23, 2011, 11:57:37 pm » |
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My first impression is that if you are having to ice/heat treat consistently every day due to nagging injuries you might want to take a look at your training and make some tweaks. I don't think you should have to be icing every day. Looking at your blog, instead of running a long ways every other day, I'd maybe recommend cutting the daily mileage in half, but running every day. Those rest days every other day won't do any good if you are overtraining on the days you do run--it takes more than one day to recover from one day of "too much." I've learned that the hard way several times By running every day at a lower mileage per day you won't be putting your body through too much stress at one time and you'll avoid a lot of trouble while still getting the same mileage per week. Plus, it allows you to get in a much better groove physically and mentally if you just do it every day. Once your body gets used to running every day and you are feeling good, then you can start increasing the mileage at a comfortable rate.
In answer to your question of ice vs. heat: Both are good, but if I had to choose one or the other, I'd go with ice just about every time. Heat is a great supplement, but doesn't tend to be as effective on its own. Ideally, if you are going to use both you want to ice first, followed immediately by heat. My favorite method is to take an ice bath for 15 minutes and then drain the tub and switch it for water as hot as I can stand it (which isn't that hot, right after icing) for the same amount of time. For more localized treatment, ice friction therapy (rubbing a chunk of ice on the affected area for 3-5 minutes), followed by a heating pad might be the ticket. The idea is that you first constrict your blood vessels with the cold, and then when your muscles warm up, either naturally or by artificial heat, your blood vessels dilate, purging out all the damaged tissue and dead stuff, and bringing in nutrients to facilitate the rebuilding process. The blood vessels will not dilate nearly as much with heat therapy alone, so that is why ice is better. Heat alone can be a good pre-workout treatment.
Anyway, that's my suggestion. Take it for what it's worth. Good luck!
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