期刊论文详细信息
Extreme Physiology & Medicine
Cold applications for recovery in adolescent athletes: a systematic review and meta analysis
Marco Cardinale1  Andrew Murray2 
[1] Department of Computer Science and Institute of Sport Exercise and Health, University College London, London, UK;University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh, UK
关键词: Elite;    Athlete;    Adolescent;    Youth;    Cold;    Ice;    Recovery;   
Others  :  1231860
DOI  :  10.1186/s13728-015-0035-8
 received in 2015-04-16, accepted in 2015-09-21,  发布年份 2015
PDF
【 摘 要 】

Recovery and regeneration modalities have been developed empirically over the years to help and support training programmes aimed at maximizing athletic performance. Professional athletes undergo numerous training sessions, characterized by differing modalities of varying volumes and intensities, with the aim of physiological adaptation leading to improved performance. Scientific support to athletes focuses on improving the chances of a training programme producing the largest adaptive response. In competition it is mainly targeted at maximizing the chances of optimal performance and recovery when high performance levels are required repeatedly in quick succession (e.g. heats/finals). In recent years, a lot of emphasis has been put on recovery modalities. In particular, emphasis has been placed on the need to reduce the delayed onset of muscle soreness (DOMS) typically evident following training and competitive activities inducing a certain degree of muscle damage. One of the most used recovery modalities consists of cold-water immersion and/or ice/cold applications to muscles affected by DOMS. While the scientific literature has provided a rationale for such modalities to reduce pain in athletes and recreationally active adults, it is doubtful if this rationale is appropriate to aid training with adolescent athletes. In particular, since these methods have been suggested to potentially impair the muscle remodeling process leading to muscle hypertrophy. While this debate is still active in the literature, many coaches adopt such practices in youth populations, simply transferring what they see in elite sportspeople directly; without questioning the rationale, safety or effectiveness as well as the potential for such activity to reduce the adaptive potential of skeletal muscle remodeling in adolescent athletes. The aim of this review was to assess the current knowledge base on the use of ice/cold applications for recovery purposes in adolescent athletes in order to provide useful guidelines for sports scientists, medical practitioners, physiotherapists and coaches working with such populations as well as developing research questions for further research activities in this area. Based on the current evidence, it seems clear that evidence for acute benefits of such interventions are scarce and more work is needed to ascertain the physiological implications on a pre or peri-pubertal population.

【 授权许可】

   
2015 Murray and Cardinale.

【 预 览 】
附件列表
Files Size Format View
20151111032447565.pdf 1479KB PDF download
Fig.4. 29KB Image download
Fig.3. 49KB Image download
Fig.2. 34KB Image download
Fig.1. 38KB Image download
【 图 表 】

Fig.1.

Fig.2.

Fig.3.

Fig.4.

【 参考文献 】
  • [1]Viru A. Molecular cellular mechanisms of training effects. J Sport Med Phys Fit. 1994; 34:309-322.
  • [2]Mujika I. The influence of training characteristics and tapering on the adaptation in highly trained individuals: A review. Int J Spo Med. 1998; 19(7):439-446.
  • [3]Issurin VB. New horizons for the methodology and physiology of training periodization. Sport Med. 2010; 40:189-206.
  • [4]Matos N, Winsley RJ, Williams CA. Prevalence of nonfunctional overreaching/overtraining in young English athletes. Med Sci Sports Exerc. 2011; 43:1287-1294.
  • [5]Nosaka K, Newton M. Difference in the magnitude of muscle damage between maximal and submaximal eccentric loading. J Strength Cond Res. 2002; 16:202-208.
  • [6]Armstrong R. Initial events in exercise-induced muscular injury. Med Sci Sports Exerc. 1990; 22:429-435.
  • [7]Tidball JG. Inflammatory processes in muscle injury and repair. Am J Physiol Regul Integr Comp Physiol. 2005; 288:R345-R353.
  • [8]Sorichter S, Puschendorf B, Mair J. Skeletal muscle injury induced by eccentric muscle action: muscle proteins as markers of muscle fiber injury. Ex Imm Rev. 1999; 5:5-21.
  • [9]Nosaka K, Clarkson PM. Muscle damage following repeated bouts of high force eccentric exercise. Med Sci Sports Exerc. 1995; 27:1263-1269.
  • [10]Barnett A. Using recovery modalities between training sessions in elite athletes: does it help? Sport Med. 2006; 36:781-796.
  • [11]Vaile J, Halson S, Gill N, Dawson B. Effect of hydrotherapy on recovery from fatigue. Int J Sports Med. 2008; 29:539-544.
  • [12]Gill N, Beaven C, Cook C. Effectiveness of post-match recovery strategies in rugby players. Br J Sports Med. 2006; 40:260-263.
  • [13]Montgomery PG, Pyne D, Hopkins W, Dorman JC, Cook K, Minahan CL. The effect of recovery strategies on physical performance and cumulative fatigue in competitive basketball. J Sports Sci. 2008; 26:1135-1145.
  • [14]Duffield R, Edge J, Merrells R, Hawke E, Barnes M, Simcock D, Gill N. The effects of compression garments on intermittent exercise performance and recovery on consecutive days. Int J Sports Physiol Perform. 2008; 3:454-468.
  • [15]Bieuzen F, Bleakley C, Costello J. Contrast water therapy and exercise induced muscle damage: a systematic review and meta-analysis. PLoS One. 2013; 8:e62356.
  • [16]Poppendieck W, Faude O, Wegmann M, Meyer T. Cooling and performance recovery of trained athletes: a meta-analytical review. Int J Sports Physiol Perform. 2013; 8:227-242.
  • [17]Bleakley C, Bieuzen F, Davison GW, Costello JT. Whole-body cryotherapy: empirical evidence and theoretical perspectives. Open Access J Sport Med. 2014; 5:25-36.
  • [18]White GE, Wells GD. Cold-water immersion and other forms of cryotherapy: physiological changes potentially affecting recovery from high-intensity exercise. Extrem Physiol Med. 2013; 2:26.
  • [19]Versey NG, Halson S, Dawson BT. Water immersion recovery for athletes: effect on exercise performance and practical recommendations. Sport Med. 2013; 43:1101-1130.
  • [20]Cochrane DJ. Alternating hot and cold water immersion for athlete recovery: a review. Phys Ther Sport. 2004; 5(1):26-32.
  • [21]Leeder J, Gissane C, van Someren K, Gregson W, Howatson G. Cold water immersion and recovery from strenuous exercise: a meta-analysis. Br J Sports Med. 2012; 46:233-240.
  • [22]Clarkson P, Sayers SP. Etiology of exercise-induced muscle damage. Can J Appl Physiol. 1999; 24:234-248.
  • [23]Howatson G, van Someren K. The Prevention and treatment of exercise-induced muscle damage. Sport Med. 2008; 38:483-503.
  • [24]Jones D, Newham DJ, Round JM, Tolfree SE. Experimental human muscle damage: morphological changes in relation to other indices of damage. J Physiol. 1986; 375:435-448.
  • [25]Newham DJ, Mills KR, Quigley BM, Edwards RH. Pain and fatigue after concentric and eccentric muscle contractions. Clin Sci. 1983; 64:55-62.
  • [26]Byrnes WC, Clarkson P, White JS, Hsieh SS, Frykman PN, Maughan R. Delayed onset muscle soreness following repeated bouts of downhill running. J Appl Physiol. 1985; 59:710-715.
  • [27]Davies C, Barnes C. Negative (eccentric) work. I. Effects of repeated exercise. Ergonomics. 1972; 15:3-14.
  • [28]Newham DJ, Jones D, Clarkson P. Repeated high-force eccentric exercise: effects on muscle pain and damage. J Appl Physiol. 1987; 63:1381-1386.
  • [29]McHugh MP. Recent advances in the understanding of the repeated bout effect: the protective effect against muscle damage from a single bout of eccentric exercise. Scand J Med Sci Sports. 2003; 13:88-97.
  • [30]Vanderthommen M, Soltani K. Does neuromuscular electrical stimulation influence muscle recovery after maximal isokinetic exercise ? Isokinet Exerc. 2007; 15:143-149.
  • [31]Nosaka K, Newton M. Repeated eccentric exercise bouts do not exacerbate muscle damage and repair. J Strength Cond Res. 2002; 16:117-122.
  • [32]Malm C. Exercise-induced muscle damage and inflammation: Fact or fiction? Acta Physiol Scand. 2001; 171:233-239.
  • [33]Clarkson P, Hubal MJ. Exercise-induced muscle damage in humans. Am J Phys Med Rehabil. 2002; 81(11 Suppl):S52-S69.
  • [34]Smith LL, Fulmer MG, Holbert D, McCammon MR, Houmard JA, Frazer DD, Nsien E, McCammon RG. The impact of a repeated bout of eccentric exercise on muscular strength, muscle soreness and creatine kinase. Br J Sports Med. 1994; 28:267-271.
  • [35]Ebbeling CB, Clarkson P. Exercise-induced muscle damage and adaptation. Sport Med. 1989; 7:207-234.
  • [36]Clarkson P, Tremblay I. Exercise-induced muscle damage, repair, and adaptation in humans. J Appl Physiol. 1988; 65:1-6.
  • [37]Gulick DT, Kimura IF. Delayed onset muscle soreness: what is it and how do we treat it? J Sport Rehabil. 1996; 5:234-243.
  • [38]Meeusen R, Lievens P. The use of cryotherapy in sports injuries. Sport Med. 1986; 3:398-414.
  • [39]Swenson C, Swärd L, Karlsson J. Cryotherapy in sports medicine. Scand J Med Sci Sports. 1996; 6:193-200.
  • [40]Merrick MA, Knight KL, Ingersoll CD, Potteiger JA. The effects of ice and compression wraps on intramuscular temperatures at various depths. J Athl Train. 1993; 28:236-245.
  • [41]Paddon-Jones DJ, Quigley BM. Effect of cryotherapy on muscle soreness and strength following eccentric exercise. Int J Sports Med. 1997; 18:588-593.
  • [42]Eston R, Peters D. Effects of cold water immersion on the symptoms of exercise-induced muscle damage. J Sports Sci. 1999; 17:231-238.
  • [43]Yanagisawa O, Niitsu M, Takahashi H, Goto K, Itai Y. Evaluations of cooling exercised muscle with MR imaging and 31P MR spectroscopy. Med Sci Sports Exerc. 2003; 35:1517-1523.
  • [44]Sellwood KL, Brukner P, Williams D, Nicol A, Hinman R. Ice-water immersion and delayed-onset muscle soreness: a randomised controlled trial. Br J Sports Med. 2007; 41:392-397.
  • [45]Falk B, Dotan R. Child-adult differences in the recovery from high-intensity exercise. Exerc Sport Sci Rev. 2006; 34:107-112.
  • [46]Marginson V, Rowlands AV, Gleeson NP, Eston RG. Comparison of the symptoms of exercise-induced muscle damage after an initial and repeated bout of plyometric exercise in men and boys. J Appl Physiol. 2005; 99:1174-1181.
  • [47]Marginson V, Eston R. The relationship between torque and joint angle during knee extension in boys and men. J Sports Sci. 2001; 19:875-880.
  • [48]Marginson V, Eston R. Symptoms of exercise-induced muscle damage in boys and men following two bouts of eighty plyometric jumps. J Physiol. 2002; 539:75.
  • [49]Eston R, Byrne C, Twist C. Muscle function after exercise-induced muscle damage: considerations for athletic performance in children and adults. J Exerc Sci Fit. 2003; 1:85-96.
  • [50]Chen TC, Chen HL, Liu YC, Nosaka K. Eccentric exercise-induced muscle damage of pre-adolescent and adolescent boys in comparison to young men. Eur J Appl Physiol. 2014; 114:1183-1195.
  • [51]Soares J, Mota P, Duarte J, Appell H. Children are less susceptible to exercise-induced muscle damage than adults: a preliminary investigation. Pediatr Exerc Sci. 1996; 8(4):361-367.
  • [52]Duarte JA, Magalhães JF, Monteiro L, Almeida-Dias A, Soares JM, Appell HJ. Exercise-induced signs of muscle overuse in children. Int J Sports Med. 1999; 20:103-108.
  • [53]Bleakley C, Davison GW. What is the biochemical and physiological rationale for using cold-water immersion in sports recovery? A systematic review. Br J Sports Med. 2010; 44:179-187.
  • [54]Tee JC, Bosch AN, Lambert MI. Metabolic consequences of exercise-induced muscle damage. Sports Med. 2007; 37:827-836.
  • [55]Proske U, Morgan DL. Muscle damage from eccentric exercise: Mechanism, mechanical signs, adaptation and clinical applications. J Physiol. 2001; 537:333-345.
  • [56]Vollaard NBJ, Shearman JP, Cooper CE. Exercise-induced oxidative stress:myths, realities and physiological relevance. Sports Med. 2005; 35:1045-1062.
  • [57]Tong TK, Lin H, Lippi G, Nie J, Tian Y. Serum oxidant and antioxidant status in adolescents undergoing professional endurance sports training. Oxid Med Cell Longev. 2012; 2012:741239.
  • [58]Kabasakalis A, Tsalis G, Zafrana E, Loupos D, Mougios V. Effects of endurance and high-intensity swimming exercise on the redox status of adolescent male and female swimmers. J Sports Sci. 2014; 32:747-756.
  • [59]MacIntyre DL, Reid WD, McKenzie DC. Delayed muscle soreness The inflammatory response to muscle injury and its clinical implications. Sport Med. 1995; 20:24-40.
  • [60]Pedersen B, Toft AD. Effects of exercise on lymphocytes and cytokines. Br J Sports Med. 2000; 34:246-251.
  • [61]Smith LL. Acute inflammation: the underlying mechanism in delayed onset muscle soreness? Med Sci Sports Exerc. 1991; 23:542-551.
  • [62]Fielding RA, Manfredi TJ, Ding W, Fiatarone MA, Evans WJ, Cannon JG. Acute phase response in exercise. III. Neutrophil and IL-1 beta accumulation in skeletal muscle. Am J Physiol. 1993; 265:R166-R172.
  • [63]Paulsen G, Mikkelsen UR, Raastad T, Peake JM. Leucocytes, cytokines and satellite cells: What role do they play in muscle damage and regeneration following eccentric exercise? Exerc Immunol Rev. 2012; 18:42-97.
  • [64]Pedersen B. Exercise and cytokines. Immunol Cell Biol. 2000; 78:532-535.
  • [65]Smith LL, Anwar A, Fragen M, Rananto C, Johnson R, Holbert D. Cytokines and cell adhesion molecules associated with high-intensity eccentric exercise. Eur J Appl Physiol. 2000; 82:61-67.
  • [66]Hellsten Y, Frandsen U, Orthenblad N, Sjødin B, Richter EA. Xanthine oxidase in human skeletal muscle following eccentric exercise: a role in inflammation. J Physiol. 1997; 498(1):239-248.
  • [67]Ostrowski K, Rohde T, Zacho M, Asp S, Pedersen B. Evidence that interleukin-6 is produced in human skeletal muscle during prolonged running. J Physiol. 1998; 508:949-953.
  • [68]Croisier JL, Camus G, Venneman I, Deby-Dupont G, Juchmès-Ferir A, Lamy M, Crielaard JM, Deby C, Duchateau J. Effects of training on exercise-induced muscle damage and interleukin 6 production. Muscle Nerve. 1999; 22:208-212.
  • [69]Northoff H, Berg A. Immunologic mediators as parameters of the reaction to strenuous exercise. Int J Sports Med. 1991; 12 Suppl 1:S9-S15.
  • [70]Reihmane D, Dela F. Interleukin-6: Possible biological roles during exercise. Eur J Sport Sci. 2014; 14(3):37-41.
  • [71]Ostrowski K, Hermann C, Bangash A, Schjerling P, Nielsen JN, Pedersen B. A trauma-like elevation of plasma cytokines in humans in response to treadmill running. J Physiol. 1998; 513:889-894.
  • [72]Croft L, Bartlett JD, MacLaren DPM, Reilly T, Evans L, Mattey DL, Nixon NB, Drust B, Morton J. High-intensity interval training attenuates the exercise-induced increase in plasma IL-6 in response to acute exercise. Appl Physiol Nutr Metab. 2009; 34:1098-1107.
  • [73]Mäestu J, Jürimäe J, Purge P, Rämson R, Jürimäe T. Performance improvement is associated with higher postexercise responses in interleukin-6 and tumor necrosis factor α concentrations. J Sports Med Phys Fitness. 2010; 50:524-529.
  • [74]Eliakim A, Portal S, Zadik Z, Rabinowitz J, Adler-Portal D, Cooper DM, Zaldivar F, Nemet D. The effect of a volleyball practice on anabolic hormones and inflammatory markers in elite male and female adolescent players. J Strength Cond Res. 2009; 23:1553-1559.
  • [75]Timmons BW, Tarnopolsky MA, Snider DP, Bar-Or O. Immunological changes in response to exercise: Influence of age, puberty, and gender. Med Sci Sports Exerc. 2006; 38:293-304.
  • [76]Nieman DC, Kernodle MW, Henson DA, Sonnenfeld G, Morton DS. The acute response of the immune system to tennis drills in adolescent athletes. Res Q Exerc Sport. 2000; 71:403-408.
  • [77]Nemet D, Mills PJ, Cooper DM. Effect of intense wrestling exercise on leucocytes and adhesion molecules in adolescent boys. Br J Sports Med. 2004; 38:154-158.
  • [78]Nemet D, Pontello AM, Rose-Gottron C, Cooper DM. Cytokines and growth factors during and after a wrestling season in adolescent boys. Med Sci Sports Exerc. 2004; 36:794-800.
  • [79]Fournier M, Ricci J. Skeletal muscle adaptation in adolescent boys: sprint and endurance training and detraining. Med Sci Sports Exerc. 1981; 14(6):453-456.
  • [80]Eriksson BO, Gollnick PD, Saltin B. Muscle metabolism and enzyme activities after training in boys 11–13 years old. Acta Physiol Scand. 1973; 87:485-497.
  • [81]Eriksson BO. Physical training, oxygen supply and muscle metabolism in 11–13-year old boys. Acta Physiol Scand Suppl. 1972; 384:1-48.
  • [82]Gorianovas G, Skurvydas A, Streckis V, Brazaitis M, Kamandulis S, McHugh MP. Repeated bout effect was more expressed in young adult males than in elderly males and boys. Biomed Res Int. 2013; 2013:1-10.
  • [83]MacKelvie KJ, Khan KM, McKay HA. Is there a critical period for bone response to weight-bearing exercise in children and adolescents? a systematic review. Br J Sports Med. 2002; 36(February):250-257.
  • [84]Cooper DM, Nemet D, Galassetti P. Exercise, stress, and inflammation in the growing child: from the bench to the playground. Curr Opin Pediatr. 2004; 16:286-292.
  • [85]Koch A, Pereira R, Machado M. The creatine kinase response to resistance exercise. J Musculoskelet Neuronal Interact. 2014; 14:68-77.
  • [86]Webber L, Byrnes WWC, Rowland TTW, Foster V. Serum creatine kinase activity and delayed onset muscle soreness in prepubescent children: a preliminary study. Pediatr Exerc Sci. 1989; 1:351-359.
  • [87]Baird MF, Graham SM, Baker JS, Bickerstaff GF: Creatine-kinase- and exercise-related muscle damage implications for muscle performance and recovery. J Nutr Metab. 2012;2012. doi:10.1155/2012/960363.
  • [88]Fournier S, Taffé P, Radovanovic D, Von Elm E, Morawiec B, Stauffer J-C, Erne P, Beggah A, Monney P, Pascale P, Iglesias J-F, Eeckhout E, Muller O. Myocardial Infarct size and mortality depend on the time of day—a large multicenter study. PLoS One. 2015; 10:e0119157.
  • [89]Kopp J, Loos B, Spilker G, Horch RE. Correlation between serum creatinine kinase levels and extent of muscle damage in electrical burns. Burns. 2004; 30:680-683.
  • [90]Kaczor JJ, Ziolkowski W, Popinigis J, Tarnopolsky MA. Anaerobic and aerobic enzyme activities in human skeletal muscle from children and adults. Pediatr Res. 2005; 57:331-335.
  • [91]Gollnick PD, Armstrong R, Saubert CW, Piehl K, Saltin B. Enzyme activity and fiber composition in skeletal muscle of untrained and trained men. J Appl Physiol. 1972; 33:312-319.
  • [92]Lexell J, Sjöström M, Nordlund AS, Taylor CC. Growth and development of human muscle: a quantitative morphological study of whole vastus lateralis from childhood to adult age. Muscle Nerve. 1992; 15:404-409.
  • [93]Bell RD, MacDougall JD, Billeter R, Howald H. Muscle fiber types and morphometric analysis of skeletal msucle in six-year-old children. Med Sci Sports Exerc. 1980; 12:28-31.
  • [94]Bouchard C, Lesage R, Lortie G, Simoneau JA, Hamel P, Boulay MR, Pérusse L, Thériault G, Leblanc C. Aerobic performance in brothers, dizygotic and monozygotic twins. Med Sci Sports Exerc. 1986; 18:639-646.
  • [95]McHugh MP, Pasiakos S. The role of exercising muscle length in the protective adaptation to a single bout of eccentric exercise. Eur J Appl Physiol. 2004; 93:286-293.
  • [96]McHugh MP, Tetro DT. Changes in the relationship between joint angle and torque production associated with the repeated bout effect. J Sports Sci. 2003; 21:927-932.
  • [97]Blascovich J, Mendes WB. Social psychophysiology and embodiment. Social Psychology, In Handbook of; 2010.
  • [98]Blascovich J, Tomaka J. The biopsychosocial model of arousal regulation. Adv Exp Soc Psychol. 1996; 28:1-51.
  • [99]Leknes S, Berna C, Lee MC, Snyder GD, Biele G, Tracey I. The importance of context: When relative relief renders pain pleasant. Pain. 2013; 154:402-410.
  • [100]Bastian B, Jetten J, Fasoli F. Cleansing the soul by hurting the flesh: the guilt-reducing effect of pain. Psychol Sci. 2011; 22:334-335.
  • [101]Low J, Reed A: Electrotherapy Explained: Principles and Practice. 2000.
  • [102]Tipton MJ. The concept of an “Integrated Survival System” for protection against the responses associated with immersion in cold water. J R Nav Med Serv. 1993; 79:11-14.
  • [103]Morton J, Kayani AC, McArdle A, Drust B. The Exercise-Induced stress response of skeletal muscle, with specific emphasis on humans. Sports Med. 2009; 39:643-662.
  • [104]Egan B, Zierath JR. Exercise metabolism and the molecular regulation of skeletal muscle adaptation. Cell Metab. 2013; 17:162-184.
  • [105]Brentano MA, Martins Kruel LF. A review on strength exercise-induced muscle damage: applications, adaptation mechanisms and limitations. J Sports Med Phys Fitness. 2011; 51:1-10.
  • [106]Ferraro E, Giammarioli AM, Chiandotto S, Spoletini I, Rosano G. Exercise-induced skeletal muscle remodeling and metabolic adaptation: redox signaling and role of autophagy. Antioxid Redox Signal. 2014; 00:1-23.
  • [107]Bassel-Duby R, Olson EN. Signaling pathways in skeletal muscle remodeling. Annu Rev Biochem. 2006; 75:19-37.
  • [108]Srámek P, Simecková M, Janský L, Savlíková J, Vybíral S. Human physiological responses to immersion into water of different temperatures. Eur J Appl Physiol. 2000; 81:436-442.
  • [109]Bonde-Petersen F, Schultz-Pedersen L, Dragsted N. Peripheral and central blood flow in man during cold, thermoneutral, and hot water immersion. Aviat Sp Env Med. 1992; 63:346-350.
  • [110]Park KS, Choi JK, Park YS. Cardiovascular regulation during water immersion. Appl Hum Sci. 1999; 18:233-241.
  • [111]Wilcock IM, Cronin J, Hing WA. Physiological response to water immersion: a method for sport recovery? Sports Med. 2006; 36:747-765.
  • [112]Knight KL, Londeree BR. Comparison of blood flow in the ankle of uninjured subjects during therapeutic applications of heat, cold, and exercise. Med Sci Sports Exerc. 1980; 12:76-80.
  • [113]DeGroot DW, Gallimore RP, Thompson SM, Kenefick RW. Extremity cooling for heat stress mitigation in military and occupational settings. J Therm Biol. 2013; 38:305-310.
  • [114]Gregson W, Black MA, Jones H, Milson J, Morton J, Dawson BT, Atkinson G, Green DJ. Influence of cold water immersion on limb and cutaneous blood flow at rest. Am J Sports Med. 2011; 39:1316-1323.
  • [115]Foldes FF, Kuze S, Vizi ES, Deery A. The influence of temperatute on neuromuscular performance. J Neural Transm. 1978; 43:27-45.
  • [116]Ghaderi F, Banakar S, Rostami S. Effect of pre-cooling injection site on pain perception in pediatric dentistry: “a randomized clinical trial”. Dent Res J (Isfahan). 2013; 10:790-794.
  • [117]Algafly AA, George KP. The effect of cryotherapy on nerve conduction velocity, pain threshold and pain tolerance. Br J Sports Med. 2007; 41:365-369.
  • [118]Ernst E, Fialka V. Ice freezes pain? A review of the clinical effectiveness of analgesic cold therapy. J Pain Symptom Manage. 1994; 9:56-59.
  • [119]Abramson DI, Chu LS, Tuck S, Lee SW, Richardson G, Levin M. Effect of tissue temperatures and blood flow on motor nerve conduction velocity. JAMA. 1966; 198:1082-1088.
  • [120]Rutkove SB. Effects of temperature on neuromuscular electrophysiology. Muscle Nerve. 2001; 24:867-882.
  • [121]Janwantanakul P. The effect of quantity of ice and size of contact area on ice pack/skin interface temperature. Physiotherapy. 2009; 95:120-125.
  • [122]Glasgow PD, Ferris R, Bleakley C. Cold water immersion in the management of delayed-onset muscle soreness: Is dose important? A randomised controlled trial. Phys Ther Sport. 2014; 15(4):228-233.
  • [123]Peiffer JJ, Abbiss C, Watson G, Nosaka K, Laursen P. Effect of cold-water immersion duration on body temperature and muscle function. J Sports Sci. 2009; 27:987-993.
  • [124]Otte JW, Merrick MA, Ingersoll CD, Cordova ML. Subcutaneous adipose tissue thickness alters cooling time during cryotherapy. Arch Phys Med Rehabil. 2002; 83:1501-1505.
  • [125]Myrer JW, Myrer KA, Measom GJ, Fellingham GW, Evers SL. Muscle temperature is affected by overlying adipose when cryotherapy is administered. J Athl Train. 2001; 36:32-36.
  • [126]Yanagisawa O, Homma T, Okuwaki T, Shimao D, Takahashi H. Effects of cooling on human skin and skeletal muscle. Eur J Appl Physiol. 2007; 100:737-745.
  • [127]Enwemeka CS, Allen C, Avila P, Bina J, Konrade J, Munns S. Soft tissue thermodynamics before, during, and after cold pack therapy. Med Sci Sports Exerc. 2002; 34:45-50.
  • [128]Rupp KA, Selkow NM, Parente WR, Ingersoll CD, Weltman AL, Saliba SA. The effect of cold water immersion on 48-hour performance testing in collegiate soccer players. J Strength Cond Res. 2012; 26:2043-2050.
  • [129]Gregson W, Allan R, Holden S, Phibbs P, Doran D, Campbell I, Waldron S, Joo CH, Morton J. Postexercise cold-water immersion does not attenuate muscle glycogen resynthesis. Med Sci Sports Exerc. 2013; 45:1174-1181.
  • [130]Yanagisawa O, Niitsu M, Yoshioka H, Goto K, Kudo H, Itai Y. The use of magnetic resonance imaging to evaluate the effects of cooling on skeletal muscle after strenuous exercise. Eur J Appl Physiol. 2003; 89:53-62.
  • [131]Shepherd JT, Rusch NJ, Vanhoutte PM. Effect of cold on the blood vessel wall. Gen Pharmacol. 1983; 14:61-64.
  • [132]Vanhatalo A, Fulford J, DiMenna FJ, Jones AM. Influence of hyperoxia on muscle metabolic responses and the power-duration relationship during severe-intensity exercise in humans: a 31P magnetic resonance spectroscopy study. Exp Physiol. 2010; 95:528-540.
  • [133]Fleischman A, Makimura H, Stanley TL, McCarthy M, Kron M, Sun N, Chuzi S, Hrovat MI, Systrom DM, Grinspoon SK. Skeletal muscle phosphocreatine recovery after submaximal exercise in children and young and middle-aged adults. J Clin Endocrinol Metab. 2010; 95:E69-E74.
  • [134]Beedie CJ, Foad AJ. The placebo effect in sports performance: a brief review. Sports Med. 2009; 39:313-329.
  • [135]Benedetti F, Pollo A, Colloca L. Opioid-mediated placebo responses boost pain endurance and physical performance: is it doping in sport competitions? J Neurosci. 2007; 27:11934-11939.
  • [136]Broatch JR, Petersen A, Bishop DJ. Postexercise Cold-Water Immersion Benefits Are Not Greater than the Placebo Effect. Med Sci Sports Exerc. 2014; 46(11):2139-2147.
  • [137]Al Haddad H, Laursen PB, Chollet D, Lemaitre F, Ahmaidi S, Buchheit M. Effect of cold or thermoneutral water immersion on post-exercise heart rate recovery and heart rate variability indices. Auton Neurosci Basic Clin. 2010; 156:111-116.
  • [138]Al Haddad H, Parouty J, Buchheit M. Effect of daily cold water immersion on heart rate variability and subjective ratings of well-being in highly trained swimmers. Int J Sports Physiol Perform. 2012; 7:33-38.
  • [139]Tipton MJ, Eglin CM, Golden FSC. Habituation of the initial responses to cold water immersion in humans: a central or peripheral mechanism? J Physiol. 1998; 512:621-628.
  • [140]Parouty J, AlHaddad H, Quod M, Leprêtre PM, Ahmaidi S, Buchheit M. Effect of cold water immersion on 100-m sprint performance in well-trained swimmers. Eur J Appl Physiol. 2010; 109:483-490.
  • [141]Buchheit M, Peiffer JJ, Abbiss CR, Laursen PB. Effect of cold water immersion on postexercise parasympathetic reactivation. Am J Physiol Heart Circ Physiol. 2009; 296:H421-H427.
  • [142]De Morton NA. The PEDro scale is a valid measure of the methodological quality of clinical trials: a demographic study. Aust J Physiother. 2009; 55:129-133.
  • [143]Cohen J. A power primer. Psychol Bull. 1992; 112:155-159.
  • [144]Buchheit M, Horobeanu C, Mendez-Villanueva A, Simpson B, Bourdon P. Effects of age and spa treatment on match running performance over two consecutive games in highly trained young soccer players. J Sports Sci. 2011; 29:591-598.
  • [145]Hamlin MJ. The effect of contrast temperature water therapy on repeated sprint performance. J Sci Med Sport. 2007; 10:398-402.
  • [146]Cross K, Wilson R, Perrin D. Functional performance following an ice immersion to the lower extremity. J Athl Train. 1996; 31(2):113-116.
  • [147]Duffield R. The use of mixed-method, part-body pre-cooling procedures for team-sport athletes training in the heat. J Strength Cond Res. 2009; 23(9):2524-2532.
  • [148]Patterson SM, Udermann BE, Doberstein ST, Reineke DM. The effects of cold whirlpool on power, speed, agility, and range of motion. J Sports Sci Med. 2008; 7:387-394.
  • [149]Higgins T, Cameron M, Climstein M: Evaluation of passive recovery, cold water immersion, and contrast baths for recovery, as measured by game performances markers, between two simulated games of rugby union. J Strength Cond Res. 2012. doi:10.1519/JSC.0b013e31825c32b9.
  • [150]Higgins T. A random control trial of contrast baths and ice baths for recovery during competition in U/20 rugby union. J Strength Cond Res. 2011; 25(4):1046-1051.
  • [151]De Nardi M, La Torre A, Barassi A, Ricci C, Banfi G. Effects of cold-water immersion and contrast-water therapy after training in young soccer players. J Sport Med Phys Fit. 2011; 52(4):609-615.
  • [152]Higgins T. Evaluation of hydrotherapy, using passive tests and power tests, for recovery across a cyclic week of competitive rugby union. J Strength Cond Res. 2013; 27(4):954-965.
  • [153]Higgins T. Acute response to hydrotherapy after a simulated game of rugby. J Strength Cond Res. 2013; 27:2851-2860.
  • [154]Jakeman JR, Macrae R, Eston R. A single 10-min bout of cold-water immersion therapy after strenuous plyometric exercise has no beneficial effect on recovery from the symptoms of exercise-induced muscle damage. Ergonomics. 2009; 52:456-460.
  • [155]King M, Duffield R. The effects of recovery interventions on consecutive days of intermittent sprint exercise. J Strength Cond Res. 2009; 23:1795-1802.
  • [156]Rowsell GJ, Coutts AJ, Reaburn P, Hill-Haas S. Effect of post-match cold-water immersion on subsequent match running performance in junior soccer players during tournament play. J Sports Sci. 2011; 29:1-6.
  • [157]Rowsell GJ, Coutts AJ, Reaburn P, Hill-Haas S. Effects of cold-water immersion on physical performance between successive matches in high-performance junior male soccer players. J Sports Sci. 2009; 27:565-573.
  • [158]Ascensão A, Leite M, Rebelo AN, Magalhäes S, Magalhäes J. Effects of cold water immersion on the recovery of physical performance and muscle damage following a one-off soccer match. J Sports Sci. 2011; 29:217-225.
  • [159]Sayers MG, Calder AM, Sanders JG. Effect of whole-body contrast-water therapy on recovery from intense exercise of short duration. Eur J Sport Sci. 2011; 11:293-302.
  • [160]Kinugasa T, Kilding AE. A comparison of post-match recovery strategies in youth soccer players. J Strength Cond Res. 2009; 23:1402-1407.
  • [161]Higgins T, Climstein M, Cameron M. Evaluation of hydrotherapy, using passive tests and power tests, for recovery across a cyclic week of competitive rugby union. J Strength Cond Res. 2012; 27(4):954-965.
  • [162]Roberts LA, Nosaka K, Coombes JS, Peake JM. Cold water immersion enhances recovery of submaximal muscle function following resistance exercise. Am J Physiol Regul Integr Comp Physiol. 2014; 307(8):R998-R1006.
  • [163]Yamane M, Ohnishi N, Matsumoto T. Does regular post-exercise cold application attenuate trained muscle adaptation? Int J Sports Med. 2015; 36:647-653.
  • [164]Yamane M, Teruya H, Nakano M, Ogai R, Ohnishi N, Kosaka M. Post-exercise leg and forearm flexor muscle cooling in humans attenuates endurance and resistance training effects on muscle performance and on circulatory adaptation. Eur J Appl Physiol. 2006; 96:572-580.
  • [165]Halson SL, Bartram J, West N, Stephens J, Argus CK, Driller MW, Sargent C, Lastella M, Hopkins WG, Martin DT. Does Hydrotherapy Help or Hinder Adaptation to Training in Competitive Cyclists? Med Sci Sports Exerc. 2014; 46(8):1631-1639.
  • [166]Urso M. Anti-inflammatory interventions and skeletal muscle injury: benefit or detriment? J Appl Physiol. 2013; 2013:920-928.
  • [167]Al-Nakhli HH, Petrofsky JS, Laymon MS, Berk LS: The use of thermal infra-red imaging to detect delayed onset muscle soreness. J Vis Exp. 2012:59. doi:10.3791/3551.
  文献评价指标  
  下载次数:6次 浏览次数:33次