Should You Use Cold-Water Immersion Therapy After Exercise?
If you train hard, you have undoubtedly experienced muscle soreness, stiffness, and fatigue for a few days after your workout. Sadly, delayed onset muscle soreness is no fun, especially after a brutal leg day!
We’ve all seen athletes bathing in ice baths after a hard training session. While this approach intuitively makes sense, as ice reduces swelling, pain, and inflammation, the question is, does cold-water immersion therapy improve your adaptation to exercise?
Cold-water Immersion therapy: a brief overview
One approach many athletes use to enhance their recovery is coldwater immersion therapy. Coldwater immersion therapy involves placing yourself in an ice bath (water temperature between 10-15oC) for about fifteen minutes immediately after your workout.
The idea is that cold water reduces inflammation, decreases DOMS, and thereby improves muscle recovery after exercise (1).
The effects of Cold Water Therapy on Strength and Endurance Training
What the Researchers Did
To assess the impact of cold-water immersion therapy on adaptation to exercise, Dr. Malta and Colleagues analyzed eight clinical trials that tested the effect of long-term cold-water immersion therapy on adaptations to strength and endurance training (2).
Adaptations to Strength Training
By far, the most important finding from Malta et al. is that cold immersion therapy has a significantly negative impact on all aspects of strength training (2).
Briefly, cold-water immersion significantly reduced the following strength parameters (2):
- One-repetition maximum
- Isometric strength
- Strength-endurance
- Explosive power
Thus, cold water immersion therapy reduces every aspect of strength and power performance when regularly incorporated within strength and power training programs (2).
Adaptations to Endurance Training
Fortunately, there’s slightly better news for endurance athletes. Cold-water immersion therapy had no effect on:
- time-trial performance
- average time-trial power
- aerobic power
Thus, cold-water immersion therapy neither enhances nor impedes adaptation to endurance training.
Take-Home Message
Cold-water immersion negatively impacts strength and power training and has no beneficial effect on endurance training. Therefore, I strongly recommend against including cold-water immersion therapy in your strength training program.
However, if you are using cold-water immersion for other health reasons, you should keep your cold-water immersion as far away as possible from your strength training.
References and Further Reading
1. A. F. Machado et al., Can Water Temperature and Immersion Time Influence the Effect of Cold Water Immersion on Muscle Soreness? A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis. Sports Med 46, 503-514 (2016).
2. E. S. Malta, Y. M. Dutra, J. R. Broatch, D. J. Bishop, A. M. Zagatto, The Effects of Regular Cold-Water Immersion Use on Training-Induced Changes in Strength and Endurance Performance: A Systematic Review with Meta-Analysis. Sports Med 51, 161-174 (2021).
Acknowledgments
Images created by Ville Heikkinen and mihtiander
Disclaimer
The material displayed on this website is provided without any guarantees, conditions or warranties as to its accuracy.
Information written and expressed on this website is for education purposes and interest only. It is not intended to replace advice from your medical or healthcare professional.
You are encouraged to make your own health care choices based on your own research and in conjunction with your qualified practitioner.
The information provided on this website is not intended to provide a diagnosis, treatment or cure for any diseases. You should seek medical attention before undertaking any diet, exercise, other health program or other procedure described on this website.
To the fullest extent permitted by law we hereby expressly exclude all warranties and other terms which might otherwise be implied by statute, common law or the law of equity and must not be liable for any damages whatsoever, including but without limitation to any direct, indirect, special, consequential, punitive or incidental damages, or damages for loss of use, profits, data or other intangibles, damage to goodwill or reputation, injury or death, or the cost of procurement of substitute goods and services, arising out of or related to the use, inability to use, performance or failures of this website or any linked sites and any materials or information posted on those sites, irrespective of whether such damages were foreseeable or arise in contract, tort, equity, restitution, by statute, at common law or otherwise.
Ten Minutes is All You Need
Research has shown that ten minutes of moderate-to-vigorous exercise performed each day is enough to significantly reduce your risk of early death.
The Way of the Weekend Warrior
The way of the weekend warrior is one path to health that also leaves plenty of room in your life for the pursuit of other activities that you find important and meaningful.