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Using Ice vs. Heat to Treat Injuries

Mindlesswork

Mindlesswork

Crusty Poo Butt
Sep 21, 2010
1,395
33
It is inflamed, but heat relieves pain, so its recommended for that reason ONLY. Ice does the 'work'.

Oh so ice first then later put on heat for relieving pain?

As for moist heat, can hot towels be used?
 
fixxer

fixxer

MuscleHead
Dec 15, 2010
1,005
172
20 minutes is the ONLY way ice works bro. After 15 min vasodilation starts, that's why.

I'm confused, you're saying at the 20 minute mark of icing your veins dilate? Is that a typo?


Also, I've never thought of this, but what's the harm in using a heat rub while you workout on the muscle you are working out? Increase blood flow and keep warm/loose both seem like excellent things to me.
 
jdjack

jdjack

MuscleHead
Sep 22, 2010
568
33
Heat increases inflammation (more 'air' in the balloon), but dulls the pain. When it cools to normal the 'air' in the area, but no healing. Whereas, cold dilates (after 20 min) the blood vessels allowing more bloodflow in the injured area, allowing it to heal and the body to heal faster.

This is textbook physiology. I can provide sources if you'd like or you can read Guyton's Textbook of Physiology if you'd like.
 
marx

marx

MuscleHead
Sep 29, 2010
4,671
626
I'm confused, you're saying at the 20 minute mark of icing your veins dilate? Is that a typo?


Also, I've never thought of this, but what's the harm in using a heat rub while you workout on the muscle you are working out? Increase blood flow and keep warm/loose both seem like excellent things to me.

The physical rehab person told my girl that about ice, 15 minutes tops...

Used to smell ben gay at the gym all the time, do you have a fanny pack too LOL?

Another thought on this

MEAT vs. RICE Treatment
Traditional modern medical treatment for acute injuries, such as those that occur during active sports, usually receive the RICE protocol. In fact, it’s become a standard for sports injuries and pain management. RICE, by the way, stands for Rest, Ice, Compression and Elevation. A “P” is occasionally added to the equation. It stands for Protection, and consists of bracing or taping the area. In addition, most injured individuals are also encouraged to take anti-inflammatory medications. Unfortunately, in order to help heal injured ligaments and tendons, there couldn’t be a worse approach. Read on to find out how the RICE protocol came about, why it’s counterproductive to healing and why the MEAT (Movement, Exercise, Analgesics and Treatments) protocol is the best way to heal weakened and injured ligaments and tendons.

The RICE protocol
Ligament sprains are often accompanied by quite a bit of painful swelling, also called edema. A key premise of the RICE treatment is that this swelling is harmful to the tissue and needs to be minimized. In fact, sports medicine specialists and athletic trainers have fallen into the trap that muscles are like tendons and that tendons are like ligaments. Yet that couldn’t be further from the truth. Understanding the difference between ligaments and muscles is crucial to understanding why the RICE treatment is totally inappropriate for healing tendons and ligaments.

Muscles, because of their good circulation, heal quickly and rarely cause a long-term problem, whereas ligaments, due to their poor blood supply, often heal incompletely and are the cause of most chronic sports injuries and pain. And while the accumulation of fluids, or edema, can in fact be harmful to muscles in the form of compartment syndrome, this does not apply to ligament and tendon injuries. Compartment syndrome occurs when swelling due to an injury places pressure on the muscle tissue, which decreases circulation and healing, which cause further swelling due to fluid accumulation, which decreases healing even more. This vicious cycle can lead to permanent muscle, nerve or circulation damage, which is why the RICE treatment has become an established protocol for muscle injuries, but unfortunately has inappropriately been applied to ligament injuries as well, which operate under an entirely different set of circumstances.

Ligaments are the small and mighty bone binders – they bind together bones at the joints. They are made of collagen, one of the strongest substances in the human body. Ligaments normally receive blood vessels from small arterial plexuses from the joints, but they themselves have essentially no blood vessels. If the blood vessels from the small arterial plexuses are sheared as the result of an injury, the limited blood supply that ligaments get is completely cut off. Furthermore, the blood supply to the ligaments is the poorest at the point where the ligament attaches to the bone, called the fibro-osseous junction. This point is also the weak link in the ligament-bone complex, and the area most commonly injured during sports and responsible for most lingering sports injuries. And this is the exact site where Prolotherapy is administered! But we’re getting ahead of ourselves. Let’s briefly review why the RICE protocol is inappropriate for ligaments.

Why RICE prevents healing
All of the components of RICE – rest, ice, compression and elevation – are designed to decrease swelling, and pain, by decreasing the circulation to the area, which is exactly what ligaments need to heal faster. Rest, compression and elevation, that is, immobilization, is extremely detrimental to joints and ligaments. It lowers the metabolic rate in the area. Ligaments heal slowly by nature, and they take twice as long to heal if immobilized. The fibro-osseous junction, the principal site of Prolotherapy treatments, heals even more slowly. Ice has a similar effect. And while lowering the temperature of an area is critical for certain surgeries and limb-salvage operations, where a lowered metabolism can mean the difference between success and failure, this is not so for injured ligaments. Ice leads to lower temperatures, which leads to lower metabolism, which leads to slower healing! And to make matters worse, injured athletes often continue their activities after getting “relief” from RICE, making themselves susceptible to further injury. Here’s why. The colder a ligament, the less force is needed to deform it, which is one of the reasons many athletic injuries occur in cold weather. In summary, anything that decreases the metabolic rate or blood supply to ligaments, such as rest, immobilization and ice, will further promote the decline of the ligaments, and profoundly delay their healing.

The MEAT protocol, and why it promotes healing
The more conservative, and effective, treatment for acute injuries to ligaments and tendons is the MEAT protocol. As mentioned earlier, MEAT stands for movement, exercise, analgesics and treatment. While immobility is detrimental to soft tissue healing, movement is beneficial because it improves blood flow to the injured area, removing debris. One of the effects of movement is the generation of heat, which increases blood flow. This is why the application of heat is also recommended for ligament and tendon injuries. Gentle range-of-motion exercises also help improve blood flow to the injured area. Natural analgesics, or painkillers, such as proteolytic enzymes, which break down proteins, aid soft tissue healing by reducing the viscosity, or stickiness, of the extracellular fluid. Examples include bromelain (from pineapple), trypsin, chymotrypsin and papain (from papaya). Reduced viscosity of the extracellular fluid in turn increases nutrient and waste transport from the injured site, reducing swelling, or edema. In other words, natural analgesics decrease the painful swelling of soft-tissue injuries but do not stop the natural inflammatory reactions that lead to healing, unlike anti-inflammatories, which can actually hinder healing. Narcotics such as codeine may also be prescribed short term for very painful injuries. In the short term, they are very helpful because they relieve pain without interfering with the natural healing mechanisms of the body. In fact, our bodies produce our own narcotic, called endorphins, which are released in response to an acute injury to reduce pain. Other options for pain control include pain relievers that are not synthetic anti-inflammatories, such as Tylenol or Ultram. They help relieve pain without decreasing inflammation, a critical part of the soft-tissue healing process.

And finally, treatments are used to increase blood flow and immune cell migration to the injured area that will assist ligament and tendon healing. Treatments include physical therapy, massage, chiropractic care, ultrasound, myofascial release and electrical stimulation. All improve blood flow and help soft tissue to heal. If the treatment has not healed within 6 weeks, more aggressive treatments, including Prolotherapy, should be considered. Of course if time is of the essence, Prolotherapy is quite effective as an initial treatment for acute pain, particularly in the case of acute sports injuries. In summary, the MEAT protocol is more effective and expedient than the RICE protocol when it comes to healing ligament and tendon injuries.
Guess the thread wasn't ligament and tendon specific like the article posted. still interesting though...
 
hugerobb

hugerobb

VIP Strength Advisor
Sep 15, 2010
2,027
56
Ive always used ice to stop swelling and heat to stop the pain
 
Sadie

Sadie

TID Lady Member
Oct 2, 2010
167
30
20 minutes is the ONLY way ice works bro. After 15 min vasodilation starts, that's why.

and thats why every medical professional i have ever seen for an injury instructs 20 min on 20 min off for ice.. the only time i use heat is if i wake up with stiffness or something along those lines since heat will loosen you up fast.. i wouldnt use heat on an injury as it will make swelling worse not better
 
S

schultz1

Bangs Raiden's mom VIP
Jan 3, 2011
3,701
1,061
Back in the day playing sports in school in the 90's coaches used to "slush" an injury. Basically submerdging the injured body part in a tub of ice water for a short period of time...is this still practiced? I would think, and always worried, that frost bite and/or shock could be an issue. Thoughts?

Oneof the most effective ways to treat injuries according the the national strength and conditioning association. I use it till this day. I also have my kids use it when sore from their hockey games. Suck when you're doing it but, then next day you feel great.
 
B

Barnaby

Guest
hi guys,,,
Cold is the best immediate treatment for acute injuries.The reason behind this is it reduces swelling and pain where as heat is ideal for Sore, stiff, nagging muscle or joint pain.Particularly heat is being used for chronic injuries.
 
M

muaythaifighter

Member
Jan 21, 2011
27
1
GREAT READ! i use all heat cuz its all old injuries that will never recover. plus my weekly rub downs.
 
S

sprawl33

Member
Aug 15, 2013
30
0
I used icy hot and a ice pack at the same time and it works wonders.
I strongly recommend it
 
J

Jeffbcause

Member
Apr 25, 2015
12
3
and thats why every medical professional i have ever seen for an injury instructs 20 min on 20 min off for ice.. the only time i use heat is if i wake up with stiffness or something along those lines since heat will loosen you up fast.. i wouldnt use heat on an injury as it will make swelling worse not better


I endorse and quote this, the only thing I would like to add is try to get a new injury iced within 72 hours..
 
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