Ways to overcome muscle soreness – how to deal with pain after training and how to prevent it?

Muscle soreness is a universal experience for virtually every person who trains. Regardless of age, gender or training experience, everyone has experienced this phenomenon in their lives.

Agata Brama

Muscle soreness can occur not only after a workout, but also after an intense mountain hike, skiing or horse riding. Therefore, it can be said that soreness accompanies virtually any physical activity. Many active people are looking for ways to prevent it or get rid of it quickly if it occurs. See what soreness really is and learn proven ways to mitigate it.

Soreness and post-workout muscle ache

Contrary to popular belief, the pain we feel after a workout... is not soreness at all. Soreness occurs at the time of training and is related to the metabolic changes taking place in the working muscles. Among others, they produce lactic acid, which “acidifies” the muscle environment. This is felt as a localized pain and “burning” in the working muscles during or just after exercise.

The pain that occurs a day or two after exercise is not related to the presence of lactic acid. This acid is quickly and efficiently excreted from the muscles after exercise, and the pH of the environment smoothly returns to balance. Therefore, the term “soreness” to describe the post-workout ache in the body is quite misplaced.

The delayed discomfort we feel is actually DOMS, from delayed onset muscle soreness, or localized delayed muscle ache. It is the result of a completely different mechanism than the one responsible for the formation of soreness.

Where does DOMS come from, or quick revision of sports physiology

Our skeletal muscles are made up of fibres. It is the work of these fibres that is responsible for muscle functionality and our ability to bend limbs or lift objects, among other things. In every movement we make, muscle fibres do work.

Regardless of the sport, the goal of training is to improve muscle strength and/or endurance. The answer to the question of the mechanism of DOMS formation is actually the adaptive property of working muscle fibres to current conditions. For training to be effective, the stimulus in the form of a workout must be strong enough.

Only then can our muscle fibres break down and then rebuild in excess to prepare for the next strong stimulus in the future. The breakdown and subsequent superstructure of muscle fibres guarantee training progression – it is thanks to these mechanisms that we can perform increasingly heavier workouts, lift heavier weights or achieve better times over a given distance.

Where does DOMS come into play in all of this? It results from the tearing of muscle fibres during physical activity. The torn and repaired tissue generates inflammation on a micro scale, which is felt as pain occurring as early as a dozen or so hours after the workout.