HEALTH BLOGS
HEALTH BLOGS
category: health
21 Oct 2009

Do you treat your cool down in the same way that you treat your post-workout stretching? You know you’re suppose to, but you usually skip it.

Women’s Health Magazine decided to ask their experts if this golden rule was an established fact from science or just the automatic set-up of the treadmill. Here’s what they discovered:

“Cooling down is not a joke according to Adam Friedman, Gold’s Gym Fitness Institute expert.

Though not mandatory, it is helpful to cool down when you’re working at a high intensity—which is at or above 85 percent of your maximum heart rate*.

When you’re pushing hard, your blood is moving quickly around your body to provide nutrients and oxygen to the muscles. When you stop immediately, the blood can sometimes draw back into the stomach area, occasionally leaving you feeling dizzy or nauseous.

But even if you feel a bit woozy, it’s not necessarily dangerous or harmful to your body—just a little uncomfortable.

What about the idea it can relieve muscle soreness?

It might relieve cramping, says Jordan D. Metzl, M.D., sports medicine physician, Hospital for Special Surgery, but it’s a myth that cooling-down can ease muscle soreness.

“When you’re sore, it’s really because you’ve made tiny tears in your muscles,” says Metzl. “Cooling-down won’t help that, and it won’t really help from an injury perspective.”

To sum it up: The next time you hit the treadmill, don’t worry about completing the 5-minute cool-down unless you’ve really been pushing yourself and need that time to catch your breath and stretch out your rubber legs. “

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