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Stretching and Its Effects
on Recovery: A Review
William A. Sands, PhD, CSCS,1
Jeni R. McNeal, PhD, CSCS*D,2
Steven R. Murray, DA,3
Michael W. Ramsey, PhD,1
Kimitake Sato, PhD,1
Satoshi Mizuguchi, PhD,1
and Michael H. Stone, PhD, FNSCA1
1
Department of Exercise and Sport Science, East Tennessee State University, Johnson City, Tennessee;
2
Department of Physical Education, Health, and Recreation, Eastern Washington University, Cheney, Washington; and
3
Department of Kinesiology, Colorado Mesa University, Grand Junction, Colorado
Supplemental digital content is available for this article. Direct URL citations appear in the printed text and are provided
in the HTML and PDF versions of this article on the journal’s Web site (http://journals.lww.com/nsca-scj).
A B S T R A C T
STRETCHING IS A COMMONLY
PRESCRIBED EXERCISE ACTIVITY
THAT HAS BEEN APPLIED TO
WARM-UP, INCREASING RANGE OF
MOTION (ROM), AND RECOVERY
FROM TRAINING. THE PRACTI-
TIONER SHOULD UNDERSTAND
THE EFFECTS OF STRETCHING
EXERCISE AND THE INHERENT DIF-
FERENCES BETWEEN TYPES OF
STRETCHING EXERCISES AND
ACTIVITIES DESIGNED TO
ENHANCE "LOOSENESS" AND
FREEDOM OF MOTION. STRETCH-
ING TO ENHANCE ROM MAY BE
CONTRAINDICATED WHEN
APPLIED TO RECOVERY ACTIVITIES.
STRETCHING FOR RECOVERY
SHOULD BE PAIN-FREE MOTION
WITHIN THE CONSTRAINTS OF
MAXIMUM ROM OF A JOINT.
FOR A VIDEO ABSTRACT OF THIS
ARTICLE, SEE SUPPLEMENTAL
DIGITAL CONTENT 1 (SEE VIDEO,
http://links.lww.com/SCJ/A119).
STRETCHING
S
tretching has long been a part of
athlete training, defined as “.
the application of force to mus-
culotendinous structures in order to
achieve a change in their length, usu-
ally for the purposes of improving joint
range of motion (ROM), reducing stiff-
ness or soreness, or preparing for
(physical) activity” (3, p. 3). Flexibility
is the ROM of a joint or a related series
of joints, such as the spine (61,84).
Stretching for increased flexibility
tends to be uncomfortable, seeking to
enhance stretch tolerance by relatively
extreme body positions that put mus-
cles and tendons under unaccustomed
tensile stresses (51,53). Stretching as
a preparatory activity (i.e., warm-up)
is clearly not intended to help an ath-
lete “recover” because the stretching
precedes the bulk of the training lesson.
Stretching to reduce stiffness and sore-
ness is a therapeutic aspect of stretch-
ing that is distinct from the other
concepts listed above (87). Thus, the
term “stretching” can be somewhat
paradoxical by application to several
diverse purposes. For example, Kisner
and Colby (44, p. 187) differentiate
between stretching and “ROM exerci-
ses,” with stretching involving tissue
tensions and lengths beyond those nor-
mally available, whereas ROM exerci-
ses seek to keep movements within the
current boundaries of tissue extensibil-
ity (2, p. 5).
There are a number of confusing
notions about stretching, flexibility,
and recovery. For example, the ROM
of a joint almost always is determined
statically or passively, whereas the
actual expression of ROM in sport is
usually dynamic (87, p. 311). As a desir-
able property of movement, and the link
between stretching and flexibility, Siff
(81, p. 123), has commented that move-
ment proficiency is based on a balance
of static and dynamic positions and
motions and that tissues must be con-
ditioned to withstand deformations and
shocks. In terms of recovery, stretching
seeks to achieve motion that is pain free,
unencumbered, and coordinated.
However, other activities and modal-
ities can enhance ROM in the short
term. Heat, cold, vibration, massage,
hydrotherapy, anesthetics, and other
modalities have been shown to
reduce pain and enhance ROM
(41,47,61,73–75).
Stretching can be categorized as active
or passive, static or dynamic, and acute
or chronic (61). Active stretching refers
to a limb position that places a joint at its
extreme ROM by virtue of the tension
obtained from agonist muscles (e.g.,
while standing, raising a straight leg
from the hip in flexion using the tension
from hip flexors). Active stretching po-
sitions are opposed by the antagonist
muscles’ elastic and viscous resistances
(e.g., while standing, raising a straight leg
from the hip in flexion is resisted by hip
extensor muscles and resistive properties
of tendons, ligaments, skin, and fascia).
Passive stretching involves placing a joint
K E Y W O R D S :
recovery; stretching; flexibility; range of
motion; extensibility; stiffness
VOLUME 35 | NUMBER 5 | OCTOBER 2013 Copyright Ó National Strength and Conditioning Association30
in an extreme ROM position by the use
of gravity or inertia (e.g., a gymnast or
dancer sitting in a split position or
swinging a limb to an extreme position).
Static stretching is the most commonly
prescribed type of stretching involving
placement of the body and limbs in an
extreme ROM position and holding this
position for a period by gravity, partner
assistance, or agonist muscle tension.
Dynamic stretching moves joints
through extreme ROM movements
without long pauses or holds and
momentarily taking a limb to an extreme
position (e.g., swinging the leg at the hip,
forward and backward in the sagittal
plane, momentarily stretching hip flex-
ors and extensors). Acute stretching
refers to a single exercise or stretching
for a relatively short duration, usually 30
seconds or less (6,68). Chronic stretch-
ing refers to repeated stretching exer-
cises or sets of exercises over days and
weeks.
Stretching to develop semipermanent
ROM improvements relies largely on
the achievement of “stretch tolerance”
(50,52,54). Achievement of stretch toler-
ance requires focused practice in extreme
and uncomfortable ROM positions.
Stretching discomfort is difficult to quan-
tify but relates directly to stretching
intensity and pain tolerance (11, p. 2,
18,30). The presence of discomfort or
pain in an effort to achieve recovery
appears contradictory to the concept of
recovery. However, the discomfort level
of stretching often has been pre-
scribed as tension remaining below
a pain threshold (2, pp. 58, 145),
without considering that an optimal
discomfort and tension level may be
obtained in a different position that
results in the more effective achieve-
ment of a new ROM. Moreover, the
inducement of pain also appears to
contradict the concept of recovery-
relaxation (2, p. 5, 62,71).
RECOVERY
Recovery is usually defined as the pro-
cess of returning something that was
lost (85, pp. 260–261). “Mostly, recov-
ery is defined as the compensation of
deficit states of an organism (e.g.,
fatigue or decrease in performance)
and, according to the homeostatic
principle, a reestablishment of the ini-
tial state” (39, p. 6). However, recovery
in sport is a 2-stage process: returning
what was lost (i.e., reducing fatigue)
and adapting or supercompensating
to training demands (85, pp. 260–
261). Adaptation results from the inter-
play of work and recovery. Recovery is
not, and should not be, considered
complete or effective unless the athlete
reaches a higher state of fitness after
recovery (61,85, pp. 260–261). Thus,
simply reducing fatigue or returning
to a nonfatigued state represents in-
complete recovery. Moreover, the ulti-
mate test of recovery-adaptation lies
in the transfer of newly acquired
fitness and/or skill to actual sport
performance (10, pp. 1–21, 14,87,
pp. 173–174).
ARE STRETCHING AND RECOVERY
COMPATIBLE?
In terms of recovery, the primary
objective of stretching should be to
achieve enhanced ROM and/or
reduced stiffness and soreness. The
acute effects of stretching are short-
lived, from seconds to minutes
(21,22,28,43,45,82,93). Supporting
Wolff’s law (function determines
structure), semipermanent changes
in ROM require focused training for
days to months (13,23,46,65). Acute
therapeutic stretching may return
ROM after immobilization from
injury (55,58,72) and quasi-therapeu-
tically in dynamic "loosening" activi-
ties to promote ease of motion after
warm-up and/or cooldown activities
(1,15,38,89), as a means of developing
concentration control (27,42) and the
ability to cope with chronic pain
(78,79,91). The difference in stretch-
ing and ROM exercise concepts, as
described above, has been noted by
Verkhoshansky and Siff (87, pp. 173–
174), who have attributed some gains
in ROM to changes in muscle and
tendon stiffness and neuromuscular
properties. If stretching is included
in recovery efforts, the movements
should be dynamic and pain free,
contraindicating stretching positions
that elicit discomfort and pain.
The role of stretching and recovery
has a relatively long, and somewhat
confusing, history. As early as 1961,
de Vries (19) observed reduced mus-
cle distress after static stretching.
Static stretching has been shown to
reduce electromyographic median
frequency fatigue of back extensor
muscles and thereby enhanced cop-
ing with chronic pain (24). Smaller
decreases and more rapid return of
strength after delayed onset muscle
soreness (DOMS) were observed
using static and proprioceptive neu-
romuscular facilitation stretching
(16). Stretching via pain-free motions
with minimal resistance may enhance
postexercise strength, ROM, and
recovery (62). Heat-shock protein
incursion of immobilized rat gastroc-
nemius muscle was reduced after
static stretching and was thought to
protect the muscle against reloading
injury after immobilization (34). Cold
combined with stretching was supe-
rior to either alone or heat in reduc-
ing postexertional pain (67).
In contrast to the previous para-
graph, an acute reduction in muscu-
lar strength after fatiguing exercise
has been shown to continue after
static stretching for recovery (25).
Maximal voluntary contraction force
remained unchanged, whereas reflex
and stretch-shortening parameters
were reduced after fast, repeated
muscle stretching (5). Pre-exercise
stretching was not effective in reduc-
ing postexercise soreness and
reduced force abilities (36). In a study
of active exercise, passive resting, and
stretching for recovery from isoki-
netic knee extensions at 50% maximal
voluntary contractions to fatigue,
active recovery (i.e., light exercise,
cycling with no resistance) showed
better return to baseline recovery
(62). Active recovery was better in
returning strength-endurance perfor-
mance than either passive recovery
or stretching, which did not differ
from each other (62). Cold-water
immersion was better than carbohy-
drate supplementation and stretching
on recovery of basketball players
Strength and Conditioning Journal | www.nsca-scj.com 31
participating in a 3-day tournament
(62). Heat, cold, and stretching
groups performing stair running did
not achieve enhanced recovery over
a control group (69). Rat sciatic nerve
axonal retrograde transport (i.e.,
intracellular material movement
toward the cell body from the termi-
nal ending) was inhibited by 6% strain
(10% neuron lengthening) stretching.
This rodent study showed that
stretching caused ischemia and
increased neuron tensile forces (86).
The reduction of pain via stretching
is a laudable goal for recovery activ-
ities. However, perceived muscle
pain was not relieved by static
stretching (59). Stretching pre- and
posteccentric exercise did not reduce
DOMS (90). Inconsistent results
were obtained using warm-up,
stretching, and massage treatments
to reduce soreness after eccentric
exercise (70). Recovering from trau-
matic muscular injury usually seeks to
ensure rapid return of ROM within
the constraints of tissue healing.
However, more recent work has
shown that return to activity should
be based on full recovery of the
muscle and tendon unit and that
programs based solely on stretching
and strengthening result in poorer
outcomes (35). A review of DOMS
and effective treatments concluded
that cold therapy, stretching, hom-
eopathic remedies, ultrasound, and
electrical modalities had little
or no influence on the alleviation of
muscle soreness or other DOMS
symptoms (17).
CAN STRETCHING FOR RECOVERY
BE QUANTIFIED?
A serious problem permeates nearly
all studies of stretching—how does
one measure stretching intensity?
How does one determine if the
stretching activity elicited slightly
uncomfortable, moderately uncom-
fortable or painful sensations during
stretching? Individual athletes have
idiosyncratic tolerances for pain.
Moreover, discomfort and pain may
be exercise specific (61). Soreness and
stiffness may elicit pain and reduced
ROM that inhibits the use of even small
ROM movements thereby presenting
a new stress rather than the reduction
of stress. There does not appear to be
a single metric ever proposed to ascer-
tain the level, intensity, or magnitude of
stretching, short of static measurements
of maximum ROM positions (e.g., sit-
and-reach tests) that are too often
completely lacking in a conceptual
framework and sport specificity (33).
As such, how can any judgment of
the effectiveness of stretching on
recovery be determined? The subject
or athlete is usually directed to per-
form movements that are pain free,
but the line between mere discom-
fort and pain is not clear (11,
p. 2,18,30). Moreover, the tolerance
of discomfort and pain is likely to be
greater during short duration expo-
sures as opposed to those of longer
duration (4,63,76). Some athletes
may perform extreme positions more
zealously and achieve greater ROM or
incur and endure greater discomfort
than studymates (63). Stretching studies
are inherently incomparable if there is
no standard means of measuring the
stretching effort.
CAN STRETCHING PREVENT
RECOVERY AND ADAPTATION?
There is a consensus that serious stretch-
ing (i.e., flexibility-related stretching that
is uncomfortable and intended to
enhance ROM rather than relaxation
through acquisition of stretch tolerance,
54) results in reduced strength and
power after stretching exercises. The del-
eterious effects may not be reversed by
transitional exercises, and the effect can
last up to an hour (8,9,12,37,56,60,88).
Unskilled, reckless, and unsupervised
use of ballistic stretching (e.g., powerful
jerking-type stretch) actually causes mus-
cle soreness and stiffness and is therefore
contrary to the idea of enhancement and
maintenance of relaxation and pain-free,
fluid motion (87).
Recovery modalities, such as heat,
cold, hot/cold contrast, hydrotherapy,
massage, light exercise, electrical
stimulation, and nutritional supple-
mentation, rely heavily on increasing
overall blood flow to sore areas of the
body. Paradoxically, in a conceptual
model of recovery, it was postulated
that cooldown activities and stretch-
ing accelerate the elimination of
waste products, despite evidence that
stretching decreases blood flow.
Blood flow, capillary region oxygena-
tion, and velocity of red blood cells
decrease during stretching (57,66,83).
However, one study of ballet-trained
athletes and untrained controls indi-
cated that oxygenation during pain-
free stretching of the anterior tibialis
muscle was better maintained in the
ballet-trained athletes (64). Although
the fascicle lengths of the anterior ti-
bialis muscles were measured in both
groups, one wonders about the choice
of muscle in this study because of the
difficulty of stretching this muscle. In
this study, one could argue that
the anterior tibialis was simply length-
ened with little or no accompanying
discomfort.
Reduction of edema, both local and
systemic, are important objectives of
the recovery process but are poorly
understood by practitioners. More-
over, the new “frontier” in recovery
probably lies in the study and
control of training-induced infl-
ammation and associated edema
(20,26,29,32,48,49,77). Reduction of
edema is reliant on free lymphatic
fluid flow, and the accumulation of
cellular debris from exercise can
obstruct lymphatic uptake of fluids
(77). Herbert and Gabriel performed
a meta-analysis of the effects of
stretching on muscle soreness and
the risk of injury and found that
“Stretching before or after exercising
does not confer protection from mus-
cle soreness” (32, p. 468). However,
there may be a connection between
movements such as combinations of
stretching and contraction that may
mechanically aid lymphatic flow and
venous return and thereby help con-
trol sports-related edema and post-
training soreness (92).
CONCLUSIONS AND PRACTICAL
APPLICATIONS
The emphasis on dynamic movements
rather than static stretch positions is
Stretching and Recovery
VOLUME 35 | NUMBER 5 | OCTOBER 201332
important for recovery stretching. In
a review of recovery modalities, Barnett
wrote the following for athlete recovery
between events: “. there is no compel-
ling scientific evidence to support the
use of contrast temperature water
immersion therapy, hyperbaric oxygen
therapy, nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory
drugs, compression garments, stretching,
electromyostimulation, and combination
modalities” (emphasis added) (7, p. 781).
As we learn more about recovery, inves-
tigations may focus more light on many
modalities and some effectiveness may
yet be apparent. However, one would be
wise to question the relevance and effec-
tiveness of stretching in sport, particu-
larly stretching for recovery.
Possibly the most heretical remark to
make about stretching is to suggest that
the dedicated use of stretching sessions
may not even be necessary, especially
sincemanyathletesdispenseentirely with
special stretching or even warm-up ses-
sions before or after training without suf-
fering injury in training or competition.
The prescription of stretching and warm-
up or cooling down sessions has become
a well-accepted ritual, but that does not
imply that this is essential (87, p. 192).
Stretching exercises should be varied
under the same principle as strengthening
exercises, but rarely are (35,80). Light
training followed by pain-free stretching
is proposed as an effective means of
achieving an active recovery that was
superior to taking a day off from training
(40). Finally, a meta-analysis update of 12
studies, one including over 2,000 subjects,
showed that pre- and post-activity
stretching reduced muscle soreness from
1 to 3 days after exercise by one point in a
100-point scale. The authors concluded
that although the results were statistically
significant, the magnitude of effect was
not clinically significant (31). Practitioners
are encouraged to consider recovery
stretching carefully, that the activity is
not a panacea, and prescription of recov-
ery stretching should not be undertaken
blindly, unskillfully, and without careful
monitoring.
Conflicts of Interest and Source of Funding:
The authors report no conflicts of interest
and no source of funding.
William A.
Sands is a profes-
sor in the
Department of
Exercise and
Sport Science at
East Tennessee
State University.
Jeni R. McNeal
is a professor at
Eastern Wash-
ington University
and Strength and
Conditioning
Consultant for
United States
Diving.
Steven R.
Murray is a pro-
fessor at Colorado
Mesa University.
Michael W.
Ramsey is the
chair of the
Department of
Exercise and
Sport Science at
East Tennessee
State University.
Kimitake Sato
is an assistant
professor in the
Department of
Exercise and
Sport Science,
and an adjunct
faculty for Cen-
ter of Excellence
for Sport Science and Coach Education
at East Tennessee State University.
Satoshi
Mizuguchi is an
assistant profes-
sor in the
Department of
Exercise and
Sport Science at
East Tennessee
State University.
Michael H.
Stone is the lab-
oratory supervi-
sor, PhD
coordinator, and
a professor in the
Department of
Exercise and
Sport Science at
East Tennessee State University.
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Stretching and Recovery
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Stretching and its effects on recovery

  • 1. Stretching and Its Effects on Recovery: A Review William A. Sands, PhD, CSCS,1 Jeni R. McNeal, PhD, CSCS*D,2 Steven R. Murray, DA,3 Michael W. Ramsey, PhD,1 Kimitake Sato, PhD,1 Satoshi Mizuguchi, PhD,1 and Michael H. Stone, PhD, FNSCA1 1 Department of Exercise and Sport Science, East Tennessee State University, Johnson City, Tennessee; 2 Department of Physical Education, Health, and Recreation, Eastern Washington University, Cheney, Washington; and 3 Department of Kinesiology, Colorado Mesa University, Grand Junction, Colorado Supplemental digital content is available for this article. Direct URL citations appear in the printed text and are provided in the HTML and PDF versions of this article on the journal’s Web site (http://journals.lww.com/nsca-scj). A B S T R A C T STRETCHING IS A COMMONLY PRESCRIBED EXERCISE ACTIVITY THAT HAS BEEN APPLIED TO WARM-UP, INCREASING RANGE OF MOTION (ROM), AND RECOVERY FROM TRAINING. THE PRACTI- TIONER SHOULD UNDERSTAND THE EFFECTS OF STRETCHING EXERCISE AND THE INHERENT DIF- FERENCES BETWEEN TYPES OF STRETCHING EXERCISES AND ACTIVITIES DESIGNED TO ENHANCE "LOOSENESS" AND FREEDOM OF MOTION. STRETCH- ING TO ENHANCE ROM MAY BE CONTRAINDICATED WHEN APPLIED TO RECOVERY ACTIVITIES. STRETCHING FOR RECOVERY SHOULD BE PAIN-FREE MOTION WITHIN THE CONSTRAINTS OF MAXIMUM ROM OF A JOINT. FOR A VIDEO ABSTRACT OF THIS ARTICLE, SEE SUPPLEMENTAL DIGITAL CONTENT 1 (SEE VIDEO, http://links.lww.com/SCJ/A119). STRETCHING S tretching has long been a part of athlete training, defined as “. the application of force to mus- culotendinous structures in order to achieve a change in their length, usu- ally for the purposes of improving joint range of motion (ROM), reducing stiff- ness or soreness, or preparing for (physical) activity” (3, p. 3). Flexibility is the ROM of a joint or a related series of joints, such as the spine (61,84). Stretching for increased flexibility tends to be uncomfortable, seeking to enhance stretch tolerance by relatively extreme body positions that put mus- cles and tendons under unaccustomed tensile stresses (51,53). Stretching as a preparatory activity (i.e., warm-up) is clearly not intended to help an ath- lete “recover” because the stretching precedes the bulk of the training lesson. Stretching to reduce stiffness and sore- ness is a therapeutic aspect of stretch- ing that is distinct from the other concepts listed above (87). Thus, the term “stretching” can be somewhat paradoxical by application to several diverse purposes. For example, Kisner and Colby (44, p. 187) differentiate between stretching and “ROM exerci- ses,” with stretching involving tissue tensions and lengths beyond those nor- mally available, whereas ROM exerci- ses seek to keep movements within the current boundaries of tissue extensibil- ity (2, p. 5). There are a number of confusing notions about stretching, flexibility, and recovery. For example, the ROM of a joint almost always is determined statically or passively, whereas the actual expression of ROM in sport is usually dynamic (87, p. 311). As a desir- able property of movement, and the link between stretching and flexibility, Siff (81, p. 123), has commented that move- ment proficiency is based on a balance of static and dynamic positions and motions and that tissues must be con- ditioned to withstand deformations and shocks. In terms of recovery, stretching seeks to achieve motion that is pain free, unencumbered, and coordinated. However, other activities and modal- ities can enhance ROM in the short term. Heat, cold, vibration, massage, hydrotherapy, anesthetics, and other modalities have been shown to reduce pain and enhance ROM (41,47,61,73–75). Stretching can be categorized as active or passive, static or dynamic, and acute or chronic (61). Active stretching refers to a limb position that places a joint at its extreme ROM by virtue of the tension obtained from agonist muscles (e.g., while standing, raising a straight leg from the hip in flexion using the tension from hip flexors). Active stretching po- sitions are opposed by the antagonist muscles’ elastic and viscous resistances (e.g., while standing, raising a straight leg from the hip in flexion is resisted by hip extensor muscles and resistive properties of tendons, ligaments, skin, and fascia). Passive stretching involves placing a joint K E Y W O R D S : recovery; stretching; flexibility; range of motion; extensibility; stiffness VOLUME 35 | NUMBER 5 | OCTOBER 2013 Copyright Ó National Strength and Conditioning Association30
  • 2. in an extreme ROM position by the use of gravity or inertia (e.g., a gymnast or dancer sitting in a split position or swinging a limb to an extreme position). Static stretching is the most commonly prescribed type of stretching involving placement of the body and limbs in an extreme ROM position and holding this position for a period by gravity, partner assistance, or agonist muscle tension. Dynamic stretching moves joints through extreme ROM movements without long pauses or holds and momentarily taking a limb to an extreme position (e.g., swinging the leg at the hip, forward and backward in the sagittal plane, momentarily stretching hip flex- ors and extensors). Acute stretching refers to a single exercise or stretching for a relatively short duration, usually 30 seconds or less (6,68). Chronic stretch- ing refers to repeated stretching exer- cises or sets of exercises over days and weeks. Stretching to develop semipermanent ROM improvements relies largely on the achievement of “stretch tolerance” (50,52,54). Achievement of stretch toler- ance requires focused practice in extreme and uncomfortable ROM positions. Stretching discomfort is difficult to quan- tify but relates directly to stretching intensity and pain tolerance (11, p. 2, 18,30). The presence of discomfort or pain in an effort to achieve recovery appears contradictory to the concept of recovery. However, the discomfort level of stretching often has been pre- scribed as tension remaining below a pain threshold (2, pp. 58, 145), without considering that an optimal discomfort and tension level may be obtained in a different position that results in the more effective achieve- ment of a new ROM. Moreover, the inducement of pain also appears to contradict the concept of recovery- relaxation (2, p. 5, 62,71). RECOVERY Recovery is usually defined as the pro- cess of returning something that was lost (85, pp. 260–261). “Mostly, recov- ery is defined as the compensation of deficit states of an organism (e.g., fatigue or decrease in performance) and, according to the homeostatic principle, a reestablishment of the ini- tial state” (39, p. 6). However, recovery in sport is a 2-stage process: returning what was lost (i.e., reducing fatigue) and adapting or supercompensating to training demands (85, pp. 260– 261). Adaptation results from the inter- play of work and recovery. Recovery is not, and should not be, considered complete or effective unless the athlete reaches a higher state of fitness after recovery (61,85, pp. 260–261). Thus, simply reducing fatigue or returning to a nonfatigued state represents in- complete recovery. Moreover, the ulti- mate test of recovery-adaptation lies in the transfer of newly acquired fitness and/or skill to actual sport performance (10, pp. 1–21, 14,87, pp. 173–174). ARE STRETCHING AND RECOVERY COMPATIBLE? In terms of recovery, the primary objective of stretching should be to achieve enhanced ROM and/or reduced stiffness and soreness. The acute effects of stretching are short- lived, from seconds to minutes (21,22,28,43,45,82,93). Supporting Wolff’s law (function determines structure), semipermanent changes in ROM require focused training for days to months (13,23,46,65). Acute therapeutic stretching may return ROM after immobilization from injury (55,58,72) and quasi-therapeu- tically in dynamic "loosening" activi- ties to promote ease of motion after warm-up and/or cooldown activities (1,15,38,89), as a means of developing concentration control (27,42) and the ability to cope with chronic pain (78,79,91). The difference in stretch- ing and ROM exercise concepts, as described above, has been noted by Verkhoshansky and Siff (87, pp. 173– 174), who have attributed some gains in ROM to changes in muscle and tendon stiffness and neuromuscular properties. If stretching is included in recovery efforts, the movements should be dynamic and pain free, contraindicating stretching positions that elicit discomfort and pain. The role of stretching and recovery has a relatively long, and somewhat confusing, history. As early as 1961, de Vries (19) observed reduced mus- cle distress after static stretching. Static stretching has been shown to reduce electromyographic median frequency fatigue of back extensor muscles and thereby enhanced cop- ing with chronic pain (24). Smaller decreases and more rapid return of strength after delayed onset muscle soreness (DOMS) were observed using static and proprioceptive neu- romuscular facilitation stretching (16). Stretching via pain-free motions with minimal resistance may enhance postexercise strength, ROM, and recovery (62). Heat-shock protein incursion of immobilized rat gastroc- nemius muscle was reduced after static stretching and was thought to protect the muscle against reloading injury after immobilization (34). Cold combined with stretching was supe- rior to either alone or heat in reduc- ing postexertional pain (67). In contrast to the previous para- graph, an acute reduction in muscu- lar strength after fatiguing exercise has been shown to continue after static stretching for recovery (25). Maximal voluntary contraction force remained unchanged, whereas reflex and stretch-shortening parameters were reduced after fast, repeated muscle stretching (5). Pre-exercise stretching was not effective in reduc- ing postexercise soreness and reduced force abilities (36). In a study of active exercise, passive resting, and stretching for recovery from isoki- netic knee extensions at 50% maximal voluntary contractions to fatigue, active recovery (i.e., light exercise, cycling with no resistance) showed better return to baseline recovery (62). Active recovery was better in returning strength-endurance perfor- mance than either passive recovery or stretching, which did not differ from each other (62). Cold-water immersion was better than carbohy- drate supplementation and stretching on recovery of basketball players Strength and Conditioning Journal | www.nsca-scj.com 31
  • 3. participating in a 3-day tournament (62). Heat, cold, and stretching groups performing stair running did not achieve enhanced recovery over a control group (69). Rat sciatic nerve axonal retrograde transport (i.e., intracellular material movement toward the cell body from the termi- nal ending) was inhibited by 6% strain (10% neuron lengthening) stretching. This rodent study showed that stretching caused ischemia and increased neuron tensile forces (86). The reduction of pain via stretching is a laudable goal for recovery activ- ities. However, perceived muscle pain was not relieved by static stretching (59). Stretching pre- and posteccentric exercise did not reduce DOMS (90). Inconsistent results were obtained using warm-up, stretching, and massage treatments to reduce soreness after eccentric exercise (70). Recovering from trau- matic muscular injury usually seeks to ensure rapid return of ROM within the constraints of tissue healing. However, more recent work has shown that return to activity should be based on full recovery of the muscle and tendon unit and that programs based solely on stretching and strengthening result in poorer outcomes (35). A review of DOMS and effective treatments concluded that cold therapy, stretching, hom- eopathic remedies, ultrasound, and electrical modalities had little or no influence on the alleviation of muscle soreness or other DOMS symptoms (17). CAN STRETCHING FOR RECOVERY BE QUANTIFIED? A serious problem permeates nearly all studies of stretching—how does one measure stretching intensity? How does one determine if the stretching activity elicited slightly uncomfortable, moderately uncom- fortable or painful sensations during stretching? Individual athletes have idiosyncratic tolerances for pain. Moreover, discomfort and pain may be exercise specific (61). Soreness and stiffness may elicit pain and reduced ROM that inhibits the use of even small ROM movements thereby presenting a new stress rather than the reduction of stress. There does not appear to be a single metric ever proposed to ascer- tain the level, intensity, or magnitude of stretching, short of static measurements of maximum ROM positions (e.g., sit- and-reach tests) that are too often completely lacking in a conceptual framework and sport specificity (33). As such, how can any judgment of the effectiveness of stretching on recovery be determined? The subject or athlete is usually directed to per- form movements that are pain free, but the line between mere discom- fort and pain is not clear (11, p. 2,18,30). Moreover, the tolerance of discomfort and pain is likely to be greater during short duration expo- sures as opposed to those of longer duration (4,63,76). Some athletes may perform extreme positions more zealously and achieve greater ROM or incur and endure greater discomfort than studymates (63). Stretching studies are inherently incomparable if there is no standard means of measuring the stretching effort. CAN STRETCHING PREVENT RECOVERY AND ADAPTATION? There is a consensus that serious stretch- ing (i.e., flexibility-related stretching that is uncomfortable and intended to enhance ROM rather than relaxation through acquisition of stretch tolerance, 54) results in reduced strength and power after stretching exercises. The del- eterious effects may not be reversed by transitional exercises, and the effect can last up to an hour (8,9,12,37,56,60,88). Unskilled, reckless, and unsupervised use of ballistic stretching (e.g., powerful jerking-type stretch) actually causes mus- cle soreness and stiffness and is therefore contrary to the idea of enhancement and maintenance of relaxation and pain-free, fluid motion (87). Recovery modalities, such as heat, cold, hot/cold contrast, hydrotherapy, massage, light exercise, electrical stimulation, and nutritional supple- mentation, rely heavily on increasing overall blood flow to sore areas of the body. Paradoxically, in a conceptual model of recovery, it was postulated that cooldown activities and stretch- ing accelerate the elimination of waste products, despite evidence that stretching decreases blood flow. Blood flow, capillary region oxygena- tion, and velocity of red blood cells decrease during stretching (57,66,83). However, one study of ballet-trained athletes and untrained controls indi- cated that oxygenation during pain- free stretching of the anterior tibialis muscle was better maintained in the ballet-trained athletes (64). Although the fascicle lengths of the anterior ti- bialis muscles were measured in both groups, one wonders about the choice of muscle in this study because of the difficulty of stretching this muscle. In this study, one could argue that the anterior tibialis was simply length- ened with little or no accompanying discomfort. Reduction of edema, both local and systemic, are important objectives of the recovery process but are poorly understood by practitioners. More- over, the new “frontier” in recovery probably lies in the study and control of training-induced infl- ammation and associated edema (20,26,29,32,48,49,77). Reduction of edema is reliant on free lymphatic fluid flow, and the accumulation of cellular debris from exercise can obstruct lymphatic uptake of fluids (77). Herbert and Gabriel performed a meta-analysis of the effects of stretching on muscle soreness and the risk of injury and found that “Stretching before or after exercising does not confer protection from mus- cle soreness” (32, p. 468). However, there may be a connection between movements such as combinations of stretching and contraction that may mechanically aid lymphatic flow and venous return and thereby help con- trol sports-related edema and post- training soreness (92). CONCLUSIONS AND PRACTICAL APPLICATIONS The emphasis on dynamic movements rather than static stretch positions is Stretching and Recovery VOLUME 35 | NUMBER 5 | OCTOBER 201332
  • 4. important for recovery stretching. In a review of recovery modalities, Barnett wrote the following for athlete recovery between events: “. there is no compel- ling scientific evidence to support the use of contrast temperature water immersion therapy, hyperbaric oxygen therapy, nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs, compression garments, stretching, electromyostimulation, and combination modalities” (emphasis added) (7, p. 781). As we learn more about recovery, inves- tigations may focus more light on many modalities and some effectiveness may yet be apparent. However, one would be wise to question the relevance and effec- tiveness of stretching in sport, particu- larly stretching for recovery. Possibly the most heretical remark to make about stretching is to suggest that the dedicated use of stretching sessions may not even be necessary, especially sincemanyathletesdispenseentirely with special stretching or even warm-up ses- sions before or after training without suf- fering injury in training or competition. The prescription of stretching and warm- up or cooling down sessions has become a well-accepted ritual, but that does not imply that this is essential (87, p. 192). Stretching exercises should be varied under the same principle as strengthening exercises, but rarely are (35,80). Light training followed by pain-free stretching is proposed as an effective means of achieving an active recovery that was superior to taking a day off from training (40). Finally, a meta-analysis update of 12 studies, one including over 2,000 subjects, showed that pre- and post-activity stretching reduced muscle soreness from 1 to 3 days after exercise by one point in a 100-point scale. The authors concluded that although the results were statistically significant, the magnitude of effect was not clinically significant (31). Practitioners are encouraged to consider recovery stretching carefully, that the activity is not a panacea, and prescription of recov- ery stretching should not be undertaken blindly, unskillfully, and without careful monitoring. Conflicts of Interest and Source of Funding: The authors report no conflicts of interest and no source of funding. William A. Sands is a profes- sor in the Department of Exercise and Sport Science at East Tennessee State University. Jeni R. McNeal is a professor at Eastern Wash- ington University and Strength and Conditioning Consultant for United States Diving. Steven R. Murray is a pro- fessor at Colorado Mesa University. Michael W. Ramsey is the chair of the Department of Exercise and Sport Science at East Tennessee State University. Kimitake Sato is an assistant professor in the Department of Exercise and Sport Science, and an adjunct faculty for Cen- ter of Excellence for Sport Science and Coach Education at East Tennessee State University. Satoshi Mizuguchi is an assistant profes- sor in the Department of Exercise and Sport Science at East Tennessee State University. Michael H. Stone is the lab- oratory supervi- sor, PhD coordinator, and a professor in the Department of Exercise and Sport Science at East Tennessee State University. REFERENCES 1. Aguilar AJ, DiStefano LJ, Brown CN, Herman DC, Guskiewicz KM, and Padua DA. A dynamic warm-up model increases quadriceps strength and hamstring flexibility. J Strength Cond Res 26: 1130–1141, 2012. 2. Alter MJ. Science of Flexibility. Champaign, IL: Human Kinetics, 2004. 3. Armiger P and Martyn MA. Stretching for Functional Flexibility. Philadelphia, PA: Lippincott Williams & Wilkins, 2010. 4. Asenlof P, Denison E, and Lindberg P. Idiographic outcome analyses of the clinical significance of two interventions for patients with musculoskeletal pain. Behav Res Ther 44: 947–965, 2006. 5. Avela J, Finni T, Liikavainio T, Niemela E, and Komi PV. Neural and mechanical responses of the triceps surae muscle group after 1 h repeated fast passive stretches. J Appl Physiol 96: 2325–2332, 2004. 6. Bandy WD and Irion JM. The effect of time on static stretch on the flexibility of the hamstring muscles. Phys Ther 74: 54–61, 1994. 7. Barnett A. Using recovery modalities between training sessions in elite athletes. Does it help? Sports Med 36: 781–796, 2006. 8. Bazett-Jones DM, Gibson MH, and McBride JM. Sprint and vertical jump performances are not affected by six weeks of static hamstring stretching. J Strength Cond Res 22: 25–31, 2008. Strength and Conditioning Journal | www.nsca-scj.com 33
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