Herbert Robert D, de Noronha Marcos, Kamper Steven J
Musculoskeletal Division, The George Institute for Global Health, PO Box M201, Missenden Road, Camperdown, Sydney, Australia, NWS 2050.
Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2011 Jul 6(7):CD004577. doi: 10.1002/14651858.CD004577.pub3.
Many people stretch before or after engaging in athletic activity. Usually the purpose is to reduce risk of injury, reduce soreness after exercise, or enhance athletic performance. This is an update of a Cochrane review first published in 2007.
The aim of this review was to determine effects of stretching before or after exercise on the development of delayed-onset muscle soreness.
We searched the Cochrane Bone, Joint and Muscle Trauma Group Specialised Register (to 10 August 2009), the Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials (2010, Issue 1), MEDLINE (1966 to 8th February 2010), EMBASE (1988 to 8th February 2010), CINAHL (1982 to 23rd February 2010), SPORTDiscus (1949 to 8th February 2010), PEDro (to 15th February 2010) and reference lists of articles.
Eligible studies were randomised or quasi-randomised studies of any pre-exercise or post-exercise stretching technique designed to prevent or treat delayed-onset muscle soreness (DOMS). For the studies to be included, the stretching had to be conducted soon before or soon after exercise and muscle soreness had to be assessed.
Risk of bias was assessed using The Cochrane Collaboration's 'Risk of bias' tool and quality of evidence was assessed using GRADE. Estimates of effects of stretching were converted to a common 100-point scale. Outcomes were pooled in fixed-effect meta-analyses.
Twelve studies were included in the review. This update incorporated two new studies. One of the new trials was a large field-based trial that included 2377 participants, 1220 of whom were allocated stretching. All other 11 studies were small, with between 10 and 30 participants receiving the stretch condition. Ten studies were laboratory-based and other two were field-based. All studies were exposed to either a moderate or high risk of bias. The quality of evidence was low to moderate.There was a high degree of consistency of results across studies. The pooled estimate showed that pre-exercise stretching reduced soreness at one day after exercise by, on average, half a point on a 100-point scale (mean difference -0.52, 95% CI -11.30 to 10.26; 3 studies). Post-exercise stretching reduced soreness at one day after exercise by, on average, one point on a 100-point scale (mean difference -1.04, 95% CI -6.88 to 4.79; 4 studies). Similar effects were evident between half a day and three days after exercise. One large study showed that stretching before and after exercise reduced peak soreness over a one week period by, on average, four points on a 100-point scale (mean difference -3.80, 95% CI -5.17 to -2.43). This effect, though statistically significant, is very small.
AUTHORS' CONCLUSIONS: The evidence from randomised studies suggests that muscle stretching, whether conducted before, after, or before and after exercise, does not produce clinically important reductions in delayed-onset muscle soreness in healthy adults.
许多人在进行体育活动之前或之后会进行拉伸。通常目的是降低受伤风险、减轻运动后的酸痛感或提高运动表现。这是对2007年首次发表的Cochrane综述的更新。
本综述旨在确定运动前或运动后拉伸对延迟性肌肉酸痛发展的影响。
我们检索了Cochrane骨、关节与肌肉创伤组专业注册库(截至2009年8月10日)、Cochrane对照试验中心注册库(2010年第1期)、MEDLINE(1966年至2010年2月8日)、EMBASE(1988年至2010年2月8日)、CINAHL(1982年至2010年2月23日)、SPORTDiscus(1949年至2010年2月8日)、PEDro(截至2010年2月15日)以及文章的参考文献列表。
符合条件的研究是关于任何旨在预防或治疗延迟性肌肉酸痛(DOMS)的运动前或运动后拉伸技术的随机或半随机研究。为了纳入研究,拉伸必须在运动前不久或运动后不久进行,并且必须评估肌肉酸痛情况。
使用Cochrane协作网的“偏倚风险”工具评估偏倚风险,并使用GRADE评估证据质量。拉伸效果的估计值转换为通用的100分制。结果合并进行固定效应荟萃分析。
本综述纳入了12项研究。此次更新纳入了两项新研究。其中一项新试验是一项大型现场试验,包括2377名参与者,其中1220人被分配进行拉伸。其他11项研究规模较小,有10至30名参与者接受拉伸干预。10项研究基于实验室,另外两项基于现场。所有研究均存在中度或高度偏倚风险。证据质量为低到中度。各项研究结果具有高度一致性。汇总估计表明,运动前拉伸使运动后一天的酸痛感在100分制上平均降低0.5分(平均差 -0.52,95%置信区间 -11.30至10.26;3项研究)。运动后拉伸使运动后一天的酸痛感在100分制上平均降低1分(平均差 -1.04,95%置信区间 -6.88至4.79;4项研究)。在运动后半天到三天之间也有类似效果。一项大型研究表明,运动前和运动后拉伸使一周内的酸痛峰值在100分制上平均降低4分(平均差 -3.80,95%置信区间 -5.17至-2.4)。这种效果虽然具有统计学意义,但非常小。
随机研究的证据表明,对于健康成年人,无论是在运动前、运动后还是运动前和运动后进行肌肉拉伸,都不会在临床上显著减轻延迟性肌肉酸痛。