Ihsan Mohammed, Abbiss Chris R, Allan Robert
Human Potential Translational Research Programme, Yong Loo Lin School of Medicine, National University of Singapore, Singapore, Singapore.
Research and Scientific Support, Aspetar Orthopaedic and Sports Medicine Hospital, Doha, Qatar.
Front Sports Act Living. 2021 Jul 16;3:714148. doi: 10.3389/fspor.2021.714148. eCollection 2021.
In the last decade, cold water immersion (CWI) has emerged as one of the most popular post-exercise recovery strategies utilized amongst athletes during training and competition. Following earlier research on the effects of CWI on the recovery of exercise performance and associated mechanisms, the recent focus has been on how CWI might influence adaptations to exercise. This line of enquiry stems from classical work demonstrating improved endurance and mitochondrial development in rodents exposed to repeated cold exposures. Moreover, there was strong rationale that CWI might enhance adaptations to exercise, given the discovery, and central role of peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor gamma coactivator-1α (PGC-1α) in both cold- and exercise-induced oxidative adaptations. Research on adaptations to post-exercise CWI have generally indicated a mode-dependant effect, where resistance training adaptations were diminished, whilst aerobic exercise performance seems unaffected but demonstrates premise for enhancement. However, the general suitability of CWI as a recovery modality has been the focus of considerable debate, primarily given the dampening effect on hypertrophy gains. In this mini-review, we highlight the key mechanisms surrounding CWI and endurance exercise adaptations, reiterating the potential for CWI to enhance endurance performance, with support from classical and contemporary works. This review also discusses the implications and insights (with regards to endurance and strength adaptations) gathered from recent studies examining the longer-term effects of CWI on training performance and recovery. Lastly, a periodized approach to recovery is proposed, where the use of CWI may be incorporated during competition or intensified training, whilst strategically avoiding periods following training focused on improving muscle strength or hypertrophy.
在过去十年中,冷水浸泡(CWI)已成为运动员在训练和比赛期间使用的最流行的运动后恢复策略之一。在早期关于CWI对运动表现恢复及相关机制影响的研究之后,最近的重点是CWI如何影响对运动的适应性。这一研究方向源于经典研究,该研究表明反复暴露于寒冷环境的啮齿动物的耐力和线粒体发育得到改善。此外,鉴于过氧化物酶体增殖物激活受体γ共激活因子-1α(PGC-1α)在寒冷和运动诱导的氧化适应中的发现及其核心作用,有充分的理由认为CWI可能增强对运动的适应性。关于运动后CWI适应性的研究通常表明存在模式依赖性效应,即阻力训练适应性降低,而有氧运动表现似乎不受影响,但显示出增强的前提。然而,CWI作为一种恢复方式的总体适用性一直是相当多争论的焦点,主要是因为它对肥大增加有抑制作用。在这篇小型综述中,我们强调了围绕CWI和耐力运动适应性的关键机制,重申了CWI在经典和当代研究支持下增强耐力表现的潜力。本综述还讨论了从最近研究中收集到的关于CWI对训练表现和恢复的长期影响的含义和见解(关于耐力和力量适应性)。最后,提出了一种周期性恢复方法,即在比赛或强化训练期间可以采用CWI,同时策略性地避免在专注于提高肌肉力量或肥大的训练后的阶段使用。