Koffie
goed tegen spierpijn na inspanning.*
Koffie kan wel eens als een goede pijnstiller werken bij spierpijn na een inspanning.
Dit blijkt uit een klein onderzoek bij vrouwen, die doorgaans weinig koffie drinken. Bij deze vrouwen werkte 2 kopjes koffie nog beter dan medicijnen die hiervoor gebruikt kunnen worden. Jammer genoeg zijn alleen vrouwen getest die normaal weinig koffie drinken. Onduidelijk is dus nog of de uitkomsten ook zullen gelden voor mannen en/of zij die normaal meer koffie drinken. De onderzoekers zeiden nog dat drinken van koffie vóór een inspanning niet zo best is vanwege mogelijke bijwerkingen zoals zenuwachtigheid en hartproblemen.
Caffeine
Cuts Post-Workout Pain By Nearly 50 Percent, UGA Study Finds
Although
it's too soon to recommend dropping by Starbucks before hitting the gym, a new
study suggests that caffeine can help reduce the post-workout soreness that
discourages some people from exercising.
In a study to be published in the February issue of The Journal of Pain,
a team of University of Georgia researchers finds that moderate doses of
caffeine, roughly equivalent to two cups of coffee, cut post-workout muscle pain
by up to 48 percent in a small sample of volunteers.
Lead author Victor Maridakis, a researcher in the department of kinesiology at
the UGA College of Education, said the findings may be particularly relevant to
people new to exercise, since they tend to experience the most soreness.
"If you can use caffeine to reduce the pain, it may make it easier to
transition from that first week into a much longer exercise program," he
said.
Maridakis and his colleagues studied nine female college students who were not
regular caffeine users and did not engage in regular resistance training. One
and two days after an exercise session that caused moderate muscle soreness, the
volunteers took either caffeine or a placebo and performed two different
quadriceps (thigh) exercises, one designed to produce a maximal force, the other
designed to generate a sub-maximal force. Those that consumed caffeine one-hour
before the maximum force test had a 48 percent reduction in pain compared to the
placebo group, while those that took caffeine before the sub-maximal test
reported a 26 percent reduction in pain.
Caffeine has long been known to increase alertness and endurance, and a 2003
study led by UGA professor Patrick O'Connor found that caffeine reduces thigh
pain during moderate-intensity cycling. O'Connor, who along with professors
Kevin McCully and the late Gary Dudley co-authored the current study, explained
that caffeine likely works by blocking the body's receptors for adenosine, a
chemical released in response to inflammation.
Despite the positive findings in the study, the researchers say there are some
caveats. First, the results may not be applicable to regular caffeine users,
since they may be less sensitive to caffeine's effect. The researchers chose to
study women to get a definitive answer in at least one sex, but men may respond
differently to caffeine. And the small sample size of nine volunteers means that
the study will have to be replicated with a larger study.
O'Connor said that despite these limitations, caffeine appears to be more
effective in relieving post-workout muscle pain than several commonly used
drugs. Previous studies have found that the pain reliever naproxen (the active
ingredient in Aleve) produced a 30 percent reduction in soreness. Aspirin
produced a 25 percent reduction, and ibuprofen has produced inconsistent results.
"A lot of times what people use for muscle pain is aspirin or ibuprofen,
but caffeine seems to work better than those drugs, at least among women whose
daily caffeine consumption is low," O'Connor said.
Still, the researchers recommend that people use caution when using caffeine
before a workout. For some people, too much caffeine can produce side effects
such as jitteriness, heart palpitations and sleep disturbances.
"It can reduce pain," Maridakis said, "but you have to apply some
common sense and not go overboard."
(Jan. 2007)