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The Pain & Therapy Bibliography, Record ID 1529 {show all records}

Effects of stretching before and after exercising on muscle soreness and risk of injury: systematic review


added Sep 29, 06, updated Jun 27, 11
most detailed summaries by Paul Ingraham

summary

This paper and Shrier are literature reviews: that is, they are reviews of many other studies. They both show many contradictions in existing research, but they both conclude that there is no convincing evidence that stretching is useful. For good, readable summaries of this paper, see MacAuley or Stretching ‘fails to stop muscle injury’.

item type
article in a journal
authors
Rob D Herbert and Michael Gabriel
full text
http://bmj.bmjjournals.com/cgi/content/full/325/7362/468
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journal
British Medical Journal
year
2002
month
August
volume
325
number
7362
page
468

abstract

OBJECTIVE: To determine the effects of stretching before and after exercising on muscle soreness after exercise, risk of injury, and athletic performance.

METHOD: Systematic review.

DATA SOURCES: Randomised or quasi-randomised studies identified by searching Medline, Embase, CINAHL, SPORTDiscus, and PEDro, and by recursive checking of bibliographies.

MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Muscle soreness, incidence of injury, athletic performance.

RESULTS: Five studies, all of moderate quality, reported sufficient data on the effects of stretching on muscle soreness to be included in the analysis. Outcomes seemed homogeneous. Stretching produced small and statistically non-significant reductions in muscle soreness. The pooled estimate of reduction in muscle soreness 24 hours after exercising was only 0.9 mm on a 100 mm scale (95% confidence interval 2.6 mm to 4.4 mm). Data from two studies on army recruits in military training show that muscle stretching before exercising does not produce useful reductions in injury risk (pooled hazard ratio 0.95, 0.78 to 1.16).

CONCLUSIONS: Stretching before or after exercising does not confer protection from muscle soreness. Stretching before exercising does not seem to confer a practically useful reduction in the risk of injury, but the generality of this finding needs testing. Insufficient research has been done with which to determine the effects of stretching on sporting performance.

related content

One article on SaveYourself.ca cites this paper as a source: