| Literature DB >> 24648779 |
Chris M Bleakley1, François Bieuzen2, Gareth W Davison1, Joseph T Costello3.
Abstract
Whole-body cryotherapy (WBC) involves short exposures to air temperatures below -100°C. WBC is increasingly accessible to athletes, and is purported to enhance recovery after exercise and facilitate rehabilitation postinjury. Our objective was to review the efficacy and effectiveness of WBC using empirical evidence from controlled trials. We found ten relevant reports; the majority were based on small numbers of active athletes aged less than 35 years. Although WBC produces a large temperature gradient for tissue cooling, the relatively poor thermal conductivity of air prevents significant subcutaneous and core body cooling. There is weak evidence from controlled studies that WBC enhances antioxidant capacity and parasympathetic reactivation, and alters inflammatory pathways relevant to sports recovery. A series of small randomized studies found WBC offers improvements in subjective recovery and muscle soreness following metabolic or mechanical overload, but little benefit towards functional recovery. There is evidence from one study only that WBC may assist rehabilitation for adhesive capsulitis of the shoulder. There were no adverse events associated with WBC; however, studies did not seem to undertake active surveillance of predefined adverse events. Until further research is available, athletes should remain cognizant that less expensive modes of cryotherapy, such as local ice-pack application or cold-water immersion, offer comparable physiological and clinical effects to WBC.Entities:
Keywords: cooling; muscle damage; recovery; sport; whole-body cryotherapy
Year: 2014 PMID: 24648779 PMCID: PMC3956737 DOI: 10.2147/OAJSM.S41655
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Open Access J Sports Med ISSN: 1179-1543
Study characteristics
| Study design | Participants | WBC (control) | Outcomes
| ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Higher values in WBC (vs control) | Lower values in WBC (vs control) | No between-group differences | |||
| Mila-Kierzenkowska et al | n=9 Olympic-level kayakers undertaking a 10-day training cycle (all female, mean age 23.9±3.2 years) Cointerventions | n=9 exposed to −120°C to −140°C for 3 minutes; 20 sessions in total: twice per day over a 10-day period (n=9 no WBC) | Catalase TBARS | Superoxide dismutase Glutathione peroxidase | |
| Hausswirth et al | n=9 well-trained runners undertaking a simulated 48-minute trail run (all male, mean age 31.8±6.5 years) | n=9 exposed to −110°C for 3 minutes; 3 sessions in total: immediately, 24, and 48 hours postexercise (n=9 seated rest) | Strength | Pain Tiredness | Creatine kinase |
| Pournot et al | n=11 trained runners undertaking a simulated 48-minute trail run (all male, mean age 31.8±6.5 years) | n=11 exposed to −110°C for 3 minutes; 4 sessions in total: immediately, 24, 48, and 72 hours postexercise | IL-1ra | CRP | IL-1β |
| Ziemann et al | n=12 professional male tennis players undertaking moderate-intensity training for 5 days (all male, mean age 20±2 years control, 23±3 years WBC) | n=6 exposed to −120°C for 3 minutes; 10 sessions in total: twice per day over 5 days (n=6 no WBC) | IL-6 | TNFα | Creatine kinase |
| Miller et al | n=94 healthy participants (46 male, 48 female, mean age 37.5±3.1 years WBC, 37.9±2.1 years control) | n=46 exposed to −130°C for 3 minutes; 10 sessions in total: 1 session per day over 10 days (n=48 no WBC) | Total antioxidant status | ||
| Costello et al | n=36 healthy participants (24 male, 12 female, mean age 20.8±1.2 years) | n=16 exposed to −110°C for 3 minutes; 2 sessions in a single day, 2 hours apart (n=16 exposed to 15°C) | Joint positional sense | ||
| Costello et al | n=18 participants (4 female, 14 male, mean age 21.2±2.1 years) undertaking 100 high-force maximal eccentric contractions of the left knee extensors | n=9 exposed to −110°C for 3 minutes; 2 sessions in a single day, 2 hours apart (n=9 exposed to 15°C) | MVIC | ||
| Fonda and Sarabon | n=11 participants (all male, mean age 26.9±3.8 years) undertaking high-load and eccentric lower-limb exercises | n=11 exposed to −140°C to −195°C for 3 minutes; 6 sessions in total: 1 per day over 6 days (n=11 no WBC) | Pain at rest | Creatine kinase | |
| Hausswirth et al | n=40 healthy participants (all male; mean age 33.9±12.3 years control, 34.6±11.5 years WBC, 33.3±13.8 years PBC) | n=15 exposed to −110°C WBC for 3 minutes; n=15 exposed to −160°C PBC for 3 minutes; (n=10 seated rest) | Norepinephrine Dopamine (WBC) Heart-rate variability | Epinephrine | |
| Ma et al | n=30 participants with adhesive capsulitis of the shoulder joint (24 female, 6 male, mean age 57.2±6.6 years) | n=15 exposed to −110°C for 4 minutes; 24 sessions in total: 2 sessions per day, 3 times per week over 4 weeks plus standard physiotherapy treatment (n=15 standard physiotherapy treatment only) | ROM Function | Pain | |
| Schall et al | n=11 participants (all female, mean age 20.3±1.8 years) undertaking a 3-minute-maximum swimming exercise bout | n=9 exposed to −110°C for 3 minutes; 1 session immediately after exercise (n=9 30 minutes of passive recovery) | Indices of heart-rate variability Metabolic recovery (lactate VO2 peak) Subjective recovery | Performance (subjective judging in synchronized swimming) | |
Notes:
Absolute, relative, and variable error
countermovement jump, power, strength.
Abbreviations: WBC, whole-body cryotherapy; vs, versus; TBARS, thiobarbituric acid reactive substances; IL, interleukin; ra, receptor antagonist; CRP, C-reactive protein; TNF, tumor necrosis factor; MVIC, maximum voluntary isometric contraction; PBC, partial body cryotherapy; ROM, range of movement.
Tissue-temperature reductions by cooling modalities
| Ice pack (10 minutes) | CWI (4–5 minutes, 8°C–10°C) | WBC (3 minutes) | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Skin temperature | 18 | 6.2 (0.5) | 3.5–8.7 |
| 20 | 8.4 (0.7) | 6.7 | |
| 20 | 9.0 (0.8) | 8.1 (0.4) | |
| 20 | 12.1 (1.0) | ||
| 22 | 10.3 (0.6) | ||
| 25.7–26.4 | 13.7 (0.7) | ||
| 19.4 | |||
| Intramuscular temperature (2 cm depth) | 1.76 (1.37) | 1.7 (0.9) | 1.2 (0.7) |
| 2.0 | |||
| 2.0 | |||
| 2.7 | |||
| −3.88 (1.83) | |||
| Core temperature | 0 | 0.2 (0.1) | 0 |
| 0 | 0.4 (0.2) | 0.3 (0.2) | |
Notes:
Data extracted from graphs with permission: Arch Phys Med Rehabil, 2001;82, Jutte LS, Merrick MA, Ingersoll CD, Edwards JE. The relationship between intramuscular temperature, skin temperature, and adipose thickness during cryotherapy and rewarming. 845–850.16 © 2001 with permission from Elsevier; and Merrick MA, Jutte LS, Smith ME. Cold modalities with different thermodynamic properties produce different surface and intramuscular temperatures. J Athl Train. 2003;38:28–33.19
standard deviation not available.
PBC. All values are degrees celsius (means ± standard deviation).
Abbreviations: CWI, cold-water immersion; WBC, whole-body cryotherapy; PBC, partial body cryotherapy (head out).
Figure 1Forest plot of perceived sensation.
Abbreviations: IV, inverse variance; CI, confidence interval; WBC, whole-body cryotherapy.
Figure 2Forest plot of performance outcomes.
Abbreviations: IV, inverse variance CI, confidence interval; WBC, whole-body cryotherapy.