| Literature DB >> 35254558 |
Thomas Chaillou1, Viktorija Treigyte2, Sarah Mosely3, Marius Brazaitis2, Tomas Venckunas2, Arthur J Cheng3.
Abstract
The application of post-exercise cooling (e.g., cold water immersion) and post-exercise heating has become a popular intervention which is assumed to increase functional recovery and may improve chronic training adaptations. However, the effectiveness of such post-exercise temperature manipulations remains uncertain. The aim of this comprehensive review was to analyze the effects of post-exercise cooling and post-exercise heating on neuromuscular function (maximal strength and power), fatigue resistance, exercise performance, and training adaptations. We focused on three exercise types (resistance, endurance and sprint exercises) and included studies investigating (1) the early recovery phase, (2) the late recovery phase, and (3) repeated application of the treatment. We identified that the primary benefit of cooling was in the early recovery phase (< 1 h post-exercise) in improving fatigue resistance in hot ambient conditions following endurance exercise and possibly enhancing the recovery of maximal strength following resistance exercise. The primary negative impact of cooling was with chronic exposure which impaired strength adaptations and decreased fatigue resistance following resistance training intervention (12 weeks and 4-12 weeks, respectively). In the early recovery phase, cooling could also impair sprint performance following sprint exercise and could possibly reduce neuromuscular function immediately after endurance exercise. Generally, no benefits of acute cooling were observed during the 24-72-h recovery period following resistance and endurance exercises, while it could have some benefits on the recovery of neuromuscular function during the 24-48-h recovery period following sprint exercise. Most studies indicated that chronic cooling does not affect endurance training adaptations following 4-6 week training intervention. We identified limited data employing heating as a recovery intervention, but some indications suggest promise in its application to endurance and sprint exercise.Entities:
Keywords: Cooling; Fatigue; Heating; Muscle function; Physical performance; Recovery; Temperature; Training; Water immersion
Year: 2022 PMID: 35254558 PMCID: PMC8901468 DOI: 10.1186/s40798-022-00428-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sports Med Open ISSN: 2198-9761
Effects of cooling and heating following resistance exercise on functional recovery and training adaptations
| References | Participants | Exercise protocol | Post-exercise recovery method | Main finding | Main effect |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Argus et al. [ | Recreationally trained subjects (13 M, 26 Y) | 3 × 5 deadlifts at 6 RM load + 3 × 10 back squats, bench presses, barbell lunges, and barbell bent-over rows at 11 RM load | Crossover design: Immersion up to the neck: CWI: 15 °C for 14 min. CWT: 1 min at 38 °C and 1 min at 38 °C for 14 min. CON: 20 min PR ( | Similar MVIC KE torque and jump performance (CMJ) in the 3 conditions | Ø of CWI and CWT on neuromuscular function |
| Gonzalez et al. [ | Recreationally trained subjects (40 M, 22 Y) | 4x ~ 10 squats, deadlifts, and barbell split squats at 70–80% 1RM | 2 groups*: CWI: 10–12 °C for 10 min CON: 10 min PR. *exclusion of two groups (nutrition supplementation with/without CWI) | Similar number of reps and average power at 80% 1RM (squat) over four sets in CWI and CON groups | Ø of CWI on fatigue resistance |
| Jajtner et al. [ | Recreationally trained subjects (30 M) | 4x ~ 10 squats, deadlifts, and barbell split squats at 70–80% 1RM | 2 groups*: CWI: 10–12 °C for 10 min. CON: 10 min PR. *exclusion of one group (neuromuscular electrical stimulation) | Similar number of reps and average power at 80% 1RM (squat) over four sets in CWI and CON groups | Ø of CWI on fatigue resistance |
| Pointon et al. [ | Recreationally trained subjects (10 M, 21 Y) | 6 × 25 maximal CONC (60°/s)/ECC (120°/s) single leg isokinetic KE. | Crossover design: CWC: ice cuff (exercised leg) for 20 min. CON: 20 min PR | Similar MVIC KE torque, potentiated twitch torque and VA in CWC and CON Similar voluntary EMG (RMS) and M-wave amplitude in CWC and CON | Ø of CWI on neuromuscular function |
| Roberts et al. [ | Recreationally trained subjects (10 M, 21 Y) | 6 × squats to failure at 8–12 RM loads. 3 × 12 walking dumbbell lunges at 40% body mass load 3 × 12 countermovement DJ | Crossover design. CWI: 10 °C for 10 min (up to the clavicle). CON: active recovery cycling at ~ 45 W for 10 min | Similar maximal isometric squat force and jump performance (SJ, CMJ) in CWI and CON Greater recovery of average and total load lifted during 6 × 10 squats at 80% 1RM in CWI versus CON | |
| Roberts et al. [ | Recreationally trained subjects (10 M, 21 Y) | 10 × 20 maximal isokinetic concentric KE at 90°/s. | Crossover design: CWI: 10 °C for 10 min. CON: active recovery cycling at ~ 41 W for 10 min | Reduced MVIC KE torque Similar fatigue resistance (50 reps isokinetic KE at 90°/s) | |
| Wilson et al. [ | Recreationally trained subjects (24 M, 25 Y) | 80% 1RM: 4 × 6 back squats. 4 × 8 split squats, hip thrusts, Romanian deadlifts | 2 groups: CWI: 10 °C for 10 min. PLA: 10 min PR with ingestion of a cornstarch pill (placebo). *exclusion of one group (cryotherapy chamber) | Lower recovery of MVIC KE torque Lower recovery of maximal isometric squat force in CWI versus PLA groups Lower recovery of maximal isokinetic KE torque (60°/s) Lower recovery of CMJ performance | |
| Fröhlich et al. [ | Recreationally trained subjects (17 M, 23 Y) | 5-wk RT (# session/wk not stated): 3 × 8–12 CONC and ECC knee flexions at 75–80% 1RM | Immersion after each session, contralateral limb-control design: CWI: 3 × 4 min at 12 °C with 30 s rest. CON (leg 2): PR | Similar increase in maximal force (1RM, KF) in CWI and CON. Lower increase in fatigue resistance (12RM, KF) in CWI versus CON | Ø of CWI on maximal strength. ↓ of CWI on fatigue resistance |
| Fyfe et al. [ | Recreationally trained subjects (16 M, 25 Y) | 7-wk RT (3 sessions/wk): 3 × 12-RM or 20-RM (20 upper and lower body and trunk Ex) | Immersion after each session, 2 groups: CWI (up to the sternum): 10 °C for 15 min. CON: 15 min PR | Similar increase in maximal force (1RM bench press and leg press) in both groups. Similar peak SJ force and push-up force in both groups after training. Smaller gain in peak CMJ force in CWI versus CON groups | Ø of CWI on maximal strength. Ballistic Ex: Ø (SJ and push-up) or ↓ (CMJ) of CWI |
| Ohnishi et al. [ | Recreationally trained subjects (16 M, 21 Y) | 6-wk RT (3 sessions/wk): 3 × 8-RM handgrip Ex | Unilateral immersion of the elbow joint and lower arm after each session. 2 groups. CWI: 10 °C for 20 min. CON: PR | No improvement of MVIC handgrip force in both CWI and CON groups. Improvement of fatigue resistance (number of reps at 30% RM with a pace of 30 reps/min) lower (tendency) in CWI versus CON | Ø of CWI on maximal strength. Potential ↓ of CWI on fatigue resistance |
| Poppendieck et al. [ | Recreationally trained subjects (9 M and 2 F, 25 Y) | 8-wk RT (3 sessions/wk): 3 × 10-RM (leg press, KF and KE) | Immersion after each session, crossover design (8-wk washout period): CWI (up to the neck): 14–15 °C for 10 min. CON: 10 min PR | No improvement of maximal force (1-RM leg press) and jump performance (CMJ) in both CWI and CON | Ø of CWI on maximal strength and jump performance |
| Roberts et al. [ | Recreationally trained subjects (24 M, 21 Y) | 12-wk RT (2 sessions/wk): 3–6 × 8–12 reps at 8–12 RM loads (leg press, KE, KF) and 3 × 10–18 reps (walking lunges, plyometrics). | Immersion after each session, 2 groups: CWI: 10 °C for 10 min. CON: 10 min active recovery cycling at ~ 60 W | Lower increase in maximal force (leg press force, KE force and MVIC KE torque) in CWI versus CON groups. No improvement of maximal isokinetic KE torque (90°/s) in both groups. Fatigue resistance (50 reps isokinetic KE at 90°/s): increase after training only in CON group over 1–25 reps | ↓ of CWI on maximal force (except isokinetic torque). ↓ of CWI on fatigue resistance |
| Stadnyk et al. [ | Recreationally trained subjects (5 M and 5 F, 21 Y) | 12-wk RT (2–3 sessions/wk): 4 × 8 reps at 70% 1RM (ECC and CONC single limb KE) | Contralateral limb-control design: Heat (heat pad wrapped around the thigh): ~ 40 °C during and for 20 min after each session. CON: PR | Similar increase in peak and mean isokinetic torque (CONC KE at 90°/s) in heat and CON legs | Ø of Heat on muscle strength |
| Yamane et al. [ | Contralateral limb-control design: Sedentary subjects (7 M + 4 F, 20 Y) 2 groups (unilateral immersion): Sedentary subjects (16 M, 21 Y) | 4-wk RT (3 sessions/wk): 3 × 8 isotonic handgrip Ex at 70–80% 1RM. | Unilateral immersion of the elbow joint and lower arm after each session. Contralateral limb-control design: CWI: 10 °C for 20 min. CON: PR. 2 groups. CWI: 10 °C for 20 min. CON: PR | Similar increase in MVIC handgrip force in CWI and CON (both experiments). Improvement of fatigue resistance (number of reps at 30% RM with a pace of 30 reps/min) lower in CWI versus CON (contralateral limb-control design), or similar in CWI and CON groups (2 groups) | Ø of CWI on maximal strength. Ø or ↓ of CWI on fatigue resistance |
| Yamane et al. [ | Recreationally trained subjects (14 M, 20 Y) | 6-wk RT (3 sessions/wk): 5 × 8 wrist-flexion at 70–80% 1RM. | Unilateral immersion of the elbow joint and lower arm after each session. 2 groups. CWI: 10 °C for 20 min. CON: PR | Improvement of MVIC wrist flexor force lower in CWI versus CON. Improvement of fatigue resistance (number of reps at 35% RM with a pace of 30 reps/min) lower (tendency) in CWI versus CON | ↓ of CWI on maximal strength and fatigue resistance |
Water immersion was applied up to the waist/lower part of the trunk, unless stated otherwise. Text highlighted in italic describes the ambient condition, when stated (air temperature and relative humidity)
Text in bold describes the specific time points
CMJ countermovement jump, CON control, CONC concentric, CWC cold water cuff, CWI cold water immersion, DJ drop jump, ECC eccentric, Ex exercise, F female, KE knee extension, KF knee flexion, M male, MVIC maximal voluntary isometric contraction, PLA placebo, PR passive recovery, reps repetitions, RH relative humidity, RM repetition maximum, RMS root mean square, SJ squat jump, RT resistance training, VA voluntary activation assessed via interpolated twitch technique, wk week, Y year, ↑ positive effect, ↓ negative effect, Ø no effect
*Some groups were excluded because they were not relevant for the purpose of the review
Effects of cooling and heating following endurance exercise on functional recovery and training adaptations
| References | Participants | Exercise protocol | Post-exercise recovery method | Main finding | Main effect |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Brophy-Williams et al. [ | Well trained team-sport players (8 M, 21 Y) | Running: 8 × 3 min at 90% Vmax. | Crossover design: CWI: 15 °C for 15 min immediately or 3 h post-Ex. CON: 15 min PR immediately after Ex | Higher number of shuttles completed (Yo-Yo intermittent recovery test) | |
| Chauvineau et al. [ | Well trained runners (12 M, 28 Y) | Running: Simulated trail run for 48 min | Crossover design: CWI (whole body including the head): 13 °C for 10 min. CWI (up to the waist): 13 °C for 10 min. CON: 10 min PR ( | Similar recovery of MVIC KE torque and CMJ performance | Ø of CWI on maximal strength and jump performance |
| Cheng et al. [ | Recreationally trained subjects (4 F and 1 M, 26 Y) | Arm cycling: 3 × 5 min (all-out) + 4 × 15 min at 50% VO2max | Crossover design. Use of water-perfused arm cuff: Ice-chilled for 2 h. Heated at 38 °C for 2 h. CON: heated at ~ 33 °C for 2 h | Better maintenance of mean PO (3 × 5 min all-out arm cycling) | |
| Crampton et al. [ | Recreationally trained triathletes (9 M, 30 Y) | Cycling: 5 min at 50% VO2max + 5 min at 60% VO2max + 80% VO2max until exhaustion. | Crossover design: CWI: 15 °C for 30 min. TWI: 34 °C for 30 min. CWT: 2,5 min at 8 °C and 2,5 min at 40 °C for 30 min. CON: 30 min active recovery | Greater time to failure during intense cycling (80% VO2max) | |
| Dantas et al. [ | Recreationally trained runners (30 M, 32 Y) | Running: 10-km TT run. | 3 groups: CWI: 10 °C for 10 min. TWI: 30 °C for 10 min. CON: 10 min PR | Similar jump performance (triple hop distance) and strength (maximal voluntary concentric KE at 60°/s) in the 3 groups | Ø of CWI on jump performance and maximal strength ( |
| De Paula et al. [ | Recreationally trained subjects (9 M, 24 Y) | Running: Unilateral ECC KF EX + 90 min running (70% VO2peak). | Crossover design: CWI: 15 °C for 15 min. HWI: 38 °C for 15 min. TWI: 28 °C for 15 min. CON: 15 min PR | Similar 5-km running time | Ø of CWI and HWI on endurance performance |
| De Pauw et al. [ | Trained subjects (9 M, 22 Y) | Cycling: 60 min at 55% Pmax + 30 min TT (Ex1). 60 min recovery. TT to perform a work equivalent to 12 min at 85% Pmax (Ex2). | Crossover design: Immersion starting directly after Ex1: CWI (up to the sternum): 15 °C for 15 min CON: 15 min PR *exclusion of one condition (active recovery) | Similar cycling performance of Ex2 in the 2 conditions Gradual decline of PO after the onset of Ex2 in PR, but not in CWI | Ø of CWI on subsequent ( |
| Dunne et al. [ | Well trained subjects (9 M, 29 Y) | Running: 5 min at 50% Vmax + 5 min at 60% Vmax + 90% Vmax until exhaustion. | Crossover design: CWI: 15 °C or 8 °C for 15 min. CON: 15 min PR | Higher time to failure at 90% Vmax | |
| McCarthy et al. [ | Recreationally trained subjects (15 M, 21 Y) | Cycling: 12 min at 85% VT + 30 s/30 s interval bouts (90% peak PO/40% peak PO) to exhaustion. | Crossover design: CWI: 8 °C for 5 or 10 min. CON: PR | Higher time to failure (30 s/30 s interval bouts at 90% peak PO/40% peak PO) | |
| Peiffer et al. [ | Well trained cyclists (10 M, 27 Y) | Cycling: 90 min at 80% VT2 + 16.1 km TT. | Crossover design: CWI: 14.3 °C for 20 min. CON: 20 min PR | Lower MVIC and SMVIC KE torques | |
| Peiffer et al. [ | Well trained cyclists (12 M, 29 Y) | Cycling: Time-to-exhaustion test at VT1. | Crossover design. Immersion starting 25 min post-Ex: CWI: 14.3 °C for 5, 10 or 20 min. CON: 20 min PR | Similar MVIC KE torque and isokinetic KE torque (240°/s) | Ø of CWI on maximal strength |
| Peiffer et al. [ | Well trained cyclists (10 M, 35 Y) | Cycling: 25 min at 65% VO2max + 4-km TT. | Crossover design: Immersion starting 25 min post-Ex: CWI: 14 °C for 5 min CON: PR | Greater 4-km TT performance (performed after 25 min at 65% VO2max) ( | |
| Rowsell et al. [ | Well trained triathletes (7 M, 29 Y) | Running: 7 × 5 min at 105% anaerobic threshold. | Crossover design. Immersion starting 10 min post-Ex: CWI: 5 × 1 min at 10 °C, with 1 min rest. TWI: 5 × 1 min at 34 °C, 1 min rest | Similar mean PO (5-min maximal cycling effort + 6 × 5 min freely paced cycling) | Ø of CWI on endurance performance |
| Stanley et al. [ | Well trained cyclists (18 M, 27 Y) | Cycling: 60 min including 8 × 4 min at 80% peak PO. | Crossover design. Immersion starting 20 min after Ex, up to the neck: CWI: 14 °C for 5 min. CWT: 1 min at 14 °C and 2 min at 35 °C for 10 min. CON: 10 min PR | Similar TT performance (~ 14 min cycling) | Ø of CWI and CWT on endurance performance |
| Stenson et al. [ | Well trained runners and triathletes (9 M, 36 Y) | Running: 8 × 1200 m at 75% VO2peak | Crossover design: CWI: 12 °C for 12 min. CON: 12 min PR | Similar 5-km running TT performance | Ø of CWI on endurance performance |
| Vaile et al. [ | Well trained cyclists (10 M, 32 Y) | Cycling: 15 min at 75% peak PO + 15 min TT. | Crossover design: Immersion up to the neck: CWI intermittent: 5 × 1 min at 10 °C, 15 °C or 20 °C, with 2 min rest. CWI: 20 °C for 15 min. CON: active recovery | Reduced cycling performance (15 min at 75% peak PO + 15 min TT in heat: | |
| Vaile et al. [ | Well trained cyclists (10 M, 34 Y) | Cycling: 15 min at 75% peak PO + 15 min TT. | Crossover design: Immersion up to the neck: CWI intermittent: 5 × 1 min at 10 °C, 15 °C or 20 °C, with 2 min rest. CWI: 20 °C for 15 min. CON: active recovery | Reduced cycling performance (15 min at 75% peak PO + 15 min TT in heat: | |
| Versey et al. [ | Well trained cyclists (11 M, 32 Y) | Cycling: 75 min including 6 sets of 5 × 15 s sprints interspaced with 15–45 s rest + 3 × 5 min TT (Ex1). 2-h recovery. Ex2: same as Ex1. | Crossover design. Immersion up to the neck, starting 10 min after Ex1: CWT: 1 min at 38 °C and 1 min at 15 °C for 6, 12 or 18 min. CON: 20 min PR ( | Greater cycling TT performance and cycling sprint performance (total work) in CWT (6 min) versus CON. Greater cycling sprint performance (total work and peak power) in CWT (12 min) versus CON | |
| Versey et al. [ | Well trained runners (10 M, 37 Y) | Running: 15-min warm-up including 3 × 100 m + 3-km TT + 8 × 400 m + 7-min warm-down (Ex1) 2-h recovery. 15-min warm-up including 3 × 100 m + 3-km TT + 7-min warm-down (Ex2). | Crossover design. Immersion up to the neck, starting 10 min after Ex1: CWT: 1 min at 38 °C and 1 min at 15 °C for 6, 12 or 18 min. CON: 20 min PR ( | Slightly faster 3-km running TT of Ex2 in CWT (6 min only) versus CON | Slight |
| Wilson et al. [ | Recreationally trained runners (31 M, 40 Y) | Running: Competitive marathon (42,2 km) | 2 groups: CWI: 8 °C for 10 min. PLA: PR with ingestion of fruit flavored drink (placebo). *exclusion of one group (cryotherapy chamber) | Similar recovery of peak isokinetic KE torque (60°/s), MVIC KE force and DJ performance (reactive strength index) | Ø of CWI on maximal force and jump performance |
| Wiewelhove et al. [ | Recreational runners (46 M, 30 Y) | Running: Competitive half-marathon (21,1 km) | 2 groups: CWI: 15 °C for 15 min. CON: 15 min PR. *exclusion of two groups (active recovery and massage therapy) | Moderate harmful effect of CWI versus CON on CMJ performance | Potential |
| Yeargin et al. [ | Well-trained runners (12 M and 3 F, 28 Y) | Running: 90 min of moderately intense running. | Crossover design: CWI: 14 °C or 5 °C for 12 min CON: PR in hot air condition | Greater 3.2-km TT running performance | |
| Aguiar et al. [ | Recreationally trained subjects (17 M, 23 Y) | 4-wk endurance cycling training (12 HIIE sessions): 8–13 × 60 s at 90–110% peak PO with 75 s rest | Immersion after each training session, 2 groups: CWI: 10 °C for 15 min. CON: PR | Similar improvement of 15 km- cycling TT performance in CWI and CON groups | Ø of CWI on the improvement of endurance performance |
| Halson et al. [ | Well trained subjects (21 M, 20 Y) | 39 day- endurance cycling training (1–2 sessions/day): Low-moderate intensity road rides + HIIE sessions | Immersion 4x /wk, 2 groups: CWI: 15 °C for 15 min (up to the neck). CON: PR | Unclear greater increase in 2 × 4-min maximal cycling effort in CWI versus CON groups. Likely higher fatigue resistance (mean power of 2nd versus 1st 4-min maximal effort) in CWI versus CON groups. Likely greater increase in mean sprint PO in CWI versus CON groups. No between-group difference in 10 min TT performance | Unclear or likely |
| Méline et al. [ | Elite short-track speed skaters (3 F and 3 M, 21 Y) | 4-wk training (18 h/wk): ice skating, running, cycling, roller skating, fitness, RE) | Immersion after the last session of the day, crossover design. HWI: 40 °C for 20 min. CON: 20 min PR ( | MVIC KE force increased in HWI and decreased in PR. No effect of training on SJ/CMJ performance, sprint peak PO, 1-min continuous CMJ, VT and time to exhaustion during incremental test in HWI and PR. Tendency to increased VO2max only in HWI. Increase ice-skating sprint performance similar in HWI and PR | ↑ of HWI on maximal strength and VO2max (tendency). Ø of HWI on other aerobic and anaerobic parameters |
| Vaile et al. [ | Well trained cyclists (12 M, 32 Y) | 5 consecutive training days: 105 min cycling (sprints + TT) | Immersion up to the neck after each session, crossover design: CWI: 15 °C for 14 min. HWI: 38 °C for 14 min. CWT: 1 min at 15 °C and 1 min at 38 °C for 14 min. CON: PR | Greater sprint performance in CWI and CWT versus CON from the 4th day, no effect of HWI. Greater TT performance in HWI (only on day 2), CWI and CWT versus CON | ↑ of CWI and CWT on maintenance of high-intensity cycling performance |
| Yamane et al. [ | Recreationally trained subjects (6 M, 20 Y) | 4-wk cycling training (3–4 sessions/wk) 5 min at 35% VO2max + 25 min at 70% VO2max. | Unilateral immersion after each session: CWI: 2 × 20 min at 5 °C (thigh and lower leg) with 30 min rest. CON: PR | Improvement of endurance performance (time of the one-leg incremental test) and VO2max only in the CON leg | |
| Zurawlew et al. [ | Recreationally trained subjects (17 M, 23 Y) | 6 consecutive training days: 40 min running at 65% VO2max. | Immersion after each session, 2 groups: HWI group: 40 °C for 40 min. TWI group: 34 °C for 40 min | Reduced 5-km running time performed in heat ( No changes in 5-km running time performed in temperate environment ( | |
Water immersion was applied up to the waist/lower part of the trunk, unless stated otherwise. Text highlighted in italic describes the ambient condition, when stated (air temperature and relative humidity)
Text in bold describes the specific time points
CMJ countermovement jump, CON control, CWI cold water immersion, CWT contrast water therapy, DJ drop jump, ECC eccentric, Ex exercise, F female, HIIE high intensity interval exercise, HWI hot water immersion, M male, KE knee extension, KF knee flexion, MVIC maximal voluntary isometric contraction, PO power output, PR passive recovery, SMVIC maximal voluntary isometric contraction with superimposed electrical stimulation, RE resistance exercise, RH relative humidity, TT time trial, TWI thermoneutral water immersion, Vmax/Pmax: maximal speed/power obtained during a maximal incremental test (VO2max test), VO oxygen uptake, VT ventilatory threshold, wk week, ↑ positive effect, Y year, ↓ negative effect, Ø no effect
*Some groups/conditions were excluded because they were not relevant for the purpose of the review
Effects of cooling and heating following sprint exercise on functional recovery and training adaptations
| References | Participants | Exercise protocol | Post-exercise recovery method | Main finding | Main effect |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Broatch et al. [ | Recreationally trained subjects (30 M, 24 Y) | Cycling: 4 × 30 s all-out with 4 min rest | 3 groups: CWI: 10.3 °C for 15 min. TWI: 34.7 °C for 15 min. TWP: 34.7 °C for 15 min with skin cleanser added to the water (placebo) | Greater peak MVIC KE torque Greater average MVIC KE torque | Ø of CWI (versus TWP) on maximal strength |
| Buchheit et al. [ | Recreationally trained cyclists (10 M, 29 Y) | Cycling: 2 × 1-km TT with 20 min rest. | Crossover design. Immersion after the 1st 1-km TT: CWI: 14 °C for 5 min. CON: 5 min PR | -Similar cycling time and mean cycling PO during the 2nd 1-km TT in CWI and CON | Ø of CWI on subsequent ( |
| Crampton et al. [ | Recreationally trained subjects (8 M, 25 Y) | Cycling: 3 × 30 s all-out cycling bouts with 4 min rest (Ex1). 35 min recovery. 3 × 30 s all-out cycling bouts with 4 min rest (Ex2). | Crossover design. Immersion after Ex1: CWT1/1: 2.5 min at 8 °C and 2.5 min at 40 °C for 30 min. CWT1/4: 1 min at 8 °C and 4 min at 40 °C for 30 min. CON: 30 min PR | Greater peak PO of Ex2 in CWT1/4 versus PR, with no differences between CWT1/1 and CON. Reduced total work during Ex2 in CON but not CWT conditions | ↑ of CWT on subsequent ( |
| Crampton et al. [ | Well trained cyclists (8 M, 25 Y) | Cycling: 3 × 30 s all-out cycling bouts with 4 min rest (Ex1). 40 min recovery. 3 × 30 s all-out cycling bouts with 4 min rest (Ex2) | Crossover design. Immersion after Ex1: CWI: 15 °C for 30 min. CON: active recovery (arm Ex) for 30 min. CWI (15 °C) with active recovery (arm Ex) for 30 min. TWI (34 °C) with active recovery (arm Ex) for 30 min | Lower mean PO of Ex2 in CWI versus the other trials. Mean PO of Ex2 only preserved in arm Ex and TWI with arm Ex. Lower peak PO of the 1st sprint of Ex2 in CWI and CWI with active recovery versus the two other trials. Peak PO of Ex2 only preserved in TWI with active recovery | ↓ of CWI on subsequent ( |
| Crowe et al. [ | Recreationally trained subjects (13 M, 4 F, 21 Y) | Cycling: 2 × 30 s all-out cycling bouts with 60 min rest | Crossover design. Immersion 10 min after the 1st sprint: CWI: 13–14 °C for 15 min. CON: 15 min PR | Reduced peak PO and total work during the 2nd 30-s all-out cycling sprint in CWI but not CON conditions | ↓ of CWI on subsequent ( |
| Hurrie and Giesbrecht. [ | Well trained subjects (6 M, 3 F, 32 Y) | Cycling: 3 × 30 s all-out cycling bouts with 4 min rest (Ex1). 40 min recovery. 3 × 30 s all-out cycling bouts with 4 min rest (Ex2). | Crossover design. Immersion after Ex1: CWI (15 °C) with active recovery (cycling) for 30 min. TWI (34 °C) with active recovery (cycling) for 30 min. TWI (34 °C) for 30 min | Reduced mean and peak PO during Ex2 versus Ex1 only observed in CWI with active recovery | ↓ of CWI with active recovery on subsequent ( |
| Kim and Hurr. [ | Recreationally trained subjects (11 M) | Cycling: 2 × 30 s all-out cycling bouts with 10 min rest | Crossover design. Recovery intervention after the 1st sprint: Leg cooling suit for 10 min. CON: 10 min PR | Lower peak PO during the 2nd 30-s cycling sprint in cooling versus CON. Lower mean frequency (EMG) during the 1st 10 s of the 2nd sprint in cooling versus CON | ↓ of leg cooling on subsequent ( |
| Parouty et al. [ | Well trained swimmers (5 M, 5 F, 19 Y) | Swimming: 2 × 100 m sprints with 30 min rest | Crossover design. Immersion 5 min after the 1st sprint: CWI: 14–15 °C for 5 min (up to the neck). CON: 5 min PR | Higher swimming time during the 2nd 100 m sprint in CWI versus CON | ↓ of CWI on subsequent ( |
| Schnieep et al. [ | Well trained cyclists (10 M, 30 Y) | Cycling: 2 × 30 s all-out cycling bouts with 15 min rest | Crossover design. Immersion immediately after the 1st sprint: CWI: 12 °C for 15 min. CON: 15 min PR | Greater decline in mean and peak PO for CWI versus CON during the 2nd 30-s all-out cycling sprint | ↓ of CWI on subsequent ( |
| White et al. [ | Recreationally trained subjects (8 M, 24 Y) | Running: 12 × 120 m maximal sprints with 2.5 min rest | Cross over design: CWI: 10 °C for 10 or 30 min. CWI: 20 °C for 10 or 30 min. CON: 45 min PR | Similar recovery of SJ performance in CWI conditions and CON Similar reduction of DJ performance | Ø of CWI on SJ performance |
| Yoshimura et al. [ | Well trained subjects (15 M, 19 Y) | Cycling: 2x (10 min at 50%VO2max + 30 s all-out) with 20 min rest. | Cross over design: CWI: 20 °C for 20 min (up to the neck). CON: 20 min PR. *exclusion of one condition (CWI with CO2) | Similar decline in mean PO in CWI and CON during the 2nd 30-s all-out cycling sprint | Ø of CWI on subsequent ( |
| Broatch et al. [ | Recreationally trained subjects (16 M, 25 Y) | 6-wk cycling training (3 sessions/wk): 4–6 × 30 s all-out bouts with 4 min rest | Immersion after each session, 2 groups: CWI: 10 °C for 15 min. CON: PR | Similar improvement of 2 km-TT and 20 km-TT performance, peak PO and VO2peak (incremental test) in CWI and CON groups | Ø of CWI on endurance performance |
Water immersion was applied up to the waist/lower part of the trunk, unless stated otherwise. Text highlighted in italic describes the ambient condition, when stated (air temperature and relative humidity)
Text in bold describes the specific time points
CMJ countermovement jump, CON control, CWI cold water immersion, DJ drop jump, Ex exercise, F female, KE knee extension, KF knee flexion, M male, MVIC maximal voluntary isometric contraction, PO power output, PR passive recovery, RH relative humidity, SJ squat jump, TT time trial, TWI thermoneutral water immersion, TWP thermoneutral water immersion with placebo, VO oxygen uptake, wk week, Y year, ↑ positive effect, ↓ negative effect, Ø no effect
*One condition was excluded because it was not relevant for the purpose of the review
Fig. 1Main effects of post-exercise cooling and heating on functional recovery and training adaptations. The blue boxes illustrate the specific effects of cooling, and the red boxes illustrate the specific effects of heating. These effects are based on the main conclusions drawn from the literature research and from Tables 1, 2, and 3