As your body is introduced to a new stimulus or reintroduced to a stimulus, damage occurs to muscle fibers. These small tears may be what causes the decrease in muscle function, tenderness and swelling in certain areas felt 8 to 72 hours after exercise. There is no need to worry. As the muscle fibers begin to repair themselves, you will be able to handle the workload much better. Your body will respond and begin to adapt to the training or activity.
The ability of the body to respond to a new stimulus and adapt to these demands is what allows us to exercise and improve fitness. There are two kinds of responses to physical exercise or training:
- Acute response is an immediate response to exercise, lasting for the duration of the exercise or training session. This could include changes in the cardiovascular, respiratory and muscular systems depending on the intensity and duration.
- Chronic adaptation refers to long term changes, over 6 or more weeks, that occur during exercise and can include improved cardiovascular adaptation, respiratory adaptation, muscle tissue adaptation to aerobic training, cardiac hypertrophy, muscular hypertrophy and increased muscle stores.
Every acute response and chronic adaptation reaction depends on the stimulus you put your body through. Your body will respond differently to activities such as running and cycling (endurance training) than it will from lifting weights or resistance training. Soreness after the first day is usually a sign of DOMS and with good recovery you should be able to do the same movements in a few days with less pain. In the long term you should be able to increase intensity and duration as the body responds and adapts.
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