Why Do Muscles Get Sore, Part 1

By Deb Younkin


As folk age, they start to complain more of pains in their muscles and joints. They seem to stiffen up with age, and such standard activities as bending over for the morning newspaper can make them cringe.

Such agony can grip so intensely they're sure it begins deep in their bones. But the real cause of rigidity and tenderness lies not in the joints or bones, according to research at the Johns Hopkins Medical School, but in the muscles and connecting tissue that move the joints.

The frictional resistance generated by the 2 rubbing surfaces of bones in the joints is unimportant, even in joints ruined by arthritis.

Flexibility is the medical term used to describe the range of a joint's motion from full movement in one particular direction to full movement in the other. The greater the range of movement, the more flexible the joint.

If you bend forward at the hips and touch your toes with your fingertips, you have good pliability, or range of motion of the hip joints. But can you bend over simply with a minimal expenditure of energy and force? The effort required to flex a joint is equally as important as its range of possible motion.

Different factors limit the suppleness and easiness of movement in different joints and muscles. In the elbow and knee, the bony structure itself sets a definite limit. In other joints,eg the ankle, hip, and back, the delicate tissue, muscle and connecting tissue limit the motion range.

The problem of inflexible joints and muscles is very similar to the difficulty of opening and closing a gate because of a seldom used and rusty hinge which has become balky.

Therefore, if people don't continually move their muscles and joints through their full ranges of motion, they lose some of their potential. That is the reason why when these people will try to move a joint after a lengthy period of passivity, they feel discomfort, and that discourages further use

What happens next is that the muscles become shortened with lengthened disuse and produces seizures and cramps that may be annoying and intensely painful. The immobilization of muscles, as researchers have demonstrated with laboratory animals, brings about biochemical changes in the tissue.




About the Author:



Grab The Post URL

URL:
HTML link code:
BB (forum) link code:

Leave a comment

  • Google+
  • 0Blogger
  • Facebook
  • Disqus

0 Response to "Why Do Muscles Get Sore, Part 1"

Post a Comment

comments powered by Disqus