Ice bath
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Ice bath

Updated: 7 Sep 2020
Ice bath
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healthline.com
In sports therapy, an ice bath, or sometimes cold-water immersion or cold therapy, is a training regimen usually following a period of intense exercise While it is becoming increasingly popular and accepted among athletes in a variety of sports, the method is controversial, with a risk of hypothermia, with the possibility of shock leading to sudden death. Many athletes have used cold water immersion after an intense exercise workout in the belief that it speeds up bodily recovery; however, the internal physical processes are not well understood and remain elusive. Generally research into the health effects of cold water immersion as part of an athletic training regimen is inconclusive, with some studies suggesting a mild benefit such as reducing muscle damage and discomfort and alleviating delayed onset muscle soreness, with other studies suggesting that cold water immersion may slow muscle growth and interfere with an overall training regimen.
Model
24 followers
71 FLIISTs
over 4 years ago
My husband is much more into steam, sauna and cold plunges than I am. Guess which one of those three I really don’t like? The cold plunge hurts! But when you come out, you’re like, ‘woah!’ I feel re-born. It is tough to do though.
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Entrepreneur
12 followers
150 FLIISTs
over 4 years ago
“Nothing has given me more mental confidence than being able to go straight from room temperature into the cold,” Dorsey says. ”[E]specially in the morning, going into an ice-cold tub from just being warm in bed is — it just unlocks this thing in my mind and I feel like if I can will myself to do that thing that seems so small but hurts so much, I can do nearly anything.”
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