To Ice or Not to Ice? Icing Can Promote Muscle Regeneration After Mild Injury

Applying ice to a muscle injury is a widespread first-aid treatment, but exactly what effect does this have on the muscle regeneration and does it really help? Cumulative research by a multi-institutional Japanese research collaboration reveals that "to ice or not to ice" may depend on the degree of muscle injury.

In their latest research, the group consisting of Associate Professor Arakawa Takamitsu and Master's student Nagata Itsuki (from Kobe University's Graduate School of Health Sciences), and Assistant Professor Kawashima Masato (Kawasaki University of Medical Welfare) and colleagues have shown that applying ice to muscle damage in a small percentage of muscle fibers in rats promotes muscle regeneration. This is believed to be the first study in the world to show benefits of icing on muscle repair. In conjunction with their previous study on serious muscle injuries, it is hoped that these results can be used as a basis for more accurate guidelines on whether or not to ice such injuries.

These research findings were first reported in the American Journal of Physiology-Regulatory, Integrative and Comparative Physiology on March 6, 2023.

Research Background

"RICE treatment" is a common approach for treating the acute phase of sports injuries. This acronym stands for Rest, Ice, Compression and Elevation and it is also often used in physical education in schools and even clinical settings. There are a variety of subsequent steps that can be taken to treat the injury afterwards, yet opinions vary as to whether or not icing should be applied. However, there is a lack of evidence on the benefits of icing.

The current research team has conducted many experiments to investigate the effectiveness of icing, which led them to publish their previous findings. However, no previous animal experiments have indicated that icing promotes muscle regeneration.

In this study, the researchers focused on altering the severity of the muscle injury in the experiments. The reasoning behind this was that the majority of sports-related muscle injuries are limited; in other words less than 10% of the overall number of muscle fibers (myofibers) are damaged and necrotized. However, all animal experiments up until now had looked at more serious injuries where over 20% of the myofibers were damaged.

Thus, the team devised an animal model for mild muscle injuries, and experimented with applying ice after injury using a similar method as before.

Research Findings

After the animal was anesthetized, the muscle was exposed and clamped between forceps to induce injury. In their previous experiments, the researchers attached a 500g weight to the forceps, which induced an injury that affected 20% of the total number of fibers in the muscle. In the present study, they tried attaching a 250g weight to the forceps and demonstrated that this could be used to consistently injure 4% of the fibers (Figure 1). This is similar to the degree of injury that often occurs after sports activities such as vigorous exercise or long-distance marathon running.

Icing was carried out by placing polyethylene bags of ice on surface of the skin over three 30-minute sessions per day, with each session being 1.5 hours apart. This was continued until two days after injury for a total of nine icing sessions (i.e. immediately after injury = three sessions, one day after injury = three sessions, two days after injury = three sessions). The icing method was the same as in the previously reported study.

Observations of muscles that were regenerating in the icing group and no-icing group two weeks after injury revealed significant differences in the size of regenerating fibers in cross-sections. In other words, this demonstrated the possibility that

Macrophages are immune cells that orchestrate the reparative process of injured muscle. Pro-inflammatory macrophages accumulate in the damaged site soon after injury occurs, however they express an inducible nitric oxide synthase (iNOS), which has a disadvantageous side-effect of expanding the injury's size. The results of this team's experiments revealed that icing after mild muscle injury reduces the accumulation of iNOS-expressing pro-inflammatory macrophages. By causing this phenomenon, icing prevents the expansion of muscle injury size.

In other words, icing attenuates the recruitment of pro-inflammatory macrophages in the injury site. This was also reported in their previous study, demonstrating that this is an effect caused by icing regardless of whether the muscle injury is serious or mild. In the previous study, icing was found to delay the regeneration of muscle after a serious injury that destroyed many fibers because the pro-inflammatory macrophages were unable to sufficiently phagocytose the injured muscle. In contrast to this, the current study shows that icing has a positive effect when the muscle injury is mild because it prevents the secondary expansion of the muscle injury caused by the pro-inflammatory macrophages. It suggests that this particular effect of icing is connected to the promotion of muscle regeneration.

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