To quote a study on inflammatory responses published in the journal Oncotarget, ‘At the tissue level, inflammation is characterised by redness, swelling, heat, pain, and loss of tissue function… [it] is the immune system’s response to harmful stimuli… and acts by removing injurious stimuli and initiating the healing process.’
It is, therefore, a defence mechanism in which white blood cells flood an affected area to aid healing, whether for a swollen ankle or inflammation resulting from exercise – the kind associated with DOMS (delayed onset muscle soreness). So, should we really be looking to curb it with ibuprofen or RICE (rest, ice, compression, elevation)?
Probably not, says a paper entitled ‘Ibuprofen use, endotoxemia, inflammation, and plasma cytokines during ultramarathon competition’ published in Brain, Behaviour And Immunity. The study looked at…
