Delayed Onset Muscle Soreness (DOMS)
Activity-induced muscular pain syndrome
Definition
DOMS refers to the sensation of pain and stiffness in muscles occurring 1-5 days after relative abnormally intensive bout of exercise1. This process can result in decreased muscular performance due to voluntary reduction of effort and/or decreased muscular capacity1.
Whether an unconscious neuromuscular decrease in recruitment in the muscle should be considered as well.
Prognosis
- DOMS symptoms will peak at 24-72hrs and then subside by 5-7 days1.
DDX
DOMS is a completely different syndrome from other exercise induced muscular discomfort such as:
Pathophysiology
There is limited information on that true pathophysiology of DOMS. It is probable that the cellular mechanisms and neural pathways of DOMS are similar to other activity-induced muscular pain syndromes1.
Armstrong1 postulates that exertional rhabdomyolysis is a severe form of DOMS1.
Location
The location of DOMS is not specific since any skeletal muscle that is over-exerted can experience DOMS1. The tenderness symptoms are usually felt distally at the muscle-tendon junction1. The causes of this localization of symptoms were theorized by Newham1:
Clinical Correlates
- Plasma intramuscular enzymes are considered indicators of muscle damage, particularly sarcolemma damage1.
- Plasma myoglobin1.
- Plasma hydroxyproline as an indicator of connective tissue damage1.
- Plasma creatinine
- Hyperkalemia