Absolute Edge: Performance & Rehab
Reaching for ibuprofen, Advil, or Aleve at the first sign of pain might actually be slowing your recovery. You've been told your whole life that inflammation is bad. That swelling is the enemy. That the faster you can shut down that inflammatory response, the faster you'll heal. But the science tells a different story. The Inflammation Myth Chronic, systemic inflammation IS problematic—it's associated with heart disease, diabetes, and autoimmune conditions. But acute inflammation—the kind that happens when you sprain your ankle, strain a muscle, or injure a tendon—is completely different. It's not a malfunction. It's the first and most essential phase of the healing process. Inflammation is how healing begins. What Inflammation Actually Does * Blood flow increases: Delivering raw materials needed for repair * Immune cells flood the site: Neutrophils and macrophages clean up damaged tissue and prepare for rebuilding * Chemical signals are released: Prostaglandins, cytokines, and growth factors coordinate the entire healing cascade * Swelling occurs: That fluid contains proteins, nutrients, and immune cells essential for repair This inflammatory phase lasts 3-7 days. If you aggressively suppress it, you're not speeding up healing—you're interfering with it. What the Research Says About NSAIDs and Healing NSAIDs block COX-1 and COX-2 enzymes, reducing prostaglandin production. But those same prostaglandins are essential signaling molecules for tissue repair. Bone Healing A 2010 review in the Journal of Bone and Joint Surgery found NSAIDs impair osteoblast activity. Regular NSAID use can delay fracture healing by several weeks. Tendon Healing A 2017 study found ibuprofen impaired tendon-to-bone healing in rotator cuff repairs—less organized collagen and reduced strength. Muscle Healing One study found ibuprofen reduced muscle protein synthesis after exercise by nearly 50 percent. Ligament Healing Studies show anti-inflammatory use can delay healing and result in weaker scar tissue formation. The Pain Paradox Pain serves a purpose—it's information telling you to modify your behavior. When you mask pain completely, you lose that feedback signal. If you take ibuprofen and your ankle stops hurting, you might walk on it normally. But the tissue is still damaged. You've just turned off the alarm—leading to re-injury and turning acute problems into chronic ones. When NSAIDs Make Sense * Chronic inflammatory conditions: Rheumatoid arthritis, ankylosing spondylitis * Severe pain preventing function: Short-term use (days, not weeks) * Post-surgical protocols: As directed by your surgeon * Later stages of healing: After the first week, occasional use is less likely to impair healing What to Do Instead Embrace Relative Rest Modify activity to reduce load on injured tissue while maintaining movement elsewhere. Use Ice Strategically 15-20 minutes at a time, with at least an hour between applications. Elevate When Appropriate Help fluid drain mechanically without interfering with the inflammatory process. Compress Thoughtfully Limit excessive swelling while allowing inflammation to proceed. Move Early and Often Early, gentle movement within pain-tolerable ranges pumps fluid through tissue, delivers nutrients, and prevents stiffness. Seek Treatment That Supports Healing Electroacupuncture promotes blood flow, reduces pain through endorphin release, and modulates inflammation without suppressing it. Manual therapy improves circulation and restores movement patterns. Progressive exercise provides the mechanical stimulus tissues need to remodel. Consider Acetaminophen Tylenol is a pure analgesic—it reduces pain without interfering with the inflammatory cascade. Masking vs. Healing Masking symptoms: Making pain go away without changing the underlying condition. Short-term solution, long-term problems. Addressing the problem: Understanding why you're in pain and taking steps to actually fix it. Leads to genuine resolution. Tuesday Truth "Inflammation isn't the enemy. It's the first responder. It's the cleanup crew. It's the foundation of every healing process your body undertakes." The best approach? Support healing, don't suppress it. Move early. Seek treatment that works with your body. Save the NSAIDs for situations where they're truly needed. About Absolute Rehabilitation & Wellness: Located in Burlington, Ontario, we help you heal smarter—not just feel better temporarily. We understand root causes, support your body's natural healing processes, and build your capacity for long-term resilience. 📞 Call our Burlington clinic: 905.332.7000 🌐 absoluterw.com [https://www.absoluterw.com]]]>
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