@ccsport381: Giày Babolat Propulse Fury 3 #giaythethao #dothethao #thainguyen

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Sunday 05 April 2026 09:55:52 GMT
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What actually happens inside your muscles when they hurt after the gym? Muscle soreness after a workout—also known as DOMS (delayed onset muscle soreness)—is not random pain. It’s a structured biological repair process. When you lift weights, especially during eccentric training (slow lowering phase), microscopic damage forms inside your muscle fibers. The structural units called Z-discs experience tiny tears. This is normal mechanical stress. Within 0–6 hours:
Inflammation begins. Fluid shifts into the muscle tissue. Swelling increases internal pressure. The body activates an immune response to stabilize the damaged area. 12–48 hours:
This is peak soreness. Macrophages enter the muscle and remove damaged protein fragments. Inflammatory signals increase sensitivity. This is why your muscles feel stiff and tender 1–2 days after a heavy gym session. Growth hormone rises during deep sleep, which supports tissue repair. Sleep quality directly affects muscle recovery. 2–3 days:
Protein synthesis increases. Satellite cells fuse to existing muscle fibers. Z-discs are reinforced. Contractile proteins like actin and myosin are rebuilt. The muscle adapts to tolerate future stress. 3–5 days:
Inflammation decreases. Structural rebuilding completes. The muscle fiber becomes slightly thicker and stronger. This is muscular hypertrophy. Muscle recovery depends on:
• Sufficient protein intake (around 0.7–1g per lb bodyweight for lifters)
• Adequate sleep (7–9 hours)
• Progressive overload
• Proper hydration
• Recovery time between sessions If soreness lasts too long, intensity may exceed recovery capacity. If there is no progressive stimulus, growth slows. #muscle #gym #anatomy #gymscience #GymLife
What actually happens inside your muscles when they hurt after the gym? Muscle soreness after a workout—also known as DOMS (delayed onset muscle soreness)—is not random pain. It’s a structured biological repair process. When you lift weights, especially during eccentric training (slow lowering phase), microscopic damage forms inside your muscle fibers. The structural units called Z-discs experience tiny tears. This is normal mechanical stress. Within 0–6 hours:
Inflammation begins. Fluid shifts into the muscle tissue. Swelling increases internal pressure. The body activates an immune response to stabilize the damaged area. 12–48 hours:
This is peak soreness. Macrophages enter the muscle and remove damaged protein fragments. Inflammatory signals increase sensitivity. This is why your muscles feel stiff and tender 1–2 days after a heavy gym session. Growth hormone rises during deep sleep, which supports tissue repair. Sleep quality directly affects muscle recovery. 2–3 days:
Protein synthesis increases. Satellite cells fuse to existing muscle fibers. Z-discs are reinforced. Contractile proteins like actin and myosin are rebuilt. The muscle adapts to tolerate future stress. 3–5 days:
Inflammation decreases. Structural rebuilding completes. The muscle fiber becomes slightly thicker and stronger. This is muscular hypertrophy. Muscle recovery depends on:
• Sufficient protein intake (around 0.7–1g per lb bodyweight for lifters)
• Adequate sleep (7–9 hours)
• Progressive overload
• Proper hydration
• Recovery time between sessions If soreness lasts too long, intensity may exceed recovery capacity. If there is no progressive stimulus, growth slows. #muscle #gym #anatomy #gymscience #GymLife

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