Cryotherapy is one of the least expensive and most used therapies recommended in the immediate treatment of the skeletal muscle injury. The major objective of the use of cryotherapy in the early follow-up of muscle injury is to minimize adverse effects related to the damage process, as pain, edema, haemorrhage and muscle spasm, but above all, reduce the area of secondary injury caused by ischemia induced by the primary injury (Knight, 1995; Knight and Londeree, 1980; Merrick et al., 1999, Jarvinen et al., 2005). According to Knight (1995), the physiological responses to primary injury may lead to a secondary injury by means of enzymatic and hypoxic mechanisms that affect the peripheral cells of the primary injury. The secondary injury caused by post-trauma hypoxia is due to several factors such as bleeding of the injured vessels, hemostasis, decreased blood flow due to increased blood viscosity and increased extravascular pressure and swelling caused by injury of the cellular membrane, that may occlude small vessels further increasing the ischemic area (Fisher, 1990). Then, in the first hours after the primary injury there is an increase in the total area of injury, which is a consequence of the secondary injury (Knight 1995; Merrick et al., 1999). The physiopathology of soft tissue injury is characterized by increased cell metabolism, bleeding, hyperemia, swelling, and recruiting of leukocytes (Olson and Stravino, 1972). These factors are the rational for the use of local cooling in the early treatment of soft tissue injuries including bruising, strains and luxation (Shelbourne and Wilckens, 1990; Jarvinen et al., 2005). The physiological effects induced by the cooling of the skin include the reduction of the temperature, metabolism, circulation, pain, muscle spams and inflammatory process (Olson and Stravino, 1972; Kowal, 1983; Kellet, 1986). Although several procedures have been reported for the use of ice (gel, spray, ice packs, immersion, etc), in clinics, hospitals and sports activities ice packs are the most used (Enwemeka et al., 2002). Previous reports suggested that in acute skeletal muscle injuries, cryotherapy reduces the metabolic rate of hypoxic tissues, allowing better cell survival in this period and therefore reducing the area of secondary injury (Knight and Londeree, 1980; Knight et al., 1981; Merrick et al., 1993; Merrick et al., 1999). An interesting report showed that an early treatment consisted of 5h of continuous cryotherapy application after crush lesion, slowed secondary injury in the triceps surae muscle of rat (Merrick et al., 1999). Nevertheless, is not common the continuous application of cryotherapy for hours in humans because the risk of frozen injuries (Knight, 1995). The intermittent use of cryotherapy, as for example 30 minutes of ice pack each one or two hours has been recommended to be used after muscle injury in humans because is therapeutically effective and safe (Knight 1995; Jarvinen et al., 2005). Although sessions of cryotherapy associated to compression is recommended and used as immediate treatment during the first 72 hours after muscle injury (Knight, 1995), the effect of intermittent sessions of this treatment in the area of secondary muscle injury is not well established. Also, it is not well established which number of sessions, applied immediately after injury are effective to reduce the secondary muscle injury. In addition, it is important to consider that for several subjects are difficult or impossible to apply intermittent sessions of cryotherapy for long periods, as for example during the night when they sleep. Several aspects difficult the studies of the muscle injury in humans, as for example, the variability of injured muscles, differences in the extension of the injured area and in the local of injury. Also, models of human muscle injury could have serious ethical restrictions. Then, as studies about the skeletal muscles of the mammals using animal models revealed similarities during the regeneration process, they have been used to evaluate the effect of different kind of treatments after muscle damage (Jarvinen, 2005). Also, animal models were used to evaluate the effect of cryotherapy and hypothermia in the skeletal muscle injury (Knight, 1995; Merrick, et al. 1999; for review see Jarvinen et al., 2005) and provided important information about the use of cryotherapy after injury in the soft tissues. The studies using animal muscles are necessary in this case because it permits to induce a similar area of injury in the same skeletal muscle of a large number of animals, which permits a scientific comparison among them. Then, in the present study the skeletal muscle of rat was injured to evaluate the effect of sessions of cryotherapy in the extension of the secondary injury. Specifically, it was examined the effect of three intermittent sessions of cryotherapy (ice pack) and muscle compression (sand pack), applied immediately after muscle damage, in the area of secondary injury of the rat skeletal muscle. |