Should I stretch before working out

Working out on a regular basis is a great way to improve and maintain good health. If you’re not stretching before and after your workout, however, you’re not really taking advantage of a complete workout routine. There are several specific benefits of stretching both before and after a workout.

Benefits of Stretching Before a Workout

You should always start your workout with a series of stretching exercises. Stretching 5 to 10 minutes is probably enough for most activities. It’s important, however, to adequately stretch all the muscles you’ll be using. There are several specific advantages you’ll receive when adequately stretching before your workout.

  • Increased Blood Flow– The first thing stretching can do is increase your blood flow. Increased blood flow to your muscles prepares them for strenuous activity.
  • Increased Flexibility and Range of Motion– Correct stretching will loosen your muscles and tendons. This will increase flexibility and range of motion during your workout.
  • Improved Performance– All of the above; increased blood flow, flexibility, and range of motion, will improve overall performance.

Benefits of Stretching After a Workout

You may be tempted to go straight into relaxation mode after a workout. It’s important, however, to get in even a few minutes of stretching. There are several specific benefits of stretching after you finish your workout.

  • Elimination of Lactic Acid– Lactic acid is produced when you work out. This substance can make muscles achy and tired. Stretching can help reduce the amount of lactic acid throughout your body.
  • Reduces Pain and Chance of Injury– Muscles that stay tight after a workout are more prone to injury. PT in Motion states that the right kind of stretching exercises can limit pain throughout the body. Loosening up your muscles will also reduce your chance of injury.
  • Gradual Relaxation– It’s beneficial for both body and mind to gradually slow down. When you stretch after a workout you’re giving yourself the chance to gradually wind-down.

Types of Stretches

There are several different types of stretches a person can do before and after a workout. It’s important to know which types are right for you and when you should use them in a workout.

  • Static– This involves holding a particular stretch for 10 to 20 seconds. This type of stretch should feel comfortable and is normally done after a workout.
  • Dynamic– These are active movements that are not held but still cause muscles to stretch. These are often done to prepare your muscles for movement.
  • Ballistic– Ballistic stretching involves bouncing movement to push muscles beyond a normal range of motion.

Working with a Physical Therapist

It’s important to make sure you’re doing the right kind of stretches before and after your workout. A physical therapist can put together an exercise routine for your specific type of workout. Whether you’re playing a game of tennis, training for a mini-marathon, or walking through the neighborhood, physical therapy can help you make the most of your activities. A physical therapist can guide you regarding which types of stretches are the best for your current physical condition and the type of activities you’re participating in. It’s also important to make sure you’re doing the right exercises in the correct way. You’ll want to make an appointment with a qualified physical therapist to learn what stretches are right for you. Physical therapy can help you make the most of your workouts and improve your overall health.

BU experts on how you should warm up

Once upon a time, stretching was to exercise what proposing is to marriage: an essential ritual that had to be done before the main event. Athletes of a certain age were warned to stretch their muscles before exerting themselves to avoid a debilitating pull or injury.

Oops.

Recent studies caution people away from stretching before workouts, suggesting it actually impedes your body’s performance. According to this research, runners run more slowly, jumpers jump less high, and weight lifters lift more weakly by stretching, without significantly ensuring against injury during their exercise.

With the new semester well under way and (at least some) people still vowing to exercise as their New Year’s resolution, we asked three BU fitness experts to describe how they warm up before sweating, and what they’d advise others. Here are their answers.

James Camarinos, Ryan Center for Sports Medicine and Rehabilitation physical therapy center clinic manager

I recommend stretching after exercise or even at nonexercise times—for example, stretch in the middle of an eight-hour day sitting at your desk—instead of the typical stretch-before-you-work-out strategy that many employed for years. Stretching a muscle should be done when the muscle is short, meaning the length is not sufficient for the task that a person is trying to do. A person who competes in hurdles needs a long hamstring muscle to clear their leg over the hurdle; however, most typical runners with shorter strides will not need this, so endlessly stretching one’s hamstring to prep for a 10K might not get them far.

Most people stretch to loosen up. However, this would be much better accomplished with a more dynamic warm-up. Things like high knees, front kicks, back kicks (hit your glutes with your feet by bending your knee back), hip circles (roll your leg out and to the front with a bent knee), squats, lunges, or even lightly biking or elliptical will much better lengthen a muscle, but will do so with movement so as to increase the tissue temperature of the muscle and better prepare it for exercise.

Mike Lagomarsine, Fitness and Recreation Center director of fitness

The biggest issue is the confusion between flexibility training and warming up for exercise. Stretching, defined as gently bringing your joint to its end range of motion, is how you increase flexibility. So for someone looking to gain flexibility, I would recommend static stretching, holding the stretch for usually between 30 and 90 seconds. On the other hand, for someone doing a typical gym workout, the warm-up should not be static stretching, but instead a more dynamic, or moving, stretching. This will warm up the body by getting the heart rate elevated and move the body through a range of motion, but will do so actively. That can be anything from cardio machines (treadmill, elliptical, bike) to jumping jacks to jogging to jump rope. Anything that is of moderate intensity and uses major muscle groups.

Glenn Harris, Boston University Athletics head strength and conditioning coach

I suggest that people go through a dynamic stretching routine instead of a static stretching routine prior to exercising. Bringing the body through a range of motion can actually prepare it for the demands of the exercise session. For prepractice or pregame warm-up, we will go through a continuous warm-up, which is a series of running drills. The drills increase in difficulty and demand until the body is warmed up. After the warm-up series is complete, we will then perform some dynamic stretching for different parts of the body, including arm circles, leg swings, spider-man stretch, and inchworm walks.

  • Rich Barlow

    Senior Writer

    Should I stretch before working out

    is a senior writer at BU Today and Bostonia magazine. Perhaps the only native of Trenton, N.J., who will volunteer his birthplace without police interrogation, he graduated from Dartmouth College, spent 20 years as a small-town newspaper reporter, and is a former Boston Globe religion columnist, book reviewer, and occasional op-ed contributor. Profile

Is it important to stretch before working out?

Stretching in the proper way will loosen your muscles and tendons. This will increase flexibility and range of motion during your workout. Improved performance. Stretching beforehand increases blood flow, flexibility, and range of motion, which will in turn improve overall performance.

What happens if you don't stretch before a workout?

Without it, the muscles shorten and become tight. Then, when you call on the muscles for activity, they are weak and unable to extend all the way. That puts you at risk for joint pain, strains, and muscle damage.