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  2. I’m an orthopedist. 7 things I never do to keep my muscle and ...

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    Some muscle soreness is normal after exercise and typically goes away on its own in a few days. However, the experts would never ignore or exercise through severe pain.

  3. Should You Work Out If Your Muscles Are Sore? - AOL

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    Sore muscles are not able to produce as much force and will usually fatigue more quickly. So even if you wanted to do 20 push-ups, you might not be able to get through them all or go as deep as usual.

  4. What Fitness Experts Want You to Know About Working Out While ...

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    When to be concerned about muscle soreness. If regular post-workout muscle soreness or stiffness becomes severe pain that lingers beyond three or four days, or gets worse over that period of time ...

  5. Acute muscle soreness - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Acute_muscle_soreness

    Acute muscle soreness (AMS) is the pain felt in muscles during and immediately, up to 24 hours, after strenuous physical exercise. The pain appears within a minute of contracting the muscle and it will disappear within two or three minutes or up to several hours after relaxing it. [1] There are two causes of acute muscle soreness: [1]

  6. Hurting all over? Here are 10 Common Causes of Body ... - AOL

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    From cold and flu to stress to post-workout muscle soreness, there are a bevy of things that can cause your body aches. Here's how to spot each one—and what you can do to make the pain go away.

  7. Delayed onset muscle soreness - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Delayed_onset_muscle_soreness

    With delayed onset muscle soreness (DOMS) caused by eccentric exercise (muscle lengthening), it was observed that light concentric exercise (muscle shortening) during DOMS can cause initially more pain but was followed by a temporary alleviation of soreness with no adverse effects on muscle function or recovery being observed.