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Adam’s Training Journal
The other day, after a long run, I felt some tightness and pain in the back of my right knee. After a bit of internet sleuthing, I determined that the culprit was the iliotibial band (ITB), a common injury site for pavement pounders like me.
Dr. Wikipedia prescribed RICE—rest, ice, compression and elevation. I chose my own variation, which involved ice, stretching, running on soft surfaces and otherwise keeping time on my feet to a minimum. Fortunately for me, the treatment regimen seems to have worked, as I’m once again running pain-free.
But in the good, old days, when I was younger and faster, my treatment regimen undoubtedly would have consisted of another element: Bengay.
Like many young athletes, I imagined the surest way to loosen up was a healthy dose of this cream (or its cousin Icy Hot). So before every track meet, you could find me—and dozens of my teammates—anointing our legs with the stuff. Even today I cannot set foot in a locker room without it immediately conjuring the medicinal smell of days gone by.
I’ve long since left this pre-run ritual behind. I mean, who wants to smell like a medicine cabinet? But as my muscles have grown older and tighter, I’ve begun to wonder whether this aromatic practice might be worth reviving.
Dr. Prescott Prescribes
Last year, Americans spent more than $200 million on topical analgesics, or pain creams. Indeed, it’s a market that has existed in the U.S. since before the 20th century. So you’d think that there might be some good evidence that they work.
You, however, would be wrong.
From a physiological standpoint, there’s little benefit that occurs in the tissue when you apply a topical cream. And research on the subject has been minimal and inconclusive.
Although many swear by these creams, they are most likely benefiting from the placebo effect, which can cause people to feel therapeutic effects from an inert medication simply because they have been told it works.
Also, these products contain chemicals that cause a warming or cooling effect on the skin, a sensation that can temporarily “crowd out” pain signals sent by injured or sore muscles. Yet this does nothing to alleviate the underlying cause of the pain.