More gym-goers and regular exercisers are waking up to the importance of post-workout recovery. Once upon a time, recovery protocols like ice baths were strictly reserved for competitive athletes, but now cold plunges, saunas, and red light therapy are seemingly everywhere. The problem with such recovery tools, however, is that they can be pricey and inaccessible to many. And yet, the most science-backed recovery method of them all is often overlooked: sleep.
More gym-goers and regular exercisers are waking up to the importance of post-workout recovery. Once upon a time, recovery protocols like ice baths were strictly reserved for competitive athletes, but now cold plunges, saunas, and red light therapy are seemingly everywhere. The problem with such recovery tools, however, is that they can be pricey and inaccessible to many. And yet, the most science-backed recovery method of them all is often overlooked: sleep.
“Sleep is when nearly every meaningful recovery process happens: Growth hormone peaks in slow-wave sleep, muscle protein synthesis increases, lymphatic clearance reduces neuroinflammation, cortisol normalizes, autonomic balance shifts toward parasympathetic tone, glycogen replenishment improves, and motor learning consolidates,” he says.
While consistent, high-quality sleep supports recovery, a lack of sleep will quickly start impacting your workouts. Inadequate sleep has been strongly linked to higher injury rates, slower reaction time, reduced force production, impaired glucose control, and higher rates of perceived exertion during exercise.
For example, one study of collegiate athletes found that injury rates almost doubled in those who slept less than eight hours a night, while also displaying declines in both strength and speed.
Aiming for at least seven hours of sleep a night is a solid starting point. Begin by prioritizing consistent bed and wake times every day. If falling asleep proves to be tough, try to stop drinking liquids a couple of hours before bed, add magnesium glycinate supplements, and keep your bedroom cool.
“Recovery is a biological process, not a sensory experience. In other words, the machinery is working inside without you being able to sense it happening,” Workman says. “Sleep directly drives tissue remodeling, endocrine restoration, and nervous system recalibration. You can’t out-hack poor sleep with cold plunges, compression boots, or supplements.”
About the author
discmdgroup DISC Sports & Spine Center (DISC) is a national leader in minimally invasive spine surgery, orthopedic surgery, and sports medicine care. Our spine surgeons set the standard in artificial disc replacement, spine fusion, discectomy, microdiscectomy and the full spectrum of spine procedures. The group’s orthopedic surgeons advance the state of joint preservation surgery and total joint replacement, including total knee replacement as well as total hip replacement. Our flagship surgery centers based in Newport Beach, Marina del Rey, and Carlsbad serve patients local to Los Angeles, Orange County and San Diego, as well as the rest of the country. Read more articles by discmdgroup.




