NSAIDs and Performance: The Truth Most People Miss

Walk into any gym.

Open any medicine cabinet.

Talk to almost any athlete.

NSAIDs are everywhere.

Ibuprofen.
Naproxen.
Pain gone. Keep moving.

That is the belief.

Take something.
Feel better.
Recover faster.
Perform better.

But what if that belief is wrong?

What the Research Actually Looked At

A 2024 systematic review and meta analysis published in The Physician & Sportsmedicine examined how NSAIDs affect:

  • Physical performance
  • Muscle strength
  • Muscle damage
  • Recovery

This was not one small study. It included:

  • 18 randomized controlled trials
  • 188 total trials
  • 238 healthy participants

They looked at outcomes:

  • Immediately after exercise
  • 24 hours later
  • 48 hours later

This matters.

Because recovery is not just how you feel today.

It is how your body adapts tomorrow.

How NSAIDs Work

NSAIDs block cyclooxygenase enzymes.

COX enzymes drive the production of:

  • Prostaglandins
  • Thromboxanes
  • Prostacyclins

When you block those pathways:

  • Inflammation goes down
  • Pain perception goes down
  • Fever response goes down

Sounds good.

Less pain must mean better recovery.

Right?

Not exactly.

The Problem With Blocking Inflammation

Inflammation gets a bad reputation.

But it is not the enemy.

It is part of the adaptation process.

When you train:

Muscle fibers break down
Inflammatory signals activate
Repair processes begin

That sequence is what builds strength.

If you blunt that signal, you interfere with the process.

Less signal. Less adaptation. Less long term gain.

What the Study Found

Let’s keep it simple.

NSAIDs did not improve performance.

They did not increase strength.

They did not enhance recovery.

In some cases, they made things worse.

Strength

No improvement.

In some cases, strength decreased.

Endurance

Reduced resistance performance.

Muscle Growth

Impaired hypertrophy.

No prevention of muscle loss.

Recovery

No strong evidence of improvement.

At 48 hours, performance and strength actually decreased.

That is not recovery.

That is interference.

Short Term Relief vs Long Term Adaptation

This is the trade off most people never think about.

You feel better.

But you adapt less.

Pain goes down.

But performance does not go up.

In some cases, it goes down.

That is the difference between symptom relief and biological progress.

Health is not something you buy.

It is something you build.

The Bigger Pattern

This is not just about NSAIDs.

This is a pattern we see everywhere.

  • Suppress the signal.
  • Ignore the cause.
  • Repeat the cycle.

Pain is treated like the problem.

But pain is often the message.

Your body is not trying to sabotage you.

It is trying to get your attention.

What This Means for Athletes and Active Adults

If you are training consistently, this matters.

Because your goal is not just to feel good today.

Your goal is to improve capacity.

  • Strength.
  • Mobility.
  • Resilience.

If your recovery strategy interferes with adaptation, you are working against yourself.

That does not mean NSAIDs are never appropriate.

There are times they make sense.

Acute injury.
Specific medical situations.

But using them routinely for training soreness?

That deserves a second thought.

The Spine and Movement Connection

In my chiropractic office in Davie, we look at this through a different lens.

Pain is often driven by mechanical stress.

Joint restriction.
Poor load distribution.
Movement dysfunction.

If you suppress the pain without addressing the mechanics, the stress remains.

That stress accumulates.

And the cycle continues.

Adjustments Don’t Lie.

When a joint moves better, the body responds.

Not because we numbed it.

Because we improved the system.

Spinal Freedom vs Symptom Suppression

Spinal Freedom is about adaptability.

Your ability to:

Move well
Recover well
Handle stress

Disc bulge.
Joint dysfunction.
Inflammatory cascade secondary to mechanical stress.

If you rely on external inputs to mask internal problems, adaptability decreases.

If you improve structure and movement, adaptability increases.

That is the shift.

Relief is step one.

Resilience is the mission.

The Hidden Cost of “Pushing Through”

There is a culture in fitness and sports.

Push through it.
Ignore it.
Take something and keep going.

Short term, that works.

Long term, it compounds.

Because unresolved mechanics plus suppressed signals equals breakdown.

Not immediately.

Quietly. Over time.

What to Do Instead

If you are dealing with soreness or recurring pain, zoom out.

Ask better questions.

  • Is your movement clean?
  • Is your recovery structured?
  • Is your spine moving well?
  • Are you managing load properly?

Build systems. Not shortcuts.

Focus on:

  • Consistent movement
  • Proper mechanics
  • Recovery habits
  • Spinal care
  • Sleep
  • Nutrition

That is how adaptation improves.

Frequently Asked Questions

They can reduce how sore you feel, but that does not mean your body is recovering better.

Soreness is part of the inflammatory process that helps your body repair and rebuild. When you blunt that response, you may feel relief, but you are also interfering with adaptation.

So yes, pain goes down.

But recovery and performance do not necessarily improve.
They have a place when used appropriately.

Short-term use for acute situations can be helpful. The issue is when they become routine.

Frequent use to push through workouts or ignore recurring pain can create problems over time, including interfering with tissue healing and adaptation.

It is less about the drug.

More about how often and why you are using it.
No, not completely.

There are situations where short-term use makes sense.

But using them regularly for training soreness or recovery is not supported by research. If your goal is to build strength and resilience, your recovery strategy should support that process, not work against it.

Use them intentionally, not habitually.
Because it is part of the rebuilding process.

Training creates stress. That stress triggers inflammation, which signals the body to repair and strengthen tissue.

If you suppress that signal too much, you reduce the body’s ability to adapt.

Less signal. Less adaptation.

That is where the performance drop can come in.
Yes, by improving how your body moves and handles stress.

When joints are not moving well, stress builds in certain areas. That slows recovery and creates compensation patterns.

Restoring motion helps distribute load more evenly and improves efficiency.

And like we say:

Adjustments Don’t Lie.
Focus on building the system, not masking the signal.

That means:
Better movement
Better mechanics
Consistent recovery habits
Sleep
Nutrition
Spinal care
If something keeps showing up, it is usually not random.

It is a pattern.

Fix the pattern, and the need for constant relief goes down.
Occasional use is not the issue.

Patterns are.

Once in a while is very different than multiple times per week.

The body can handle occasional intervention.

It struggles with repeated interference.

Zoom out and look at your habits.

That is where the real answer is.

About the Author:

Dr. Zev Mellman is a licensed chiropractor serving patients throughout South Florida and beyond. His practice focuses on spinal health, mechanical causes of pain, and conservative approaches to musculoskeletal care.

  • Licensed Doctor of Chiropractic in the State of Florida
  • Florida License Number: CH9524
  • License Original Issue Date: 01/15/2008