279 results on '"LONG-DISTANCE RUNNERS"'
Search Results
2. Six-year follow-up of a world record-breaking master marathon runner.
- Author
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Romberger, Nathan T., Stock, Joseph M., McMillan, Ronald K., Overstreet, Matthew L., Lepers, Romuald, Joyner, Michael J., and Farquhar, William B.
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AEROBIC capacity ,LONG-distance running ,LONG-distance runners ,MARATHON running ,RUNNING speed ,ENDURANCE athletes - Abstract
Endurance performance declines with advancing age. Of the three main physiological factors that determine endurance running performance [maximal oxygen consumption (V̇ o
2max ), lactate threshold, and running economy (RE)], V̇ o2max appears to be most affected by age. Although endurance performance declines with age, recently, endurance performance has rapidly improved in master athletes as the number of master athletes competing in endurance events has increased. Master athletes represent an intriguing model to study healthy aging. In this case study, we reassessed the physiological profile of a 76-yr-old distance runner who broke the marathon world record for men over 70 yr of age in 2018. This runner was tested a few months before breaking the world record and retested in 2024. Between 2018 and 2024, his marathon running velocity decreased significantly. Therefore, the purpose of this case study was to determine the physiological changes that explain his performance decline. RE remained similar to 2018, and while there was not a clear breakpoint in blood lactate, he still likely runs marathons at a high percentage (∼90%) of his V̇ o2max . However, V̇ o2max declined by 15.1%. HRmax declined by 3.2% and maximal O2 pulse declined by 12.4%, suggesting that maximal stroke volume and/or arteriovenous O2 difference decreased. Altogether, although this marathoner continues to compete at an elite level, his performance has declined since his record-breaking marathon due to a reduction in V̇ o2max . This is likely caused by reductions in maximal stroke volume and/or arteriovenous O2 difference. We speculate that these changes reflect primarily age-related processes. NEW & NOTEWORTHY: We performed 6-yr follow-up testing on a world record-breaking master marathon runner. We determined that his performance declined since his record-breaking marathon in 2018 primarily due to a reduction in V̇ o2max . His max heart rate (HR) changed minimally, but his peak O2 pulse decreased, suggesting that his maximal stroke volume and/or arteriovenous O2 difference decreased. These changes likely reflect primarily age-related effects in the absence of an overt pathological disease process. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2024
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3. Acute effects of different rest period durations after warm-up and dynamic stretching on endurance running performance in male runners.
- Author
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Yamaguchi, Taichi, Takizawa, Kazuki, Shibata, Keisuke, Tomabechi, Nobuyasu, Samukawa, Mina, and Yamanaka, Masanori
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LONG-distance running , *LONG-distance runners , *RUNNING speed , *TREADMILL exercise , *REST periods - Abstract
Purpose: The purpose of the present study was to compare the acute effects of different rest period durations after general warm-up (GWU) and dynamic stretching (DS) on endurance running performance. Methods: Eight male runners performed endurance running performance tests after three types of intervention. The interventions were as follows: (1) GWU + 5 min Rest, (2) GWU + DS + 5 min Rest, and (3) GWU + DS + 10 min Rest. The GWU consisted of running exercises on a treadmill at a velocity equivalent to 70% of maximum oxygen uptake (V̇O2max) for 15 min. The DS consisted of performing 10 repetitions as quickly as possible for the five muscle groups of the lower extremities. Endurance running performance was measured by time to exhaustion (TTE) during running on the treadmill at a velocity equivalent to 90% V̇O2max. Results: TTE (884.5 ± 244.9 s) after GWU + DS + 10 min Rest intervention was significantly (p < 0.05) longer than that (719.8 ± 227.9 s) after GWU + 5 min Rest. TTE (734.5 ± 274.2 s) after GWU + DS + 5 min Rest intervention was not significantly different than that of the other two interventions. Conclusion: The results demonstrated that the endurance running performance at the velocity equivalent to 90% V̇O2max was enhanced by GWU + DS + 10 min Rest, but not GWU + DS + 5 min Rest. We recommend that runners rest for approximately 10 min after GWU + DS to enhance endurance running performance. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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4. Multidimensional Analysis of Physiological Entropy during Self-Paced Marathon Running.
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Palacin, Florent, Poinsard, Luc, and Billat, Véronique
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LONG-distance runners ,MARATHON running ,UNCERTAINTY (Information theory) ,RUNNERS (Sports) ,RUNNING speed ,LONG-distance running - Abstract
The pacing of a marathon is arguably the most challenging aspect for runners, particularly in avoiding a sudden decline in speed, or what is colloquially termed a "wall", occurring at approximately the 30 km mark. To gain further insight into the potential for optimizing self-paced marathon performance through the coding of comprehensive physiological data, this study investigates the complex physiological responses and pacing strategies during a marathon, with a focus on the application of Shannon entropy and principal component analysis (PCA) to quantify the variability and unpredictability of key cardiorespiratory measures. Nine recreational marathon runners were monitored throughout the marathon race, with continuous measurements of oxygen uptake ( V ˙ O
2 ), carbon dioxide output ( V ˙ CO2 ), tidal volume (Vt), heart rate, respiratory frequency (Rf), and running speed. The PCA revealed that the entropy variance of V ˙ O2 , V ˙ CO2 , and Vt were captured along the F1 axis, while cadence and heart rate variances were primarily captured along the F2 axis. Notably, when distance and physiological responses were projected simultaneously on the PCA correlation circle, the first 26 km of the race were positioned on the same side of the F1 axis as the metabolic responses, whereas the final kilometers were distributed on the opposite side, indicating a shift in physiological state as fatigue set in. The separation of heart rate and cadence entropy variances from the metabolic parameters suggests that these responses are independent of distance, contrasting with the linear increase in heart rate and decrease in cadence typically observed. Additionally, Agglomerative Hierarchical Clustering further categorized runners' physiological responses, revealing distinct clusters of entropy profiles. The analysis identified two to four classes of responses, representing different phases of the marathon for individual runners, with some clusters clearly distinguishing the beginning, middle, and end of the race. This variability emphasizes the personalized nature of physiological responses and pacing strategies, reinforcing the need for individualized approaches. These findings offer practical applications for optimizing pacing strategies, suggesting that real-time monitoring of entropy could enhance marathon performance by providing insights into a runner's physiological state and helping to prevent the onset of hitting the wall. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2024
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5. Sprinting to the top: comparing quality of distance variety and specialization between swimmers and runners.
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Born, Dennis-Peter, Romann, Michael, Lorentzen, Jenny, Zumbach, David, Feldmann, Andri, and Ruiz-Navarro, Jesús J.
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SPRINTING ,OLDER athletes ,LONG-distance running ,RUNNERS (Sports) ,SWIMMERS ,ELITE athletes ,LONG-distance runners ,WOMEN athletes - Abstract
Objectives: To compare performance progression and variety in race distances of comparable lengths (timewise) between pool swimming and track running. Quality of within-sport variety was determined as the performance differences between individual athletes' main and secondary race distances across (top-) elite and (highly-) trained swimmers and runners. Methods: A total of 3,827,947 race times were used to calculate performance points (race times relative to the world record) for freestyle swimmers (n = 12,588 males and n = 7,561 females) and track runners (n = 9,230 males and n = 5,841 females). Athletes were ranked based on their personal best at peak performance age, then annual best times were retrospectively traced throughout adolescence. Results: Performance of world-class swimmers differentiates at an earlier age from their lower ranked peers (15-16 vs. 17-20 year age categories, P < 0.05), but also plateaus earlier towards senior age compared to runners (19-20 vs. 23 + year age category, P < 0.05), respectively. Performance development of swimmers shows a logarithmic pattern, while runners develop linearly. While swimmers compete in more secondary race distances (larger within-sport variety), runners specialize in either sprint, middle- or long-distance early in their career and compete in only 2, 4 or 3 other race distances, respectively. In both sports, sprinters specialize the most (P < 0.05). Distance-variety of middle-distance swimmers covers more longer rather than sprint race distances. Therefore, at peak performance age, (top-) elite female 200 m swimmers show significantly slower sprint performances, i.e., 50 m (P < 0.001) and 100 m (P < 0.001), but not long-distance performances, i.e., 800 m (P = 0.99) and 1,500 m (P = 0.99). In contrast, (top-) elite female 800 m middle-distance runners show significantly slower performances in all their secondary race distances (P < 0.001). (Top-) elite female athletes specialize more than (highly-) trained athletes in both sports (P < 0.05). Conclusions: The comparison to track running and lower ranked swimmers, the early performance plateau towards senior age, and the maintenance of a large within-sport distance variety indicates that (top-) elite sprint swimmers benefit from greater within-sport specialization. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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6. Menthol alleviates post-race elevations in muscle soreness and metabolic and respiratory stress during running.
- Author
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Fujii, Naoto, Igarashi, Yuta, Ishii, Yuji, Ito, Eri, Lai, Yin Feng, Tanabe, Yoko, Fujimoto, Tomomi, Ogawa, Keito, Nabekura, Yoshiharu, Hiroyama, Tsutomu, and Nishiyasu, Takeshi
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LONG-distance running , *LONG-distance runners , *RUNNING races , *MYALGIA , *RATE of perceived exertion - Abstract
Purpose: We evaluated (1) whether participating in middle- and long-distance running races augments muscle soreness, oxygen cost, respiration, and exercise exertion during subsequent running, and (2) if post-race menthol application alleviates these responses in long-distance runners. Methods: Eleven long-distance runners completed a 1500-m race on day 1 and a 3000-m race on day 2. On day 3 (post-race day), either a 4% menthol solution (Post-race menthol) or a placebo solution (Post-race placebo) serving as a vehicle control, was applied to their lower leg skin, and their perceptual and physiological responses were evaluated. The identical assessment with the placebo solution was also conducted without race participation (No-race placebo). Results: The integrated muscle soreness index increased in the Post-race placebo compared to the No-race placebo (P < 0.001), but this response was absent in the Post-race menthol (P = 0.058). Oxygen uptake during treadmill running tended to be higher (4.3%) in the Post-race placebo vs. No-race placebo (P = 0.074). Oxygen uptake was 5.4% lower in the Post-race menthol compared to the Post-race placebo (P = 0.018). Minute ventilation during treadmill running was 6.7–7.6% higher in the Post-race placebo compared to No-race placebo, whereas it was 6.6–9.0% lower in the Post-race menthol vs. Post-race placebo (all P ≤ 0.001). The rate of perceived exertion was 7.0% lower in the Post-race menthol vs. Post-race placebo (P = 0.007). Conclusions: Middle- and long-distance races can subsequently elevate muscle soreness and induce respiratory and metabolic stress, but post-race menthol application to the lower legs can mitigate these responses and reduce exercise exertion in long-distance runners. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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7. 10 MLB’s Greatest September Comebacks.
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Amore, Dom
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BATTING (Baseball) ,LONG-distance runners ,GASWORKS ,ARM injuries ,RADIO broadcasters ,BASEBALL fans ,LONG-distance running - Abstract
This article from Baseball Digest explores some of the most remarkable September comebacks in Major League Baseball history. It highlights the resilience and determination of teams that overcame significant deficits in the final month of the season to secure first place in their league or division. The article specifically focuses on the Philadelphia Phillies in 1964, the St. Louis Cardinals in 1934, the Philadelphia Phillies again in 2007, the Chicago Cubs in 1938, and the Minnesota Twins in 2009. These teams provided memorable moments in baseball history and serve as examples of the power of perseverance. Additionally, the article mentions other notable comebacks, such as the New York Yankees in 1978, the New York Giants in 1951, the Seattle Mariners in 1995, the Minnesota Twins in 2006, and the New York Mets in 1973. These teams demonstrated the ability to overcome seemingly insurmountable odds and achieve victory. [Extracted from the article]
- Published
- 2024
8. "Smells like team spirit" the association between running club membership and performance in the London Marathon: An economic analysis.
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Burke, Lee-Ann
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LONG-distance runners , *CLUB membership , *ATHLETIC associations , *ATHLETICS , *SMELL , *LONG-distance running - Abstract
This study examines the association between club membership and marathon performance using a dataset of 206,653 London Marathon runners. Our results show a statistically significant association between club membership and marathon performance for both males and females which sees club membership potentially mitigating pace decline with age and resulting in substantial improvements in finishing times of up to 40 minutes. We implement a production function framework and align with three principles of economic organisation. The findings have relevance for marathon participants, coaches, and athletic associations as well as implications beyond athletics to other sports or cooperative activities. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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9. A comparison of foot and ankle biomechanics during running drills and distance running.
- Author
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Abran, Guillaume, Berraz, Audrey, Dardenne, Nadia, Gramage, Kevin, Bornheim, Stephen, Delvaux, François, Croisier, Jean-Louis, and Schwartz, Cédric
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LONG-distance running , *ANKLE , *FOOT , *BIOMECHANICS , *LONG-distance runners , *TRACK & field , *BEHAVIORAL assessment - Abstract
The aim of this study was to compare the foot-ankle joint mechanics of running drills and running. Seventeen long-distance runners performed five popular running drills (A-skip, B-skip, Bounding, Heel flicks, Straight leg running) and a run at 3.88 m/s. Kinematics, kinetics and power values were calculated for the ankle, midtarsal (MT) and metatarsophalangeal (MP) joints. Electromyographic activity was recorded for the soleus, gastrocnemius medialis, lateralis and abductor hallucis muscle. The A-skip, the B-skip and the Heel flicks induced a smaller ankle (
p < 0.001, ŋ2 = 0.41), MT (p < 0.001, ŋ2 = 0.43) and MP (p < 0.001, ŋ2 = 0.47) dorsiflexion peak than running. No difference was found between the running drills and running for ankle, MT and MP moment. The Bounding induces a higher positive ankle power than running (diff: 5.5 ± 7.5 J/kg,p = 0.014,d = 1.05). The A-skip (diff: 2.8 ± 2.9 J/kg,p < 0.001,d = 1.5) and the B-skip (diff: 2.7 ± 2.1 J/kg,p < 0.001,d = 1.4) induce a smaller MT positive power than running. This study offers an analysis of the mechanical behaviour of the foot-ankle complex to help track and field coaches select their running drills in an evidence-based manner. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2024
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10. The influence of foot muscles exercises and minimalist shoes on lactate threshold velocity in long-distance amateur runners: a randomized controlled trial.
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Sulowska-Daszyk, Iwona, Zając, Bartosz, and Mika, Anna
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FOOT , *ANAEROBIC threshold , *LONG-distance runners , *RANDOMIZED controlled trials , *RUNNING speed , *FOOT orthoses , *STRENGTH training , *LONG-distance running - Abstract
The exercises of plantar foot muscles may have beneficial effects on the performance of the lower extremity muscles. The aim of this study was to compare two methods of foot muscle strengthening: direct short foot muscle exercises and indirect activation through training in minimalist footwear in regard to influence on lactate threshold velocity in long-distance runners. 55 recreational runners aged 21–45 years took part in that study. They were randomly divided into 2 groups: Group 1 (n = 25) with short foot muscle exercises, and Group 2 (n = 30) with training in minimalist shoes. The progressive running test was performed to determine heart rate (HR) and running velocity corresponding to lactate threshold (VLT). Two-way ANOVA was used to determine the significance of the differences regarding the evaluated variables. After the 8-week training program, higher values of VLT were observed in both groups. This change was significant only in Group 1 (p < 0.05). In Group 2, the higher value was noted but the changes were non-significant. Strengthening of the short foot muscles may improve lactate threshold velocity which is connected with running performance. Considering the obtained results, it is worth contemplating the implementation of these methods in the training of long-distance runners. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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11. Effects of various extract drinks on endurance in long-distance running training.
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Yu, Zhihua and Sun, Zehao
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LONG-distance runners , *BLOOD lactate , *PLANT extracts , *TRACK & field , *ACANTHOPANAX , *LONG-distance running , *SPORTS drinks - Abstract
This paper briefly introduces plant extracts and their combinations with sports drinks. The research involved 40 sportsmen who are affiliated with the Track and Field Department of the School of Physical Education in South-Central Minzu University. This paper aimed to explore the influence of sports drinks enhanced with extracts of Codonopsis pilosula and Acanthopanax senticosus on the endurance levels of long-distance runners. The participants were divided into four groups: a placebo group, a group receiving only C. pilosula , a group receiving A. senticosus , and a composite group. Endurance performance indices for long-distance running were evaluated both before and after the training. Before training, the heart rate, blood lactate level, and maximum oxygen uptake of the placebo group were 159.53 ± 2.21 times/min, 9.7 ± 1.2 mmol/L, and 66.18 ± 2.35 mL/kg/min, respectively; the single Codonopsis pilosula group was 158.33 ± 2.24 times/min, 9.6 ± 1.1 mmol/L, and 65.87 ± 1.88 mL/kg/min, respectively; the single Acanthopanax senticosus group was 159.66 ± 3.67 times/min, 9.7 ±1.0 mmol/L, and 66.32 ± 1.47 mL/kg/min, respectively; the Codonopsis pilosulae and Acanthopanax senticosus composite group was 158.21 ± 1.28 times/min, 9.6 ± 0.9 mmol/L, and 66.87 ± 1.12 mL/kg/min, respectively. After training, the corresponding values of the placebo group were 162.53 ± 3.21 times/min, 9.6 ± 0.8 mmol/L, and 68.85 ± 3.25 mL/kg/min, respectively; the single Codonopsis pilosula group was 145.33 ± 2.25 times/min, 9.1 ± 0.5 mmol/L, and 73.69 ± 2.58 mL/kg/min, respectively; the single Acanthopanax senticosus group was 142.66 ± 3.69 times/min, 9.1 ± 0.8 mmol/L, and 73.84 ± 2.19 mL/kg/min, respectively; the composite group was 131.21 ± 1.36 times/min, 8.3 ± 0.3 mmol/L, and 77.19 ± 3.14 mL/kg/min, respectively. Sports drinks that include extracts of C. pilosula and A. senticosus significantly increased endurance levels. The concurrent use of C. pilosula and A. senticosus was more beneficial in enhancing endurance performance for long-distance running in comparison to using each extract individually. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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12. Sex Differences in Athletic Performance Response to the Imagery and Mental Toughness of Elite Middle- and Long-Distance Runners.
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Yarayan, Yunus Emre, Solmaz, Serdar, Aslan, Mehdi, Batrakoulis, Alexios, Al-Mhanna, Sameer Badri, and Keskin, Kadir
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MENTAL imagery ,TOUGHNESS (Personality trait) ,ATHLETIC ability ,LONG-distance runners ,TRACK & field athletes ,LONG-distance running - Abstract
This study aimed to determine whether there is a difference between the levels of imagery and mental toughness in the context of sports performance in male and female athletes. A total of 344 track and field athletes, 205 male (59.6%, 23.3 ± 4.0 years) and 139 female (40.4%, 22.9 ± 4.0 years), voluntarily participated in the study. Imagery Inventory and Mental Toughness Inventory in Sport were used as data collection tools in the study. In the evaluation of athletic performance, athletes were asked about their ranks in the years 2020, 2021, and 2022 and were categorized according to the scoring tables specified by the International Association of Athletics Federation. A MANOVA analysis was used to determine whether there was a difference between low (−2% to +5%), medium (+6 to +11%), and high (+12 to +17%) performers among male and female athletes, and a post hoc analysis was used to determine the source of the difference. According to the present findings, there was no significant difference between the imagery and mental toughness levels of athletes with high, medium, and low performance among male athletes. On the contrary, a significant difference was detected between the imagery and mental toughness levels of female athletes with medium and high performances, showing that athletes in the high-performance range had higher levels of imagery (Eta
2 = 8) and mental toughness (Eta2 = 10) than athletes in the medium- and low-performance ranges. The findings of this study show that imagery and emotional intelligence are important factors for sports performance. In this context, coaches and sports psychologists can include these parameters in their training programs to achieve the optimal performance range. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2024
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13. The effects of wearing face masks on the perception and mood of male healthy male adults during treadmill running: A pilot study.
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Hidaka, Kento, Sonoda, Shogo, Yamaguchi, Taiki, Kose, Yuka, Hyodo, Kazuki, Oda, Kazuto, and Eshima, Hiroaki
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MEDICAL masks , *LONG-distance running , *RATE of perceived exertion , *LONG-distance runners , *YOUNG adults - Abstract
In the past few years, the face mask has been recommended for the prevention of exposing others to COVID‐19. Wearing a face mask may have the potential to increase dyspnea and discomfort during exercise; however, controversy exists on whether wearing face masks during exercise affects exercise performance, perception, and mood in runners. We investigated the physiological and perceptual responses of healthy male adults who had experienced long‐distance running while exercising at different intensities. Nine healthy young adults who were long‐distance runners wearing surgical face mask conducted an incremental treadmill protocol. The protocol was three 6‐min stages (20%, 40%, and 60% of maximal heart rate, respectively). The rating of perceived exertion (RPE) and the feeling scale (FS) were measured. RPE was higher in mask condition than in unmask condition (No mask vs. Face mask, light; 8.22 vs. 8.78, p = 0.615, middle; 10.00 vs. 10.78, p = 0.345, high; 12.33 vs. 13.67, p = 0.044.), while FS was not different between conditions. The present study shows that wearing a mask may increase rating of perceived exertion and discomfort when the exercise intensity exceeds a certain threshold in healthy male adults who have experienced long‐distance running. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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14. ESTRATÉGIAS NUTRICIONAIS COM CARBOIDRATOS PARA MARATONISTAS.
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Kist Dutra, Ana Maria, Molz, Patrícia, and Rech Franke, Silvia Isabel
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LITERATURE reviews ,LONG-distance runners ,AMATEUR athletes ,ELITE athletes ,HUMAN beings ,LONG-distance running - Abstract
Copyright of Revista Brasileira de Nutrição e Esportiva is the property of Instituto Brasileiro de Pesquisa e Ensino em Fisiologia do Exercicio and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2024
15. Possible Mechanisms for Adverse Cardiac Events Caused by Exercise-Induced Hypertension in Long-Distance Middle-Aged Runners: A Review.
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Kim, Young-Joo and Park, Kyoung-Min
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LONG-distance runners , *RUNNING injuries , *PULMONARY hypertension , *LONG-distance running , *ANGIOTENSIN-receptor blockers , *HYPERTENSION , *VENTRICULAR fibrillation - Abstract
Sudden cardiac death (SCD) is rare among athletes. However, hypertrophic cardiomyopathy is the leading cause of SCD among those <35 years of age. Meanwhile, coronary artery disease (CAD) is the primary SCD cause among those ≥35 years of age. CAD-induced plaque ruptures are believed to be a significant cause of cardiovascular diseases in middle-aged individuals who participate in extreme long-distance running activities such as marathons. A total of 1970 articles related to EIH were identified using search terms. Out of these, 1946 studies were excluded for reasons such as arterial hypertension, exercise-induced pulmonary hypertension, the absence of exercise stress testing (EST), and a lack of relevance to EIH. The study analyzed 24 studies related to both long-distance runners with exercise-induced hypertension (EIH) and the general public. Among these, 11 studies were quasi-experimentally designed studies used in randomized controlled trials (RCTs) on long-distance runners with EIH. Additionally, 12 studies utilized cohort designs, and one study with a quasi-experimental design was conducted among the general population. Recent studies suggest that an imbalance between oxygen demand and supply due to ventricular hypertrophy may be the actual cause of cardiovascular disease, regardless of CAD. Exercising excessively over an extended period can reduce endothelial function and increase arterial stiffness, which in turn increases afterload and leads to an excessive increase in blood pressure during exercise. Exercise-induced hypertension (EIH), which increases the morbidity rate of resting hypertension and is a risk factor for cardio-cerebro-vascular diseases, is more prevalent in middle-aged long-distance runners than in runners from other age groups, and it increases the prevalence of critical arrhythmias, such as atrial fibrillation or ventricular arrhythmias. EIH is associated with angiotensin II activity, and angiotensin II receptor blockers show promising effects in middle-aged runners. Further, guidelines for preventing excessive participation in races and restricting exercise intensity and frequency would be useful. This review identifies EIH as a potential risk factor for cardiovascular diseases and describes how EIH induces SCD. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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16. Clinical and exercise professional opinion of returnto-running readiness after childbirth: an international Delphi study and consensus statement.
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Christopher, Shefali Mathur, Donnelly, Gráinne, Brockwell, Emma, Bo, Kari, Davenport, Margie H., De Vivo, Marlize, Dufour, Sinead, Forner, Lori, Mills, Hayley, Moore, Isabel S., Olson, Amanda, and Deering, Rita E.
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RUNNING injuries ,KEGEL exercises ,LONG-distance runners ,LONG-distance running ,SHIN splints ,EXERCISE physiology ,DYSPAREUNIA ,PARTICIPANT-researcher relationships - Published
- 2024
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17. Clinical and exercise professional opinion on designing a postpartum return-to-running training programme: an international Delphi study and consensus statement.
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Deering, Rita E., Donnelly, Gráinne M., Brockwell, Emma, Bo, Kari, Davenport, Margie H., De Vivo, Marlize, Dufour, Sinead, Forner, Lori, Mills, Hayley, Moore, Isabel S., Olson, Amanda, and Christopher, Shefali Mathur
- Subjects
RUNNING injuries ,SPORTS injuries ,KEGEL exercises ,EXERCISE physiology ,LONG-distance running ,DIETARY patterns ,LONG-distance runners - Published
- 2024
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18. Unveiling the obsession: Exercise addiction among female amateur runners in Delhi-NCR and the power of unwavering commitment.
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Bala, Indu and Manglani, Anita
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EXERCISE addiction , *LONG-distance runners , *JUDGMENT sampling , *PHYSICAL activity , *FEMALES , *RUNNING speed , *LONG-distance running - Abstract
Aim and Objective: This study was intended for a possible relationship that might exist between exercise addiction and unbending commitment among female amateur runners. Exercise addiction (EA) can be characterized as an obsession with physical activity; Materials and Methods: The "purposive sampling method" was utilized to collect data. The inventories taken for this purpose were "The Exercise Addiction Inventory" and "Commitment Running Scale." The questionnaire was filled out by 100 participants aged between 18 and 50 years from the capital of India and its border area (Delhi and NCR). Results and Conclusion: It was found that 39% of female long-distance runners were exercise addicts, and 72% were highly committed to running, supporting a probable reason for EA. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
- Full Text
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19. "Impact of aging on maximal oxygen uptake adjusted for lower limb lean mass, total body mass, and absolute values in runners".
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Seffrin, Aldo, Vivan, Lavínia, dos Anjos Souza, Vinícius Ribeiro, da Cunha, Ronaldo Alves, de Lira, Claudio Andre Barbosa, Vancini, Rodrigo Luiz, Weiss, Katja, Knechtle, Beat, and Andrade, Marilia Santos
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AEROBIC capacity ,LEAN body mass ,POPULATION aging ,ABSOLUTE value ,ANAEROBIC threshold ,LONG-distance runners ,LONG-distance running ,RUNNING - Abstract
Performance in endurance sports decreases with aging, which has been primarily attributed to cardiovascular and musculoskeletal aging; however, there is still no clear information on the factors that are most affected by aging. The aim of this study was to compare two groups of runners (< 50 and > 50 years of age) according to their absolute, weight-adjusted maximal oxygen uptake (V̇O
2 max), lower limb lean mass-adjusted V̇O2 max, ventilatory threshold, and respiratory compensation point (RCP). A total of 78 male recreational long-distance runners were divided into Group 1 (38.12 ± 6.87 years) and Group 2 (57.55 ± 6.14 years). Participants were evaluated for body composition, V̇O2 max, VT, and RCP. Group 1 showed higher absolute and body mass-adjusted V̇O2 max (4.60 ± 0.57 l·min−1 and 61.95 ± 8.25 ml·kg−1 ·min−1 , respectively) than Group 2 (3.77 ± 0.56 l·min−1 and 51.50 ± 10.22 ml·kg−1 ·min−1 , respectively), indicating a significant difference (p < 0.001, d = − 1.46 and p < 0.001, d = − 1.16). Correspondingly, Group 1 showed a significantly higher lower limb lean mass–adjusted V̇O2 max (251.72 ± 29.60 ml·kgLM−1 ·min−1 ) than Group 2 (226.36 ± 43.94 ml·kgLM−1 ·min−1 ) (p = 0.008, d = − 0.71). VT (%V̇O2 max) (p = 0.19, d = 0.19) and RCP (%V̇O2 max) (p = 0.24, d = 0.22) did not differ between the groups. These findings suggest that both variables that are limited by central or peripheral conditions are negatively affected by aging, but the magnitude of the effect is higher in variables limited by central conditions. These results contribute to our understanding of how aging affects master runners. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2024
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20. Changes in medial longitudinal arch height ratio of the foot in high school track and field middle and long distance athletes in training camps.
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Shun Kosugi and Shusuke Kusano
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LONG-distance runners , *LONG-distance running , *FOOT arch , *RUNNING injuries , *SPORTS camps - Abstract
【Context】Although it has been reported that decreased medial longitudinal arch (MLA) function of the foot is associated with sports injury occurrence, but no consistent view has been reached. The risk of injury occurrence may be increased if the foot MLA is reduced during daily practice. But changes in MLA during ongoing daily practice are not clear. Therefore, this study investigated changes in the MLA function of the foot during a training cam p in high school track and field athletes. 【Methods】Participants included 21 high school track and field long distance athletes. The arch height ratio (AHR) was used to evaluate the MLA of the foot. Measurements were taken on before and after of the camp to examine the relationships between changes in AHR, basic attributes, and athletic performance levels were examined. 【Results】AHR was statistically lower in female than in male athletes. The value, decreased significantly on the after of the camp compared to the before of the camp in both male and female athletes, with female athletes with high performance levels showing lower values. 【Conclusions】Continuous training in camp decreased the AHR of high school track and field athletes and that the decrease in AHR was affected by sex and athletic performance level. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
21. PERSONALITY OF MARATHON RUNNERS: A NARRATIVE REVIEW OF RECENT FINDINGS.
- Author
-
Braschler, Lorin, Thuany, Mabliny, Barbosa de Lira, Claudio Andre, Scheer, Volker, Nikolaidis, Pantelis T., Weiss, Katja, and Knechtle, Beat
- Subjects
- *
LONG-distance runners , *PERSONALITY , *MARATHON running , *PSYCHOLOGICAL factors , *MOTIVATION (Psychology) , *LONG-distance running - Abstract
Participation in marathons has dramatically increased over the last few years. Marathon running has many proven beneficial effects, especially on cardiovascular health and fitness. Most research has focused on physiologic and pathophysiologic adaptations in connection with endurance exercise. Nevertheless, marathon running also has a major impact on psychological aspects and positively influences mental health, which has only recently attracted research interest. The present narrative review aimed to review the personality traits of marathon runners with an emphasis on recent literature. Marathon runners show a distinct personality and highly characteristic personality traits needed to successfully finish such a demanding race, i.e., a strong sense of vigor, self-sufficiency, and intelligence as well as low scores in anger, fatigue, tension, and depression. Furthermore, personality differences are detectable between runners of different sexes, ages, and performance level groups. This has significant clinical implications for athletes, coaches and competition organizers, as these groups show different patterns of personality traits. Future studies should focus on changes in cognition and mood states pre-, during, and post-endurance events, as well as during training periods. Large-scale studies comparing personality differences by sex, age, and performance are also important for better clinical guidance. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. Anthropometric profiles and body composition of male runners at different distances.
- Author
-
Stachoń, Aleksandra, Pietraszewska, Jadwiga, and Burdukiewicz, Anna
- Subjects
- *
BODY composition , *LONG-distance running , *LONG-distance runners , *ADIPOSE tissues , *BODY size , *PRINCIPAL components analysis , *SHOULDER - Abstract
Anthropometric parameters are crucial prerequisite to achieve success in professional running sports. However, it is not clear how these parameters are relevant for athletes performing on a less demanding sport level as academic competitions. To help coaches and selectors working on this level, we have explored anthropometric variables and body composition in 68 academic athletes: 26 sprinters, 22 middle distance runners, and 20 long distance runners. Sprinters have a more massive body shape, shorter lower legs in relation to the length of the thigh, broader shoulders and narrower hips, greater musculature and cellular mass. A slender figure, a longer shin, and the greatest subcutaneous fat and extracellular mass characterize long-distance runners. Middle-distance runners are the slimmest, and have a narrow trunk and little subcutaneous fat. Sprinters and long-distance runners are mesomorphic, while middle-distance runners present more mixed mesomorph-ectomorph type. The principal component analysis highlighted the importance of the overall size of the body, limbs musculature and the length of the lower limb together with its segments, and also body fatness. This approach emphasized the morphological distinctiveness of runners at particular distances and allows the use of somatic features as predictors of running performance. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. "Some People Smoke and Drink, I Run": Addiction to Running through an Ethnographic Lens.
- Author
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Gross, Toomas
- Subjects
- *
EXERCISE addiction , *LONG-distance running , *LONG-distance runners , *MASLACH Burnout Inventory , *ADDICTIONS , *FATIGUE (Physiology) , *SMOKE - Abstract
Recreational long-distance runners' exercising levels often considerably exceed those necessary for keeping healthy. As their running careers unfold, many runners become inspired not so much by fitness and health but by other corollaries of running, such as capacity to endure high levels of pain and exhaustion or novel bodily experiences. As I show in the ethnographic example of Estonian runners, a "low-resolution" explanation of such a shift in runners' motivations allows it to be understood in conventional terms of addiction. Three symptoms commonly highlighted in definitions of exercise addiction – tolerance, continuance, and withdrawal – were particularly salient in the careers of many interviewed runners. However, the reasons for developing these symptoms were not merely psycho-physiological and their implications were not clear-cut which calls for a more nuanced approach to runners' bodily experiences, the meanings attributed to these, as well as running addiction and its relationship with health and well-being. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. A Comparative Study of the Performance Efficiency and Morphology of the Heart Among Long-Distance Runners.
- Author
-
Khaleel Alnjola, Omar Yousif
- Subjects
NINEVEH (Extinct city) ,LONG-distance runners ,MORPHOLOGY ,HEART ,PERFORMANCE theory ,MEDICAL laboratories ,LONG-distance running - Abstract
Copyright of Al-Rafidain Journal For Sport Sciences is the property of Republic of Iraq Ministry of Higher Education & Scientific Research (MOHESR) and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. The Effects of Omega-3 Fatty Acid Supplementation on the Lipid Profile and Cardiovascular Markers Following Downhill Running in Long-Distance Runners.
- Author
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Jaworska, Marzena, Siatkowski, Szymon, and Żebrowska, Aleksandra
- Subjects
OMEGA-3 fatty acids ,LONG-distance running ,LONG-distance runners ,EICOSAPENTAENOIC acid ,ERYTHROCYTE membranes ,UNSATURATED fatty acids ,LIPIDS ,INFLAMMATORY mediators - Abstract
Exercise-induced injury may intensify inflammatory response and reduce the cardiovascular protection mechanisms of omega 3 polyunsaturated fatty acids (ω 3 PUFA). Therefore, this study aimed to determine the erythrocyte content of fatty acids (ω 3 and ω 6), the levels of cardiac damage markers (CKMB, hsTnT, H - FABP), the concentration of inflammation mediators (IL-6, TNF α) in long distance runners supplemented with ω 3 PUFA. Twenty-four male long distance runners, who were randomly assigned to a placebo group (GrP) or a group supplemented (GrSuppl) with a daily dose of 3,000 mg of ω 3 PUFA for three weeks, participated in the study. Participants performed a downhill running exercise test. Blood samples were collected at rest and after the exercise protocol to analyse the levels of cardiac markers and inflammatory cytokines. The erythrocyte membrane content of EPA and DHA in the GrSuppl at the 3
rd week of supplementation was significantly higher than at the baseline (p < 0.001). The erythrocyte membrane content of ω 3 PUFA in the GrSuppl was significantly higher at the completion of supplementation (p < 0.001). Supplementation with ω 3 PUFA improved blood lipid profiles and reduced the concentration of inflammation mediators measured after the eccentric exercise tests. The increased ω 3 PUFA content in the erythrocyte membrane and lower blood concentrations of cardiac damage markers and inflammation mediators in distance runners supplemented for three weeks with ω 3 PUFA suggest that the cardiovascular function has been improved. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. Reduced running performance and greater perceived exertion, but similar post-exercise neuromuscular fatigue in tropical natives subjected to a 10 km self-paced run in a hot compared to a temperate environment.
- Author
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Rodrigues Júnior, Jefferson F. C., Mendes, Thiago T., Gomes, Patrícia F., Silami-Garcia, Emerson, Amorim, Fabiano T., Sevilio Jr., Mário N. O., Rossi, Fabrício E., and Wanner, Samuel P.
- Subjects
- *
FATIGUE (Physiology) , *COOLDOWN , *LONG-distance runners , *EXERCISE intensity , *RUNNING , *BODY temperature , *LONG-distance running - Abstract
Environmental heat stress impairs endurance performance by enhancing exercise-induced physiological and perceptual responses. However, the time course of these responses during self-paced running, particularly when comparing hot and temperate conditions, still needs further clarification. Moreover, monitoring fatigue induced by exercise is paramount to prescribing training and recovery adequately, but investigations on the effects of a hot environment on post-exercise neuromuscular fatigue are scarce. This study compared the time course of physiological and perceptual responses during a 10 km self-paced treadmill run (as fast as possible) between temperate (25°C) and hot (35°C) conditions. We also investigated the changes in countermovement jump (CMJ) performance following exercise in these two ambient temperatures. Thirteen recreational long-distance runners (11 men and 2 women), inhabitants of a tropical region, completed the two experimental trials in a randomized order. Compared to 25°C, participants had transiently higher body core temperature (TCORE) and consistently greater perceived exertion while running at 35°C (p < 0.05). These changes were associated with a slower pace, evidenced by an additional 14 ± 5 min (mean ± SD) to complete the 10 km at 35°C than at 25°C (p < 0.05). Before, immediately after, and 1 h after the self-paced run, the participants performed CMJs to evaluate lower limb neuromuscular fatigue. CMJ height was reduced by 7.0% (2.3 ± 2.4 cm) at 1 h after the race (p < 0.05) compared to pre-exercise values; environmental conditions did not influence this reduction. In conclusion, despite the reduced endurance performance, higher perceived exertion, and transiently augmented TCORE caused by environmental heat stress, post-exercise neuromuscular fatigue is similar between temperate and hot conditions. This finding suggests that the higher external load (faster speed) at 25°C compensates for the effects of more significant perceptual responses at 35°C in inducing neuromuscular fatigue. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. Effects of Highly Branched Cyclic Dextrin Ingestion on Running Performance, Glucoregulatory Hormones, and Metabolic Responses Among Long-Distance Male Runners.
- Author
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Saelao, Thanatat, Laiwattanapaisal, Wanida, Larpant, Nutcha, Kaewarsa, Phuritat, and Nokkaew, Nattiporn
- Subjects
LONG-distance running ,LONG-distance runners ,INGESTION ,FREE fatty acids ,FATIGUE (Physiology) ,BLOOD lactate - Abstract
This study determined the effects of highly branched cyclic dextrin (HBCD) ingestion on running performance, glucoregulatory hormone levels, and metabolic responses. Seven male runners were provided two separate randomized ingestions of 1.5 g·kg
-1 BW of HBCD and maltodextrin (MDX) prior to running to exhaustion. The blood insulin levels, salivary cortisol levels, metabolic variables, and time to exhaustion were determined. There were no significant differences observed between HBCD and MDX in any of the variables examined. However, HBCD showed a tendency towards higher levels of serum free fatty acids and blood lactate compared to MDX. Notably, no gastrointestinal (GI) symptoms were reported throughout the trials, indicating good tolerance for both HBCD and MDX. In conclusion, the acute ingestion of HBCD did not result in significant differences in running performance, and hormonal and metabolic responses compared to MDX. Both HBCD and MDX demonstrated excellent gastrointestinal (GI) tolerance, even under high intensity running conditions, which suggests the potential as beneficial energy sources during intense competitions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2023
28. Can Endurance Exercise Be Harmful?
- Author
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Labos, Christopher
- Subjects
LONG-distance running ,CORONARY artery calcification ,LONG-distance runners ,PHYSICAL activity ,MARATHON running - Abstract
The article explores the potential risks associated with endurance exercise, particularly focusing on marathon running and its impact on cardiovascular health. Various studies have examined the relationship between endurance exercise and coronary calcium levels, with conflicting findings on whether it poses a risk or offers protective benefits. While some studies suggest that endurance exercise may lead to higher coronary calcium levels, others indicate that it could be protective, especially in individuals at lower cardiovascular risk. The article highlights the need for further research to better understand the complex relationship between exercise and coronary health, emphasizing the importance of considering individual risk factors and exercise patterns. [Extracted from the article]
- Published
- 2024
29. Racing to the Rescue.
- Author
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Yuan Yuan
- Subjects
- *
SCIENTISTS' attitudes , *AEROBIC capacity , *LONG-distance runners , *RUNNERS (Sports) , *MEDICAL personnel , *LONG-distance running - Abstract
The article "Racing to the Rescue" from Beijing Review highlights the Beijing Doctor Runners, a group of over 1,300 doctors who combine their medical expertise with their passion for running to provide specialized support at running events. Led by oncologist Zhu Xishan, the group aims to enhance safety at marathons by strategically placing doctor runners throughout races to swiftly respond to emergencies. In addition to providing medical assistance, the doctors also gain personal insights into safe long-distance running, contributing to their ability to advise patients on fitness and health. Similar doctor runner groups have formed in other cities, promoting healthier engagement in the sport. [Extracted from the article]
- Published
- 2024
30. Identification method of long-distance running injury points for college students based on association rules.
- Author
-
Zhang, Shirong and Zhao, Lihong
- Subjects
- *
RUNNING injuries , *COLLEGE students , *LONG-distance running , *LONG-distance runners , *STUDENT organizations , *SPORTS injuries - Abstract
In view of the weak correlation between the signal features of the sports injury image extracted by the existing methods and the damage points, the accuracy is low and the recognition time is long. In order to improve the recognition accuracy of sports injury and reduce the loss of sports injury to human body, a method of college students' long-distance running injury point recognition based on association rules is proposed. According to the contour of the injured part of college students' long-distance running, the image is segmented, and the wavelet function is used to decompose the image signal into different frequency bands. The strong correlation rules between the wavelet function and the image signal are analyzed, so that the total energy of the time domain waveform can replace the wavelet transform coefficient; Secondly, the laser harmonic imaging points which have strong correlation with the damage points are regarded as the damage points; Finally,construct the perspective image acquisition platform, collect the sports injury image data of College Students' long-distance runners in sports school, and set up comparative experiments. The experimental results show that the design method improves the recognition accuracy of College Students' long-distance sports injury points and reduces the recognition time. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. Physical Characteristics and Body Image of Japanese Female University Long-Distance Runners.
- Author
-
Kagawa, Masaharu, Iwamoto, Sayumi, Ishikawa-Takata, Kazuko, and Ota, Masako
- Subjects
BODY image in women ,LONG-distance runners ,BEHAVIOR modification ,BODY image ,BODY mass index ,BODY composition ,LONG-distance running - Abstract
Featured Application: Many Japanese female university long-distance runners misperceive their current weight and adiposity. However, their body dissatisfaction may not be based on their physique or external information sources. Understanding their past experience and its impact on their body image may be beneficial. Further research on the effects of educational programs for the improvement of performance on the correction of body image and behaviour modification may be warranted. While female long-distance runners are considered to have strong body dissatisfaction and body concerns, body-image research that incorporates detailed anthropometric and body composition parameters is still limited. The present study therefore investigates the physical characteristics and body image of Japanese female long-distance runners and explores the factors that influence their body image. Detailed anthropometric and body composition assessment using a dual-frequency bioelectrical impedance analysis (DFBIA) was conducted on 30 Japanese female university long-distance runners. In addition, a questionnaire that included the Body Satisfaction Scale (BSS) and the Ben-Tovim Walker Body Attitudes Questionnaire (BAQ) was administered. On average, the participants had relatively low body mass index (BMI) and percentage body fat (%BF) (BMI: 18.3 ± 1.6 kg/m
2 ; %BF: 19.7 ± 4.4%), but about 50–60% of them perceived themselves as being fat or having an excessive level of %BF. Their BSS scores were not associated with their measured physique. However, the anthropometric variables of the limbs were associated with the BAQ and its subscales. There was no single source that the majority referred to obtain information on their body, and performance was the only reason for their increased body concern. In order to better understand the factors that influence their body dissatisfaction and the effects of providing accurate information on behaviour modification, further investigation is warranted. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. 本邦中・長距離種目の競技者におけるレース直前期の コンディショニングに関する研究 ~いわゆる「刺激」の内容および実践するタイミングに着目して~.
- Author
-
小畠 翼, 林 容市, and 高見 京太
- Subjects
JUNIOR high school students ,LONG-distance runners ,RACE ,LONG-distance running ,JUNIOR high schools - Abstract
Purpose:This study aimed to determine strategies for high-intensity training before races in middle- and long-distance runners in Japan. Methods:A questionnaire was used to survey 233 middle- and long-distance runners, which consisted of 63 junior high school students, 78 high school students, 58 university students, and 33 runners from company teams. The frequency, date, intensity, and distance of high-intensity training in the tapering period were investigated in these runners. Result:This study showed that 98.4% of middle- and long-distance runners performed high-intensity training in the tapering period. In addition, 61.6% of middle- and long-distance runners performed highintensity training 1 day before a race. Furthermore, 63.8% of subjects chose a 1000 m running distance for high-intensity training during the tapering period. Of the runners performing high-intensity training during the tapering period, 70.3% were training at a faster pace than their race pace. Moreover, it was clear that many runners in the junior high school age group performed high-intensity training before races; however, significantly fewer performed it 1 day before races compared to other age groups ( p < 0.01). Conclusion:In 2021, many runners in Japan are still using the same strategy of high-intensity training before a race as that used in 1995. Furthermore, new insights were gained into high-intensity training strategies before races in the junior high school age group. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
33. Technological advances in elite running sport concerning advanced footwear technology: yes, but individual preconditions must be considered.
- Author
-
Schwalm, Lars Christian, Gronwald, Thomas, Fohrmann, Dominik, Schaffarczyk, Marcelle, and Hollander, Karsten
- Subjects
LONG-distance running ,RUNNING ,SPORTS ,LONG-distance runners ,RUNNERS (Sports) - Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. Sport-related differences in QT dispersion and echocardiographic parameters in male athletes.
- Author
-
Stoičkov, Viktor, Radovanović, Dragan, Deljanin-Ilić, Marina, Perišić, Zoran, Pavlović, Milan, Tasić, Ivan, Stoičkov, Ivan, Golubović, Mlađan, Scanlan, Aaron T., Jakovljević, Vladimir, and Stojanović, Emilija
- Subjects
- *
MALE athletes , *ECHOCARDIOGRAPHY , *LONG-distance runners , *LONG-distance running , *POWERLIFTING , *VOLLEYBALL - Abstract
The aim of this study was to compare QT dispersion (QTd) and echocardiographic parameters in male athletes competing across different sports (long-distance running, volleyball, football, powerlifting, and bodybuilding) and a control population. Significant moderate-strong differences (p < 0.001, η p 2 = 0.52–0.71) were found in corrected QTd, intraventricular septal wall thickness (ISWT), posterior wall thickness (PWT), relative wall thickness (RWT) and LV (left ventricular) index between groups. Corrected QTd, ISWT, PWT, and RWT were significantly (p < 0.001) higher in powerlifters and bodybuilders compared to other athlete groups and controls. While all athlete groups displayed a significantly higher LV index (p < 0.05) compared to controls, corrected QTd was significantly lower (p < 0.001) only in long-distance runners, volleyball athletes, and football athletes compared to controls. Normal or eccentric LV hypertrophy (LVH) was observed in most long-distance runners (58% and 33%), volleyball athletes (50% and 50%), and football athletes (56% and 41%). In contrast, concentric LVH was observed in most powerlifters (58%) and bodybuilders (54%). Advanced LVH, predominantly concentric in nature, appears to be accompanied with increased QTd in powerlifters and bodybuilders. On the other hand, runners, volleyball athletes, and football athletes experienced LVH toward the upper threshold of the normal reference range alongside reduced QTd compared to other groups. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. Biomechanical characteristics of the lower extremities during running in male long-distance runners with a history of medial tibial stress syndrome: a case control study.
- Author
-
Ohmi, Takehiro, Aizawa, Junya, Hirohata, Kenji, Ohji, Shunsuke, Mitomo, Sho, Ohara, Toshiyuki, and Yagishita, Kazuyoshi
- Subjects
- *
RUNNING injuries , *SHIN splints , *LONG-distance running , *LONG-distance runners , *MOTION capture (Human mechanics) , *MANN Whitney U Test - Abstract
Background: Medial tibial stress syndrome (MTSS) is a running-related injury of the lower extremities. After returning to competition, there are often recurring episodes of MTSS. Therefore, it is important to prevent the onset and recurrence of MTSS among long-distance runners. This case–control study aimed to compare the kinematics and kinetics of runners with and without previous MTSS during running to clarify the biomechanical characteristics of the lower extremity of runners with previous MTSS. Methods: Thirteen male long-distance runners aged over 18 years and asymptomatic at the time of measurement were divided into an MTSS group and a non-MTSS group based on their history of MTSS as reported in a questionnaire. The kinetics and kinematics of running were analyzed when participants ran at a speed of 2.0 ± 0.2 m/s by a three-dimensional motion analysis system and two force plates. Data regarding the joint angles, moments, and powers of the ankle, knee, and hip during the stance phase while running were extracted and compared between the two groups using the Mann–Whitney U test. Results: Of the 13 participants, 5 and 8 were included in the MTSS (10 legs) and non-MTSS (16 legs) groups, respectively. The ankle maximum eversion moment was significantly larger in the MTSS group than in the non-MTSS group (p = 0.04). There were no significant differences in other parameters. Conclusions: This study found that the ankle maximum eversion moment during the stance phase of running was larger in the MTSS group than in the non-MTSS group. Even after the disappearance of the symptoms of MTSS, the running biomechanics of participants with previous MTSS differed from those of participants without previous MTSS. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. The Effects of Habitual Foot Strike Patterns on the Morphology and Mechanical Function of the Medial Gastrocnemius–Achilles Tendon Unit.
- Author
-
Li, Lu, Wu, Kaicheng, Deng, Liqin, Liu, Cuixian, and Fu, Weijie
- Subjects
- *
LONG-distance running , *FOOT , *ACHILLES tendon , *TENDONS , *LONG-distance runners , *MUSCLE contraction - Abstract
As a crucial and vulnerable component of the lower extremities, the medial gastrocnemius–Achilles tendon unit (gMTU) plays a significant role in sport performance and injury prevention during long-distance running. However, how habitual foot strike patterns influence the morphology of the gMTU remains unclear. Therefore, this study aimed to explore the effects of two main foot strike patterns on the morphological and mechanical characteristics of the gMTU. Long-distance male runners with habitual forefoot (FFS group, n = 10) and rearfoot strike patterns (RFS group, n = 10) and male non-runners (NR group, n = 10) were recruited. A Terason uSmart 3300 ultrasonography system was used to image the medial gastrocnemius (MG) and Achilles tendon, Image J software to analyze the morphology, and a dynamometer to determine plantar flexion torque during maximal voluntary isometric contractions. The participants first performed a 5-minute warm up; then, the morphological measurements of MG and AT were recorded in a static condition; finally, the MVICs test was conducted to investigate the mechanical function of the gMTU. One-way ANOVA and nonparametric tests were used for data analysis. The significance level was set at a p value of <0.05. The muscle fascicle length (FL) (FFS: 67.3 ± 12.7, RFS: 62.5 ± 7.6, NRs: 55.9 ± 2.0, η2 = 0.187), normalized FL (FFS: 0.36 ± 0.48, RFS: 0.18 ± 0.03, NRs: 0.16 ± 0.01, η2 = 0.237), and pennation angle (PA) (FFS: 16.2 ± 1.9, RFS: 18.9 ± 2.8, NRs: 19.3 ± 2.4, η2 = 0.280) significantly differed between the groups. Specifically, the FL and normalized FL were longer in the FFS group than in the NR group (p < 0.05), while the PA was smaller in the FFS group than in the NR group (p < 0.05). Conclusion: Long-term running with a forefoot strike pattern could significantly affect the FL and PA of the MG. A forefoot strike pattern could lead to a longer FL and a smaller PA, indicating an FFS pattern could protect the MG from strain under repetitive high loads. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. IMPACTS OF CORE TRAINING ON ATHLETES' PERFORMANCE IN LONG-DISTANCE RUNNING.
- Author
-
Wenchao Yao
- Subjects
LONG-distance running ,ATHLETE training ,ATHLETIC ability ,LONG-distance runners ,ENDURANCE athletes ,PHYSICAL training & conditioning - Abstract
Copyright of Revista Brasileira de Medicina do Esporte is the property of Redprint Editora Ltda. and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. PSYCHOLOGICAL QUALITY IN MIDDLE AND LONG-DISTANCE TRAINING.
- Author
-
Wutao Tian and Shurui Jiao
- Subjects
LONG-distance running ,LONG-distance runners ,TRACK & field ,PSYCHOLOGICAL tests ,MENTAL health ,SPORTS psychology - Abstract
Copyright of Revista Brasileira de Medicina do Esporte is the property of Redprint Editora Ltda. and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. Effect of 6-week curcumin supplementation on aerobic capacity, antioxidant status and sirtuin 3 level in middle-aged amateur long-distance runners.
- Author
-
Bańkowski, Sebastian, Petr, Miroslav, Rozpara, Michał, and Sadowska-Krępa, Ewa
- Subjects
- *
AEROBIC capacity , *LONG-distance runners , *OXIDANT status , *OXIDATIVE stress , *CURCUMIN , *DIETARY supplements , *LONG-distance running - Abstract
The study was undertaken to evaluate the effect of 6-week supplementation with a daily dose of 2g of curcumin on VO2max and prooxidant/antioxidant homeostasis in middle-aged amateur long-distance runners during the preparatory period of the macrocycle. Thirty runners were randomly assigned to a placebo group (PL) and a curcumin-supplemented group (CU). Their VO2max was assessed before supplementation and after 6 weeks of supplementation. Venous blood samples were collected from the participants at rest, immediately after exercise, and after 1h of recovery to evaluate the activity of antioxidant enzymes (SOD, CAT, GPx), non-enzymatic antioxidants (GSH, UA) and sirtuin 3 level (SIRT 3), as well as the levels of oxidative stress markers (TOS/TOC, MDA, and 8-OHdG) and muscle damage markers (CK, LDH, and Mb). VO2max, the activity of enzymatic antioxidants, the concentrations of non-enzymatic antioxidants, the levels of oxidative stress markers, and the levels of muscle damage markers did not change significantly in the CU group over 6 weeks of supplementation with curcumin. However, the resting concentration of SIRT 3 was found to be significantly higher (p ≤ 0.05) compared with pre-supplementation. Curcumin supplementation does not have a significant effect on VO2max and prooxidant/antioxidant homeostasis in runners. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. Current perception and practice of athletics coaches about the modification of footstrike pattern in endurance runners: A survey.
- Author
-
Abran, Guillaume, Delvaux, François, Schwartz, Cédric, Martens, Géraldine, Hody, Stéphanie, Dardenne, Nadia, Bruyere, Oliver, Bornheim, Stephen, and Croisier, Jean-Louis
- Subjects
COACHING (Athletics) ,COACHES (Athletics) ,LONG-distance running ,LONG-distance runners ,SCIENTIFIC literature ,CUSHIONS - Abstract
Purpose: To date, the relationship between footstrike pattern and performance, as well as with injury incidence in endurance running remains unclear. For these reasons, it is currently not recommended to modify footstrike pattern in an uninjured long-distance runner. The purpose of this study was to analyse whether athletic coaches apply these current scientific recommendations with their endurance runners on the field. Methods: A Delphi method study was used to develop an online survey that was administered to French-speaking athletic coaches in Belgium. The survey comprised three sections: 1) coaches' profile, 2) coaches' perception of footstrike patterns, 3) practices pertaining to footstrike patterns. Results: One hundred and fourteen respondents completed the entire questionnaire. Ninety-six (84%) athletic coaches reported modifying the footstrike pattern of their endurance runners. They reported that they modify their runners' rearfoot and forefoot strike more often than a midfoot strike (P < 0.0001) to prevent injury (83%) and to improve performance (66%). According to them, midfoot strike is considered as the best landing pattern for endurance performance (47%) and injury prevention (36%) whereas rearfoot strike is considered as the worst (respectively, 50% and 52%). Summary and conclusion: This study highlights the disparities between scientific recommendations and athletic coaches' field practices for modifying footstrike patterns in endurance runners. Contrary to current scientific literature recommendations, a large proportion of coaches modify the natural footstrike pattern of their endurance runners towards a midfoot strike pattern to improve performance and prevent injury. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. Heavy Resistance Training Versus Plyometric Training for Improving Running Economy and Running Time Trial Performance: A Systematic Review and Meta-analysis.
- Author
-
Eihara, Yuuri, Takao, Kenji, Sugiyama, Takashi, Maeo, Sumiaki, Terada, Masafumi, Kanehisa, Hiroaki, and Isaka, Tadao
- Subjects
RESISTANCE training ,ONLINE information services ,RUNNING ,CONFIDENCE intervals ,LONG-distance running ,SYSTEMATIC reviews ,EFFECT sizes (Statistics) ,SPORTS ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,PLYOMETRICS ,ATHLETIC ability ,HIGH-intensity interval training ,MEDLINE ,INFORMATION storage & retrieval systems ,DATA analysis software - Abstract
Background: As an adjunct to running training, heavy resistance and plyometric training have recently drawn attention as potential training modalities that improve running economy and running time trial performance. However, the comparative effectiveness is unknown. The present systematic review and meta-analysis aimed to determine if there are different effects of heavy resistance training versus plyometric training as an adjunct to running training on running economy and running time trial performance in long-distance runners. Methods: Electronic databases of PubMed, Web of Science, and SPORTDiscus were searched. Twenty-two studies completely satisfied the selection criteria. Data on running economy and running time trial performance were extracted for the meta-analysis. Subgroup analyses were performed with selected potential moderators. Results: The pooled effect size for running economy in heavy resistance training was greater (g = − 0.32 [95% confidence intervals [CIs] − 0.55 to − 0.10]: effect size = small) than that in plyometric training (g = -0.13 [95% CIs − 0.47 to 0.21]: trivial). The effect on running time trial performance was also larger in heavy resistance training (g = − 0.24 [95% CIs − 1.04 to − 0.55]: small) than that in plyometric training (g = − 0.17 [95% CIs − 0.27 to − 0.06]: trivial). Heavy resistance training with nearly maximal loads (≥ 90% of 1 repetition maximum [1RM], g = − 0.31 [95% CIs − 0.61 to − 0.02]: small) provided greater effects than those with lower loads (< 90% 1RM, g = − 0.17 [95% CIs − 1.05 to 0.70]: trivial). Greater effects were evident when training was performed for a longer period in both heavy resistance (10–14 weeks, g = − 0.45 [95% CIs − 0.83 to − 0.08]: small vs. 6–8 weeks, g = − 0.21 [95% CIs − 0.56 to 0.15]: small) and plyometric training (8–10 weeks, g = 0.26 [95% CIs − 0.67 to 0.15]: small vs. 4–6 weeks, g = − 0.06 [95% CIs 0.67 to 0.55]: trivial). Conclusions: Heavy resistance training, especially with nearly maximal loads, may be superior to plyometric training in improving running economy and running time trial performance. In addition, running economy appears to be improved better when training is performed for a longer period in both heavy resistance and plyometric training. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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42. The long run: How marathons mirror the journey of leadership.
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Towns, Sally
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ENERGY levels (Quantum mechanics) ,LONG-distance runners ,MARATHON running ,CATHOLIC education ,SENSE of direction ,LONG-distance running - Abstract
This article explores the parallels between running a marathon and being a leader. The author, Dr. Sally Towns, draws on her experience as both a runner and a leader to highlight the similarities between the two endeavors. She emphasizes the importance of preparation, strategy, and adaptability in both marathon running and leadership. The article also discusses the mental challenges faced in both pursuits and the role of values and faith in guiding one's actions. Ultimately, the author concludes that both marathon running and leadership are not just about reaching the destination, but also about the journey and the lessons learned along the way. [Extracted from the article]
- Published
- 2024
43. Maximum aerobic speed, maximum oxygen consumption, and running spatiotemporal parameters during an incremental test among middle- and long-distance runners and endurance non-running athletes.
- Author
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Casado, Arturo, Luis Tuimil, José, Iglesias, Xavier, Fernández-del-Olmo, Miguel, Jiménez-Reyes, Pedro, Martín-Acero, Rafael, and Rodríguez, Ferran A.
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LONG-distance runners ,LONG-distance running ,RUNNING speed ,ENDURANCE athletes ,OXYGEN consumption ,TRACK & field ,AEROBIC capacity - Abstract
Background. Maximal aerobic speed (MAS) is a useful parameter to assess aerobic capacity and estimate training intensity in middle- and long-distance runners. However, whether middle- and long-distance runners reach different levels of MAS compared to other endurance athletes with similar VO
2max has not been previously studied. Therefore, we aimed to compare VO2max , MAS and spatiotemporal parameters between sub-elite middle- and long-distance runners (n = 6) and endurance non-runners (n = 6). In addition, we aimed to compare the maximal blood lactate concentration [BLa] experienced by participants after conducting these tests. Methods. Telemetric portable respiratory gas analysis, contact and flight time, and stride length and rate were measured using a 5-m contact platform during an incremental test at a synthetic athletics track. VO2 , heart rate, respiratory quotient values in any 15 s average period during the test were measured. [BLa] was analyzed after the test. Running spatiotemporal parameters were recorded at the last two steps of each 400 m lap. A coefficient of variation (%CV) was calculated for each spatiotemporal variable in each participant from 8 km h-1 onwards. Results. Whereas runners reported faster MAS (21.0 vs. 18.2 km h-1) than non-runners (p = 0.0001, ES = 3.0), no differences were found for VO2max and maximum blood lactate concentration during the running tests (p > 0.05). While significant increases in flight time and stride length and frequency (p < 0.001, 0.52 ≤ ηp ² ≤ 0.8) were observed throughout the tests, decreases in contact time (p < 0.001, ηp ²=0.9) were reported. Runners displayed a greater %CV (p = 0.015) in stride length than non-runners. We conclude that middle- and long-distance runners can achieve a faster MAS compared to non-running endurance athletes despite exhibiting a similar VO2max . This superior performance may be associated to a greater mechanical efficiency. Overall, runners displayed a greater ability to modify stride length to achieve fast speeds, which may be related to a more mechanically efficient pattern of spatiotemporal parameters than non-runners. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2022
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44. Fluid Containing Highly Branched Cyclic Dextrin: An Alternative Ergogenic Aid to Enhance Endurance Exercise Performance in Long-Distance Runners.
- Author
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Chuychai, Jutamas, Srihirun, Kanang, Songdhasn Chinapong, Sanpasitt, Chanawat, Khaosanit, Pattarawut, and Nokkaew, Nattiporn
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LONG-distance runners ,ERGOGENIC aids ,RUNNING speed ,LONG-distance running ,FATIGUE (Physiology) ,WARMUP - Abstract
Chuychai J, Srihirun K, Chinapong S, Sanpasitt C, Khaosanit P, Nokkaew N. Fluid Containing Highly Branched Cyclic Dextrin: An Alternative Ergogenic Aid to Enhance Endurance Exercise Performance in Long-Distance Runners. JEPonline 2022;25(4):1-13. Thirteen male marathon runners completed the randomized, double-blind, and crossover study to investigate the effects of the highly branched cyclic dextrin (HBCD) and glucose-containing beverages (GLUC) on running endurance capacity. Thirty minutes before each time to exhaustion (TTE) test, participants ingested 500 mL of either 1.5 g·kg-1 BW of HBCD or glucose. The TTE consisted of a 3-minute warm-up, a 30-minute run at the velocity at VT1 and running at the velocity at VT2 until exhaustion to determine the endurance capacity, as well as blood glucose and lactate concentration, HR, RPE, and fluid loss. There was no significant difference in the interaction effect for blood glucose and lactate concentration, HR, and RPE between HBCD and GLUC over the period of trials. HBCD ingestion prior to exercise resulted in longer TTE than GLUC (42.67 ± 4.92 vs. 40.77 ± 4.40 minutes, P = 0.02) and less body fluid loss than GLUC (0.28 ± 0.18 vs. 0.50 ± 0.32 kg, P = 0.04). In conclusion, an HBCD beverage ingestion may help to maintain fluid loss more effectively than consuming an isocaloric glucose beverage, resulting in improved endurance performance. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
45. Haruki Murakami and His Early Work: The Loneliness of the Long-Distance Running Artist: Masaki Mori, Lanham, Maryland: Lexington Books, 2021, xvi, 113 pp., ISBN 978-1-7936-3597-6 hb, https://rowman.com/ISBN/9781793635976/Haruki-Murakami-and-His-Early-Work-The-Loneliness-of-the-Long-Distance-Running-Artist
- Author
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Lofgren, Erik R.
- Subjects
- *
LONG-distance running , *LONELINESS , *PSYCHOLOGICAL stress , *SUBMARINE volcanoes , *LONG-distance runners , *ARTISTS - Abstract
One of the more interesting parts of this work is how Mori positions Murakami in relation to the intersecting forces of English, Japanese, and translation with this last acting as the fulcrum of Murakami's early style. Mori has only been partially successful in his desire 'to have demonstrated that Murakami's short stories deserve closer critical attention then they have so far been accorded in relation to his literary I oeuvre i as a whole' (87). Like the relatively unexplored role translation has in Murakami's writing, this, too, might be deemed a missed opportunity to produce a work that extended Mori's earlier explorations into Murakami's early I oeuvre i . [Extracted from the article]
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- 2023
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46. Running-related demands and vigor in long-distance runners: The moderating role of resources and recovery.
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van Iperen, Luuk P., de Jonge, Jan, Gevers, Josette M. P., and Vos, Steven B.
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LONG-distance runners ,WASTE recycling ,LONG-distance running ,RUNNERS (Sports) ,REGRESSION analysis - Abstract
Long-distance running is a demanding sport and runners use a variety of coping strategies to deal with these demands. In this study, we investigated running-related demands, resources, and recovery and, as an indicator of well-being, vigor. Specifically, following the Demand-Induced Strain Compensation Recovery Model, we tested to what degree the relation between running-related demands and vigor was moderated by two coping strategies available in running: running-related resources (e.g., training control, running mate/coach support) and running-related recovery (i.e., detachment from running). Demands, resources, recovery, and vigor were all surveyed across three separate dimensions (i.e., physical, cognitive, emotional) in a cross-sectional sample of 623 recreational long-distance runners. Hierarchical regression analyses were used to determine to what degree the demands-vigor relation was moderated by resources and recovery. Evidence for moderations was found for the cognitive and emotional dimensions of vigor, revealing four significant moderating effects of resources or recovery on the demands-vigor relation. Three of these effects involved emotional resources or recovery. Contrary to expectations, results also showed that in two cases higher recovery was associated with lower vigor, rather than higher, when runners experienced high demands. In all, we found modest support for the role of resources and recovery in altering the nature of the demands-vigor relation in recreational long-distance runners. This study highlights the importance of the emotional dimension of demands, resources, and recovery, as those facets were most important in predicting vigor in runners. Practical implications are addressed with regard to emotional resources and recovery for long-distance runners. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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47. Convolutional Neural Network and Computer Vision-Based Action Correction Method for Long-Distance Running Technology.
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Juan, Wang
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NEURAL computers ,LONG-distance running ,CONVOLUTIONAL neural networks ,LONG-distance runners ,OPTICAL flow - Abstract
For long-distance running tactics, a computer vision-based motion correction solution is presented. The depth information is merged into the KCF algorithm to enhance it, which overcomes the classic KCF method's incapacity to tackle the tracking drift issue caused by occlusion and extracts the technical features of long-distance running motions. Based on computer vision, the posture area of long-distance runners is detected, and the technical movements of long-distance runners are recognized. Calculate the centroid coordinates of the wrong technical movement correction area in long-distance running, and generate a tracking image of the wrong technical movement in long-distance running. The foreground and background information of the image is separated by the optical flow feature of machine vision, and the motion trajectory of the long-distance running error technique is extracted, and the motion correction of the long-distance running technique based on computer vision is realized. The experimental results show that the method in this paper has better accuracy in extracting long-distance running motion features and can accurately identify and correct the technical movements of the long-distance running, the technical movements of the head, and the technical movements of the body balance, and the correction efficiency is high. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
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48. A worldwide comparison of long-distance running training in 2019 and 2020: associated effects of the COVID-19 pandemic.
- Author
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Afonseca, Leonardo A., Watanabe, Renato N., and Duarte, Marcos
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RUNNING training ,LONG-distance running ,COVID-19 pandemic ,COVID-19 ,LONG-distance runners ,SOCIAL networks - Abstract
Objective. The goal of the present study was to investigate possible effects of the COVID-19 pandemic on long-distance running training. Methods. This is a retrospective study with a within-subject design. We analyzed 10,703,690 records of running training during 2019 and 2020, from 36,412 athletes from around the world. The records were obtained through web scraping of a large social network for athletes on the internet. A potential long-distance runner was defined as a user of the social network who had a record of running at least one of the six World Marathon Majors by 2019. Results. In 2020, compared with 2019, in total there was a 3.6% decrease in the number of athletes running, a 7.5% decrease in the distance and 6.7% in the duration of running training. There were large variations in these variables throughout 2020, reaching 16% fewer athletes running weekly and 35% lower running distance (Cohen's d D0:34, p<0:001) and 33% lower running duration (Cohen's d D0:30, p<0:001) in September 2020. The beginning of the decrease in running training in the first quarter of 2020 coincides with the beginning of the adoption of measures to restrict the COVID-19 pandemic; but as of the second quarter of 2020, running training appears to have undergone variations unrelated to the preventive measures. Among the ten most represented countries in the dataset, running training in Brazil appears to have been the most affected by the COVID-19 pandemic and restriction measures. Conclusion. The wide variations in long-distance running training throughout 2020 are likely related to the COVID-19 pandemic. As for the total volume, the observed decreases of up to 7.5% in the outcome variables related to running training in 2020 could also be attributed to the COVID-19 pandemic, but other factors such as injury, illness or lack of interest, may also have contributed to these decreases. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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49. Self-Serving Bias in Performance Goal Achievement Appraisals: Evidence From Long-Distance Runners.
- Author
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Hyun, Moonsup, Jee, Wonsok F., Wegner, Christine, Jordan, Jeremy S., Du, James, and Oh, Taeyeon
- Subjects
LONG-distance runners ,LONG-distance running ,PREJUDICES ,ATHLETIC ability ,SPORTS events - Abstract
While working with a long-distance running event organizer, the authors of this study observed considerable differences between event participants' official finish time (i.e., bib time) and their self-reported finish time in the post-event survey. Drawing on the notion of self-serving bias, we aim to explore the source of this disparity and how such psychological bias influences participants' event experience at long-distance running events. Using evidence of 1,320 marathon runners, we demonstrated how people are more likely to be subject to a biased self-assessment contingent upon achieving their best finish time at the event. The study samples were split into record-high-achieved and record-high-missed groups, and the self-serving biases of each group were explored. Results from the t -test comparing record-high-achieved and -missed groups showed that runners in the record-high-missed group were significantly more likely to report a positively biased finish time than runners in the record-high-achieved group (p < 0.01). Additionally, results from logistic regression showed that as runners missed their best finish time by a wider margin, the probability of reporting a positively biased incorrect finish time increased. Lastly, we conducted an additional t -test and revealed that runners who are subject to self-serving bias showed a lower level of overall event satisfaction. The current study suggests one way to bypass the adverse effects of participant sport event participants' worse-than-expected athletic performance. We specifically suggest that the event organizers target runners who had worse-than-expected performance and make extra efforts on non-race service attributes (e.g., finish line experience, rest and recovery area, and transportation after the event) because these runners are more likely to be unsatisfied with the event. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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50. CARDIOVASCULAR MONITORING IN THE TRAINING OF LONG-DISTANCE RUNNERS.
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Huaiming Wang and Zongqiang Jin
- Subjects
LONG-distance runners ,LONG-distance running ,RUNNING training ,SINUS arrhythmia ,BLOOD pressure ,ATHLETES - Abstract
Copyright of Revista Brasileira de Medicina do Esporte is the property of Redprint Editora Ltda. and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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