Muscle damage and fatigue in the marathon

Is muscle fatigue in the marathon related to body mass change (dehydration) and/or muscle damage produced by the continuous foot strikes over the 42.2km distance? For this study, adapted from a paper originally published in Applied Physiology Nutrition and Metabolism Journal, amateur runners (114 men and 24 women) were tested before a marathon for leg muscle power output, their body weight was recorded and a urine sample was obtained. Within three minutes of completing the race, run in 28oC and 46% relative humidity, the subjects repeated the leg power test and then their body weight and urine samples were collected again. The authors found that mean body mass reduction was 2.2±1.2%. The body mass change shows high inter-individual variability, but only 7% of the runners studied lost more than 4%. No myoglobin (a protein indicating muscle fibre damage) was detected in the pre-race urine specimens while postrace urinary myoglobin concentration increased to 3.5±9.5 µg/mL (P<0.05). Mean leg muscle power reduction after the race was 16±10%. Muscle power change significantly correlated with post-race urine myoglobin concentration (r=-0.55; P<0.001) but not with body mass change (r=-0.08; P=0.35). The correlation between myoglobinuria and muscle power change suggest that muscle fatigue is associated with muscle tissue breakdown.
© Copyright 2012 New Studies in Athletics. All rights reserved.

Bibliographic Details
Subjects:
Notations:endurance sports biological and medical sciences
Published in:New Studies in Athletics
Language:English
Published: 2012
Online Access:https://www.iaaf.org/download/downloadnsa?filename=c0a2c35a-eed9-4954-9cc1-7ee5e42dfc25.pdf&urlslug=muscle-damage-and-fatigue-in-the-marathon
Volume:27
Issue:4
Pages:45-55
Document types:article
Level:advanced