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Title

Can Trained Runners Effectively Attenuate Impact Acceleration During Repeated High-Intensity Running Bouts?

Authors

Clansey, Adam C.; Lake, Mark J.; Wallace, Eric S.; Feehally, Tom; Hanlon, Michael

Abstract

The purpose of this study was to investigate the effects of prolonged high-intensity running on impact accelerations in trained runners. Thirteen male distance runners completed two 20-minute treadmill runs at speeds corresponding to 95% of onset of blood lactate accumulation. Leg and head accelerations were collected for 20 s every fourth minute. Rating of perceived exertion (RPE) scores were recorded during the third and last minute of each run. RPE responses increased (P < .001) from the start (11.8 ± 0.9, moderate intensity) of the first run to the end (17.7 ± 1.5, very hard) of the second run. Runners maintained their leg impact acceleration, impact attenuation, stride length, and stride frequency characteristics with prolonged run duration. However, a small (0.11-0.14g) but significant increase (P < .001) in head impact accelerations were observed at the end of both first and second runs. It was concluded that trained runners are able to control leg impact accelerations during sustained high-intensity running. Alongside the substantial increases in perceived exertion levels, running mechanics and frequency domain impact attenuation levels remained constant. This suggests that the present trained runners are able to cope from a mechanical perspective despite an increased physiological demand.

Subjects

PHYSIOLOGICAL effects of acceleration; ANALYSIS of variance; ATHLETES; BIOMECHANICS; EXERCISE; MEDICAL protocols; RESEARCH funding; DATA analysis; PHYSICAL training & conditioning; LONG-distance running; DESCRIPTIVE statistics; BODY-weight-supported treadmill training

Publication

Journal of Applied Biomechanics, 2016, Vol 32, Issue 3, p261

ISSN

1065-8483

Publication type

Academic Journal

DOI

10.1123/jab.2015-0125

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