Publication Details

AFRICAN RESEARCH NEXUS

SHINING A SPOTLIGHT ON AFRICAN RESEARCH

medicine

Inverse relationship between percentage body weight change and fi nishing time in 643 forty-two-kilometre marathon runners

British Journal of Sports Medicine, Volume 45, No. 14, Year 2011

Objective The purpose of this study was to determine the relationship between athletic performance and the change in body weight (BW) during a 42 km marathon in a large cohort of runners. Methods The study took place during the 2009 Mont Saint-Michel Marathon (France). 643 marathon fi nishers (560 males and 83 females) were studied. The change in BW during the race was calculated from measurements of each runner's BW immediately before and after the race. Results BW loss was 2.3±2.2% (mean±SEM) (p<0.01). BW loss was -3.1±1.9% for runners fi nishing the marathon in less than 3 h; -2.5±2.1% for runners fi nishing between 3 and 4 h; and -1.8±2.4% for runners who required more than 4 h to complete the marathon. The degree of BW loss was linearly related to 42 km race fi nishing time (p<0.0000001). Neither age nor gender infl uenced BW loss during the race. Conclusions BW loss during the marathon was inversely related to race fi nishing time in 643 marathon runners and was >3% in runners completing the race in less than 3 h. These data are not compatible with laboratory-derived data suggesting that BW loss greater than 2% during exercise impairs athletic performance. They match an extensive body of evidence showing that the most successful athletes in marathon and ultramarathon running and triathlon events are frequently those who lose substantially more than 3-4% BW during competition.
Statistics
Citations: 92
Authors: 8
Affiliations: 2
Identifiers
Study Design
Cohort Study
Participants Gender
Female