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The endurance athlete: High aerobic capacity and improved longevity: Health consequences of exercise and inactivity

journal contribution
posted on 2012-06-01, 00:00 authored by Chris ShawChris Shaw, A Wagenmakers
Adaptations to the cardiovascular, pulmonary and skeletal muscle systems allow endurance athletes to perform exercise for prolonged periods and delay the onset of fatigue. These adaptations explain why the current men's marathon world record holder can run 42.195 km (26.2 miles) in a little over 2 hours at an average speed of over 20 km/h. The adaptations which enable sustained endurance performance also offer protection against many chronic diseases and increase average lifespan. For example, former cyclists who competed in the Tour de France before 1964 demonstrated a 17% increase in average longevity compared with the general population1. Therefore studying the elite endurance athlete can give us clues as to how partaking in regular physical activity, or failure to do so, alters disease risk and life expectancy. © Biochemical Society.

History

Journal

Biochemist

Volume

34

Pagination

20-23

ISSN

0954-982X

eISSN

1740-1194

Language

eng

Publication classification

C2.1 Other contribution to refereed journal

Issue

3

Publisher

Portland Press

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