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[The body muscle compartment and its relationship to food absorption and blood chemistry during an extreme endurance performance].

Authors :
Raschka C
Plath M
Cerull R
Bernhard W
Jung K
Leitzmann C
Source :
Zeitschrift fur Ernahrungswissenschaft [Z Ernahrungswiss] 1991 Dec; Vol. 30 (4), pp. 276-88.
Publication Year :
1991

Abstract

The purpose of the study was to examine the changes of the muscle's fat-free compartment and its relation to the corresponding biochemical and nutritional parameters of 42 men and 13 women, the participants of an ultra long-distance run of 1000 km (20 days of daily running 50 km). The muscle-fractions initially increased, decreased in the middle phase, and remained stable for the rest of the run. Significant changes of the fat-free weight were registered from the 11th day on, the LBM decreasing until the middle of the distance; then the lean body mass enlarged. All the muscle-circumferences were reduced with the exception of the thigh, which grew, paralleling the CK/CKMB-concentrations, this phenomenon being due to the high mechanical stress of the lower extremities. The biochemical parameters exhibit a strain-related reaction of adaptation within the initial 6 days, the hormones and protein-concentration increasing in the beginning and falling from the third day on, uric acid and CK/CKMB-activity decreasing from the 6th day on. The consecutive parallel reduction of both uric acid, urea, and muscle measurements might be seen as a special endurance-related clearance-mechanism of potential toxicants. The negative relationship between the changes of muscle measurements and the cumulative protein intake and the catabolic constellation of the clinical-chemical values might suggest that the absolute protein intake of 1.7 g/kg body mass should be increased in order to diminish the loss of musculature during an ultra-long distance run.

Details

Language :
German
ISSN :
0044-264X
Volume :
30
Issue :
4
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Zeitschrift fur Ernahrungswissenschaft
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
1788995
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1007/BF01651957