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The importance of the aerobic metabolism to cover the energy requirements in marathon running is extensively documented in the scientific literature. Elite marathon runners use sudden pace changes as a tactical weapon. Such efforts are likely above physiological steady state and require additional anaerobic energy. To the best of our knowledge, no scientific information on glycolytic (∼anaerobic) power ( VLamax) has been published in elite marathon runners.
Running a marathon at world record pace carbohydrate utilization might be the main energy source. However no such data exists in elite marathon runners.
How they approached the problem
The data for this study is retrieved from the paper of Jones (2006) and is used to feed a mathematical model of muscle metabolism (INSCYD). The authors modelled the world record marathon of Paula Ratcliff (2014) and calculated the following data:
VO2max: 70 ml/min/kg
Vlamax: 0.31 mmol/l/s
Carbohydrate utilization during marathon: 150 gr/h (338 gr for the marathon)
What can we learn from this information?
Elite marathon running requires a high aerobic power and running economy. Glycolytic power should be balanced to allow pace changes, without compromising fat utilization and the running speed at metabolic steady state.
Link to the full-text.