| Literature DB >> 26290832 |
Odessa Addison1, Gregory Steinbrenner1, Andrew P Goldberg2, Leslie I Katzel1.
Abstract
Aging is associated with a decline in maximal aerobic capacity (VO2max) that may be attenuated by chronic endurance exercise. This case study chronicles the changes in marathon times in a 91 year old man who completed 627 marathons and 117 ultramarathons over 42 years. He began running marathons at age 48. His yearly best times remained fairly constant at ~240 minutes from age 50 - 64 years and then gradually rose to about 260 minutes in his early seventies followed by a curvilinear deterioration as he approached his ninth decade. His times plateaued at ~ 600 minutes in his late eighties. Between ages 68 and 89 his VO2max declined from 43 to 20 ml/kg/min. His marathon times were highly correlated with his VO2max (r2=0.87). The decline in marathons times and VO2max may reflect the contributions of biological aging, changes in exercise training volume and intensity, injuries, and comorbid disease.Entities:
Keywords: Maximal aerobic capacity; athlete; exercise; longitudinal
Year: 2015 PMID: 26290832 PMCID: PMC4538980 DOI: 10.9734/BJMMR/2015/17946
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Br J Med Med Res ISSN: 2231-0614
Fig. 1There is a curvaliner increase in this patient’s marathon times as he approached his ninth decade of life
Fig. 2Number of marathons and ultramarathons competed in per year. He was able to compete on average in >20 marathons a year between ages 69 and 87 years with a drop off at age 88. Marathons in dark bar, ultramarthons in line bar
Fig. 3VO2max versus age: (A) in L/min; (B) in ml/kg/min. He maintained his VO2max during the 4 years between the first two tests with a subsequent decline as he transitioned from running to walking. Similar results are noted when VO2max was expressed in either L/min (panel A) or adjusted for total body weight (panel B)
Fig. 4Relationship of VO2max to best yearly marathon time for that age. His marathon times over the 23 years were strongly related to VO2max (r2=0.87, p < 0.01)