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Ultra-marathon Runners clinical trials

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NCT ID: NCT04511858 Completed - Clinical trials for Ultra-marathon Runners

Difference in Central Fatigue During Two Ultra-endurance Practices: Running vs. Cycling

FAT-CENTR
Start date: March 5, 2021
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The mechanisms contributing to muscle fatigue in extreme long-duration exercise bouts are poorly understood. Ultra-endurance exercise is an excellent model for the study of adaptive responses to extreme loads and stress and it is an especially useful model for documenting the origins of central fatigue. This protocol will compare fatigue during and after ultra-endurance exercise bouts that result in moderate lower-limb tissue damage (i.e. cycling) or significant damage (i.e. running). The results of this protocol will allow us to further understanding of the reasons for major central fatigue, i.e. within the central nervous system, in ultra-endurance.

NCT ID: NCT04025138 Completed - Clinical trials for Ultra-marathon Runners

Fatigability Compared Men and Women Induced According to the Distance Traveled on an Ultra-marathon in the Mountains

UTMB_2019
Start date: July 2, 2019
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Acute physiological consequences of ultra-marathon running are still unknown, particularly in women. Some studies have suggested that the proportion of fatigue attributable to peripheral and central mechanisms varies between males and females; however, results are contradictory. The results from the investigators of the present experiment in two studies conducted in 2009 and 2012 showed that: - A large part of fatigue induced by a mountain ultra-marathon could be attributed to central fatigue in males and that, - Females exhibited less peripheral fatigue in the plantar flexors than males did after a 110-km ultra-trail-running race. According to the literature, there seems to be a plateau in fatigue after 12-15 hours of running.