Sex Differences in Endurance Running

Archive ouverte

Besson, Thibault | Macchi, Robin | Rossi, Jeremy | Morio, Cedric Y. M. | Kunimasa, Yoko | Nicol, Caroline | Vercruyssen, Fabrice | Millet, Guillaume Y.

Edité par CCSD ; Springer Verlag -

International audience. In recent years, there has been a significant expansion in female participation in endurance (road and trail) running. The often reported sex differences in maximal oxygen uptake (VO2max) are not the only differences between sexes during prolonged running. The aim of this narrative review was thus to discuss sex differences in running biomechanics, economy (both in fatigue and non-fatigue conditions), substrate utilization, muscle tissue characteristics (including ultrastructural muscle damage), neuromuscular fatigue, thermoregulation and pacing strategies. Although males and females do not differ in terms of running economy or endurance (i.e. percentage VO2max sustained), sex-specificities exist in running biomechanics (e.g. females have greater non-sagittal hip and knee joint motion compared to males) that can be partly explained by anatomical (e.g. wider pelvis, larger femur-tibia angle, shorter lower limb length relative to total height in females) differences. Compared to males, females also show greater proportional area of type I fibres, are more able to use fatty acids and preserve carbohydrates during prolonged exercise, demonstrate a more even pacing strategy and less fatigue following endurance running exercise. These differences confer an advantage to females in ultra-endurance performance, but other factors (e.g. lower O-2 carrying capacity, greater body fat percentage) counterbalance these potential advantages, making females outperforming males a rare exception. The present literature review also highlights the lack of sex comparison in studies investigating running biomechanics in fatigue conditions and during the recovery process.

Suggestions

Du même auteur

Sex Influence on the Functional Recovery Pattern After a Graded Running Race: Original Analysis to Identify the Recovery Profiles

Archive ouverte | Macchi, Robin | CCSD

International audience. This study investigated the sex influence on the acute and delayed fatigue effects of a 20 km graded running race. Eighteen recreational runners, 10 women and 8 men, completed the race. The t...

Effect of a graded running race on lower limb muscle damage, jump performance and muscle soreness in men and women

Archive ouverte | Macchi, Robin | CCSD

International audience. Purpose Delayed structural and functional recovery after a 20 km graded running race was analyzed with respect to the sex effect. Method s Thirteen female and 14 male recreational runners com...

Neuromuscular adjustments to unweighted running: the increase in hamstring activity is sensitive to trait anxiety

Archive ouverte | Fazzari, Camille | CCSD

International audience. Introduction: Originally developed for astronauts, lower body positive pressure treadmills (LBPPTs) are increasingly being used in sports and clinical settings because they allow for unweight...

Chargement des enrichissements...