February 8, 2024

 Eat Early To Avoid Early Stroke And Heart Disease

Studies on meal timing or “periodized nutrition” have produced varied results on a variety of important body metrics like glucose, insulin, and even endurance performance. Sometimes it’s instructive to look beyond these to hard-stop events like strokes and heart attacks.


That’s what Dr. Gabe Mirkin does here, summarizing several large, impressive studies that, in sum, seem to conclude: Eat breakfast fairly early in the day, and definitely eat dinner early in the evening--well before bedtime. 


One big review (with free full text)  recently followed 103,000 subjects for more than 7 years. “The researchers found that each hour of delaying dinner after 5 PM was associated with a 7 percent increased risk for a stroke, and that eating dinner after 9 PM was associated with a 28 percent increased risk for a heart attack, compared to eating before 8 PM.” They also found that eating breakfast after 8 am “was associated with increased risk for both heart attacks and strokes.” 


Mirkin cites other papers that have reached similar conclusions, and explains why late dinners can be harmful to your health. To put it simply: You need to move after you eat, and you probably aren’t moving much after a 9 pm dinner.


Based on these papers, the following seems a good approach: Eat dinner early, then take a 12 hour break until you break your fast relatively early the next morning. More at DrMirkin.com.


7 Ways To Run More And Better In 2024

Some things are complicated, some aren’t. Brain surgery belongs in the first category. Running falls into the second. This is a 10 second “read” from a running physiotherapist. It might be slight, but it carries a big potential impact.


You can’t do any better than Scott Carlin’s first piece of advice: “Start with identity. You’re a runner.” This means: Even if you just run 8 miles a week, you take your running seriously, along with all the other health-fitness habits that you know should be part of your overall lifestyle ( good nutrition, occasional strength training, etc).


I also found another of his tips quite powerful: “Sign up for a race.” This underlines the fact that you’re a serious runner, and, as Jeff Galloway has often noted, it will “scare” you a bit. It will scare you in a good way, putting more motivation in your training program as you see that race date edge closer on your calendar. Since motivation is job one, races help you get the job done. More at X/ScottCarlin.


Secrets Of The “Super Masters” Runners

Richard Lovett coaches the highly-successful “Red Lizards” female masters running team from Portland OR. The Lizzies, both individuals and particularly the team, are frequent winners at national cross-country competitions.


Lovett also writes authoritative running articles and books and--here’s where things get interesting--contributes to astronomy publications. He combines both in this terrific article at Cosmos, not your normal source for running insights. It’s about “secrets of the supermasters” runners.


One of them: “Choose your parents well.” Okay, not much we can do about that.


But Bas Van Hooren, a Dutch elite runner and researcher into many key running-related questions, has lots more practical advice for midlife-and-beyond runners. It seems that keeping much of your training in the slow-easy range is helpful. Easy running is less likely to produce injuries, which Van Hooren believes a major obstacle for older runners. “You need to make sure you’re not getting injured too much, because you will lose muscle mass and decrease performance,” he told Lovett.


Also, don’t worry if you weren’t a star track or cross-country runner in high school. Many top age-group runners discovered their talent later in life. No one’s quite sure why this should be, but it seems a consistent finding. Better late than never. More at Cosmos.


Yes, You Can “Spot Reduce” Your Belly Fat

I feel like I was probably 12 years old when I first heard that “spot reducing” is not possible. In other words, it was a long time ago. Sure, you might be lucky enough to lose a few pounds/body fat on an exercise and diet plan, but you can’t control where those pounds will come from. Might be your belly, might be your thighs, might be your arms. 


This was positioned as an ironclad human biological law. But a new published report based on a randomized controlled trial has cast doubt on the old truism.


The study was designed to test for spot reduction of the trunk (including the stomach). It used a sophisticated technique (dual-energy x-ray absorptiometry, DEXA) to look for any changes in trunk fat mass from pre-experiment to post-experiment.


Researchers gave exercise programs to two matched groups of subjects. Both routines burned the same number of total calories. One involved just treadmill running. The other combined treadmill running with maximal effort torso rotations and abdominal crunches. 


Results: Total weight loss and body fat loss were the same for both groups. However, the group doing rotations and crunches lost “trunk fat mass” while the all-treadmill group did not. 


Conclusion: “Abdominal endurance exercise utilized more local fat than treadmill running, indicating that spot reduction exists in adult males.” So, if you’re looking to shrink some belly fat like about 98% of the western world, keep running but also add some hard ab work to your program. More at Physiological Reports.


Yoga Breathing Boosts Running Efficiency

Yoga is a popular alternative activity among runners, particularly females. Many find that it helps reduce stress, and may also build strength and flexibility. 


A new study asked a different question about yoga for runners: Can “yoga breathing techniques” improve running efficiency?


Experienced runners (both male and female) of “various fitness” were assigned to 3 weeks of instruction in 3 types of yoga breathing technique: “Dirgha (breath awareness)), Kapalbhati, and Bhastrika (high frequency yoga breathing).” A control group received no instruction of any kind.


Before and after the instruction period, both groups ran on a laboratory treadmill at a “prescribed relative perceived exertion (RPE).” Okay, this is not exactly the most vigorous test of running economy I’ve ever seen. It’s not the way serious running physiologists go about it.


Nonetheless, after the yoga breathing instruction, those runners ran at a significantly faster pace while maintaining the prior RPE. The control group did not change pace.


Conclusion: “Yogic breathing technique positively influences running velocity regulation during self-selected running.” More at International J of Exercise Science with free full text.


New Studies Reveal Slow-But-Sure Progress On Running Injuries

Exercise journals are full of articles on running injuries, because it’s such an important topic. After all, we need to get more people moving and running to overcome the obesity-inactivity crisis. But how are we going to keep them going if they’ll soon be waylaid by knee, Achilles, and other leg woes?


It’s not much fun to write about this stuff, because there are few positive reports to cover. I’ve read hundreds of reviews, and most conclude: “We don’t know enough about preventing injuries to give you an evidence-based strategy.””


You begin to feel a bit fatalistic about it all, thinking:  “Okay, I’m a runner, I’m going to get injured. Just suck it up and deal as best you can.” In fact, this is what a lot of us do. We’re pretty hard core. We also realize that most running injuries are soft-tissue issues that tend to clear up in their own sweet time.


Here at RLRH we try to find positive (but realistic) outcomes, because we want to stay optimistic about our running. I’ve come across a few recently. Here’s a short  summary.


When a top team did a new, updated meta analysis and systematic review of running injuries, they reached the usual conclusion: “Interventions do not appear to reduce the risk and rate of running-related injuries.” However, there was a glimmer of daylight in their analysis.. 


They termed  it “an interesting finding.” For sure! There was “a significant positive effect on injury risk” if you followed suggested exercises “with an element of supervision.” In other words, with a physical therapist or someone making sure you did the recovery work, and did it correctly.


This suggests that injury prevention/recovery therapy is a lot like your training program. Consistency counts more than anything else. More at Sports Medicine with free full text.


The increasing use of digital, wearable technology is one of the big hopes in the injury-prevention world. A new paper found that a wristwatch with inertial measurement unit (to measure forces) and global positioning system (to measure speed) was used effectively by 86 runners over a 12-week period. The measured data was combined to create “acute load by effort,” which correlated with subsequent injury. 


This means that future trials might lower injury risk by noting the acute load of your  training before you pass  the breaking point. More at BMJ Open Sport & Exercise Medicine. 


Similarly, a RCT experiment with 160 Dutch runners examined the utility of digital inner soles capable of measuring impact forces. When runners received “real time” feedback regarding  3 run-related variables--speed, cadence, and footstrike--that had crept outside “target zones” for each subject, they were able to reduce injuries by 47%. Post-run feedback was not effective; it had to be “real time.” More at The American J of Sports Medicine with free full text.


A Brazilian team has been building evidence for those pesky “foot core” or “intrinsic foot muscle” exercises as injury prevention. I say pesky because I fail miserably at the damn things, but I’m going to have to go back and give it another go. In 2020, the group conducted an RCT in which runners who did a year of “novel foot core strengthening” reduced their expected injury rate by 58%. 


Last month (free full text) the same team showed that this foot core program  “reduces the occurrence of running related injuries by increasing the resistance to calcaneus pronation and building a more rigid and efficient lever during push-off.” I like the sound of a “more efficient lever.”


You have to go back to the team’s 2016 “protocol” paper to see illustrations of the foot-core exercises they used. More at BMC Musculoskeletal Disorders with free full text with photos (page down to Additional File 1.) For a short cut, check out this 7-minute YouTube video with several good foot core exercises similar to those used in Brazil.


When it comes to injury rehab, it’s looking like platelet rich plasma works well for tendonitis and plantar fasciitis. Also, if you’ve got bone-stress injuries, a recent review found that focused extracorporeal shock wave “may be a safe treatment for the management of bone stress injuries in runners.”


I know you’re not going to follow all these links. I hope that one or two might prove useful.


Listen Closely: Here’s What Evolution Teaches Us About Distance Running & Health

Daniel Lieberman is training for his 14th Boston Marathon, but that’s not the reason for listening to him, as you should whenever you get the chance. It’s his academic background and research, and his non dogmatic application of both. 


A Harvard prof and evolutionary biologist, Lieberman understands the whys of exercise and eating behaviors, and important related issues (like footwear), better than most. Best of all, he doesn’t insist on monolithic health prescriptions from evolutionary data. Lieberman doesn’t espouse practices that insist on “one true path.” Rather he views evolution and human adaptation from a more flexible perspective.


In this expansive interview with CNN medical reporter and doctor, Sanjay Gupta, Lieberman ranges over his many areas of expertise. But first, how about his marathoning habit? “It’s kinda stupid,” he says with a chuckle. “Well, not really, but we never evolved to run 26.2 miles from one point to another as fast as possible.”


Sometimes with humor, and almost always with common sense, Lieberman explains that there are plenty of healthy diets and a wide range of healthy exercises. Eskimos thrive on mostly blubber, and vegans on plants. Running marathons and swimming the English Channel are a bit extreme, but produce hardy individuals. So do gardening, bird-watching, and dancing.


There are only a  small number of key principles: Eat a variety of minimally processed food. Don’t gain unnecessary weight--especially not around the belly. Move a lot. Avoid large-scale “mismatches” with the human evolutionary past, the most dangerous of which might be a lack of sufficient daily exercise. 


Lieberman explains it like this: Movement is stressful. It actually damages proteins, muscles, DNA, and more. However, the human body evolved to not just repair this damage, but to rebuild it stronger than before. “We end up being better off after the exercise than before,” he notes. 


“But here’s the rub. We never evolved not to be physically active. So if you want to slow aging, exercise is the key, because it turns on many anti-aging mechanisms. When we don’t exercise, we age faster.” More at CNN.


Speaking Of Evolution, Should You Follow “The Paleo Diet?”

This actually comes direct from Lieberman’s research pursuits. He and his colleagues recently sought to answer the question: Should we all be following the Paleo Diet?


Dating back to a paper in the 1985 New England Journal of Medicine, the Paleo Diet argues that we should eat the same foods that our ancestors consumed 3 million year ago. The proponents claim that this is an evolutionary imperative. The Paleo Diet includes no grains or dairy products since they didn’t exist millions of years ago.


The current paper “analyzed data on animal food, plant food, and honey consumption by weight and kcal from 15 high-quality published ethnographic studies representing 11 recent tropical hunter-gatherer groups.” If the Paleo Diet was the only appropriate human diet, the researchers figured, then the 11 hunter-gatherer groups should all be eating more or less the same foods. 


That didn’t prove to be the case. Rather “Our analyses reveal high levels of variation in animal versus plant foods consumed and in corresponding percentages of protein, fat, and carbohydrates.” 


Conclusion: “The degree of variation among hunter-gatherer diets precludes any simple, accurate characterization of a “normal” ancestral diet.” In other words, there are plenty of different ways to arrive at a healthy diet, and much depends on where you live, ie, Alaska vs a tropical rain forest. More at The American J of Clinical Nutrition.


Of course, one thing does remain true for all the hunter-gatherer diets. The populations  ate fresh, whole foods--not plastic wrapped, processed, ersatz foods.


SHORT STUFF You Don’t Want To Miss

>>> Water, water everywhere: How to determine if you’re drinking too much water


>>> Don’t gum it up: Moderate exercise produces “superior” gum health. Too little exercise is a risk factor


>>> Find the right shoe: Researchers at MIT have developed a model that “predicts” which shoe will be fastest on your feet


GREAT QUOTES Make Great Training Partners

“It doesn’t matter how slowly you go as long as you do not stop.”

--Confucius


That’s all for now. Thanks for reading. See you again next week. Amby

February 1, 2024

“Move It To Improve It”--How Exercise Makes Almost Everything Better

How long has it been since I reminded you that “Motivation is job one.” Too long, I think. 


Happily a recent New York Times article gives me good reason to return to a favorite topic.


The Times asked a group of experts why we make so many exercise “excuses” and/or erect “mental blocks” that interfere with our fitness plans. And how can we overcome these blocks to increase our workout consistency?


For beginners, says How To Change book author, Katy Milkman: Stop calling them “excuses.” That self-critical term leans too close to shame, an unhelpful burden. Instead, plan, plan, plan. Devise a complete strategy or series of action steps. 


That is, always know what you’re going to do next. Forget about the excuse that’s pushing you toward not doing. Forge on to Plan B.


Also, don’t obsess about the cold, the expense, the time-crunch you’re feeling, or various aches and pains that might accompany your exercise program. With all the fitness alternatives surrounding us these days, there’s always a way to deal. Again: Be prepared.


The best advice of all came from Edward Phillips, a Harvard professor of physical medicine and rehabilitation. “If you remain sedentary, your risk of deleterious health effects is 100 percent,” Phillips said. 


Now, that’s telling it like it is. Anything you do, even 5 minutes, is better than nothing at all. More at NYTimes.


Related: Last week I wrote that we needed a variation on the venerable  “Use it, or lose it” phrase that’s popular among regular exercisers. “Lose it” is a negative thought that might not prove helpful to some. 


With an assist from RLRH reader M Hanlon, I’ve now got a good variant. Here it is: “Move it to improve it.” It’s a maxim that would be supported by a wide range of health-fitness professionals from orthopedic surgeons to physical therapists to cardiologists to strength and marathon coaches. Last and perhaps most important--mental health counselors.


Tell your friends: “Move it to improve it.”


Should You Let ChatGPT Coach You?

Let’s face it: AI internet tools are intriguing for lots of reasons beyond fake Taylor Swift images. For example,, untold numbers of runners have wondered if AI could provide a useful training program. For free, or close to free


Naturally, a group of running researchers also wondered the same. So they devised a simple test to find out. 


The researchers “invented” a beginning runner who was training just twice a week for a total of 10 miles/week. This runner then asked ChatGPT for a 6-week training plan that would “improve performance.” 


The runner made two requests, known as “prompts” in the AI world. The first was short and simple. The second included more information about the runner, including his usual heart rate during runs, his desired improvement (3 to 5%), his use of a treadmill and smartwatch, and so on. 


The ChatGPT output--its training plans--were next submitted to a group of running coaches with a masters degree in sports science, and at least 5 years of coaching experience. The coaches rated the GPT training programs on 22 criteria that were drawn from existing scientific papers. 


The big question: Are “training plans generated by ChatGPT appropriate and in-line with recent scientific evidence, and do the AI-derived training plans differ based on provided input information granularity?”


Result: The ChatGPT training plans were not highly rated by the expert coaches, but received additional points in proportion to the depth and specificity of the prompting. The more you tell ChatGPT about yourself and your training goals, the better the advice you receive. Yet even the best ChatGPT plans were “not rated optimal.”


Conclusion: “We advise avoiding the use of ChatGPT generated training plans without an expert coach’s feedback. ChatGPT currently does not cover many aspects which are relevant in a coach-athlete relationship such as motivation, monitoring, and training plan adjustments.” More at J of Sport Science & Medicine with free full text.


New Research: Better Breathing Can Improve Endurance Performance.

It’s no secret or surprise that you have to breathe optimally to perform well in endurance sports. In fact, I would have assumed that all elite athletes do this quite naturally on the way to attaining top performance. . 


However, that’s not the finding of a recent examination of 69 “elite endurance athletes” who were compared with 44 healthy non-athletes. On a battery of pulmonary function tests, nearly 45% of the elites exhibited “dysfunctional breathing patterns.” 


The big problem? They weren’t using “a diaphragmatic breathing pattern, which is associated with better pulmonary function test results,” and more oxygen delivery to the legs when the respiratory muscles become fatigued. The diaphragm is a dome-shaped muscle just below the rib cage and above the stomach.


The researchers concluded: “It may be important to incorporate breathing exercises into an athlete's training to help develop a proper breathing pattern and thus better exercise performance.” More at Nature with free full text.


Here’s a simple YouTube video explaining how you can learn and practice diaphragmatic breathing.


Yes, You Can Get Faster In The Marathon

The runners from Minnesota Distance Elite aren’t among the favorites in Saturday’s U.S. Olympic Marathon Trials in Orlando, FL. But it’s not for lack of top coaching. Coach Chris Lundstrom qualified for 3 Marathon Trials himself, and has a PhD in kinesiology with an emphasis on, you guessed it, running performance. 


Several years ago he published a paper that followed veteran 3-hour marathon runners as they prepared for their next 26.2-miler. This is an interesting group because we all know it’s not easy to continue improving in the marathon after you reach a certain fitness and performance. 


Lundstrom investigated runners in their mid-30s with previous marathon bests around 3 hours (males) and 3:30 (females). He wanted to determine how much their physiology and performance would change in yet another 12-week marathon buildup. 


Here’s what he found: The biggest difference was a drop in percentage of body fat, from an already-low 18.7% to 16.7%. This, along with their training, allowed the runners to achieve a significant improvement in their vo2 max--a key determinant of marathon success.


The runners trained an average of 53 miles a week with just one workout that was rated a “quality session.” Their Relative Perceived Exertion of training level on a weekly scale was a modest (even low) 4.8 on a 1 to 10 scale.


You wouldn’t use the word “hard” to describe this level of marathon training. These runners simply trained consistently to get ready.


So how did the runners perform in their goal marathon races? It varied considerably, as they raced in different locations with different weather. 


Most did not improve their best times of the previous 2 years. Two did run impressive times, however. Their improvements stemmed largely from a big jump in their vo2 max after the 12-weeks of training. 


Conclusion: “Maximal aerobic capacity can increase in this population, which is already well trained.” It helps to train consistently and perhaps drop a couple of pounds. However, you won’t necessarily run a fast followup marathon unless you pick a fast course with good weather. More at J of Human Sport & Exercise with free full text.


Running Builds Strong Bones In Mid-Life Athletes

Running generally builds stronger bones, particularly of the lower body … except when it doesn’t. Bone fracture risk is high in teen runners, especially among  females who don’t fuel sufficiently. Under-eating male adolescent runners also face higher risks. 


But what about in midlife when one wants to build strong bones as a hedge against any future osteoporosis? How are those runners doing in the bone-health arena? A recent paper looked at bone mineral content and density in 212 runners (average age in the early 40s) vs 110 age-matched non runners who did not meet global recommendations for physical activity.


The reviewers analyzed the two groups in terms of “cumulative loading rate” on the bones. This cumulative load was almost twice as high in runners vs non runners. We often call this “pounding.” It can lead to some injuries, but it can also promote greater bone strength and health. 


Result of the current comparison: Bone mineral content and bone mineral density of the runners was significantly higher than the non runners. That’s important because “the objective of the middle aged population is to maintain or slow the reduction in bone mineral density.” The enhanced bone health was true only in the lower body, not in  the lumbar spine.


Conclusion: “We recommend running as a suitable physical activity, supplemented with other activities, such as building muscles, including the back muscles, to promote

bone strength in the spine.” More at J of Sports Medicine & Physical Fitness with free full text.


Maybe Ketones Are A Functional Brain Food--Not A Body Fuel

The Keto or ketogenic diet gained much of its early notoriety for its potential to enhance weight loss and endurance performance. The first of these has produced modest supporting evidence, but the second not so much--at least not for endurance athletes. Now the field seems to be shifting from the body to the mind. 


This shouldn’t be a big surprise, as the strongest support for a keto diet comes from studies of epilepsy, a brain disease. 


Researchers are currently digging into other possible links between a keto diet and our mental states. In his newsletter, Physiologically Speaking, Brady Holmer explains that ketone esters could limit brain fatigue, thus improving ultra-endurance performance in events where your mental focus is just as important as carbs-glycogen to keep you going. 


A deep new report at National Public Radio quotes a number of experts in the field of psychiatric medicine. They are intrigued by the possibility that ketogenic manipulations could reduce symptoms of bipolar and depressive disease. This is a long way from hard science, but there are a number of serious trials under way.. 


Proponents of “functional nutrition” believe we might someday come closer to understanding how specialized diets could improve the health of individuals with specific conditions. This is a long step from carbohydrate-loading for marathon runners, but it’s an area receiving increased attention.  More at NPR. 


Marijuana Makes Runners Feel Better, But Run Slower

As marijuana becomes legal in more states (and countries), we’ll see increasing research into how the long-debated substance affects mind and body. Some of the investigations will be exercise studies. Here’s the latest. 


A University of Colorado team had previously found that up to 80% of local exercisers had also used marijuana before or shortly after exercise. (Colorado legalized usage a decade ago.) Now they wanted to test how marijuana changed the running experience.


Did it make the runners “feel” better or worse? Did they run faster or slower?


The answers were a bit of a toss-up. The runners reported more enjoyment and “high” symptoms, and also less pain, when running with marijuana vs without. Also, in a bit of a surprise, their runs were more positive with a CBD-dominant strain than with a THC-heavy marijuana. Generally, THC is thought to produce stronger effects.


However, running on marijuana was also rated more difficult or effortful than without. The runners were slower, perhaps due to marijuana’s tendency to increase heart rate. “It is pretty clear from our research that cannabis is not a performance enhancing drug,” said senior author Angela Bryan.


The researchers are primarily interested in learning if marijuana could boost regular activity among non-exercisers by lessening their perceived discomfort during exercise. More at U Colorado News and Sports Medicine.


Sorry, Ladies: Dark Chocolate Won’t Make You Faster

You can construct a reasonable hypothesis that consumption of dark chocolate before running could boost performance. After all, dark chocolate contains ample amounts of anthocyanins--those strong antioxidant flavonols found in richly colored fruits and vegetables. Anthocyanins might then increase nitric oxide availability, which is thought to increase exercise potential.


Like I said: A hypothesis worth testing. 


So researchers designed a cross-over study with college-age female runners. During one arm of the experiment, the runners received Ghirardelli Unsweetened baking chocolate 2 hours before treadmill testing. At another time, they received the same number of calories of Ghirardelli White Chocolate with no flavonols. (Baking chocolate is known to contain about twice the flavonols of dark chocolate.)


Result: There were no significant differences between conditions for vo2 max or energy expenditure. The dark chocolate had “no effect on running economy or fuel utilization.” Thus, “It cannot currently be recommended to use dark chocolate acutely for the augmentation of running performance.”


Hypothesis denied. Sorry about that. More at Topics in Exercise Science & Kinesiology with free full text.


There remains a small open window for dark chocolate fans. This was an “acute” study, meaning subjects got the dark chocolate only once--2 hours before their treadmill test. It’s possible that regular, “chronic” use of dark chocolate could provide a positive benefit, as has been shown in several tests of male cyclists.


You’ll have to test this hypothesis on your own. Enjoy!


How To Run Smart In The Heat

Here’s a clear, evidence-based heat-running article that you should definitely read right now if you’re racing in the weekend’s U.S. Olympic Marathon Trials.


Okay, I know you’re not. But you should review the article anyway, because it won’t be long before you have to face the challenges of heat running, wherever you might live. 


The most important advice here is: “Modify your training plan.” That’s code for “Run slower.” Along with “Run less,” there’s no smarter  approach to running in the heat. 


Actual heatstroke can be life-threatening, which concerns many. But it doesn’t ordinarily strike runners unless they are highly motivated to maintain a fast pace in hot, humid conditions. For example, in a Marathon Trials competition.


An underlying virus or other condition can also provoke heatstroke, so be particularly careful about not running in the heat if you already feel compromised.


Many of us will suffer from heat cramps or heat exhaustion (but not heatstroke) when the temps/humidity rise too high. These will make you feel like crap, but they’ll also resolve relatively quickly when you do the common-sense thing: Stop running, seek shade, drink modestly, and lower your body temperature, perhaps by pouring cold water over your torso. 


Don’t overdrink when you feel hot, as this could lead to hyponatremia, a dangerous brain-swelling condition. The goal is to cool your body, not to fill it with water or other fluids. 


Also, don’t panic. You’ll almost certainly feel better a couple of minutes after you stop exerting yourself in the heat. 


If no one’s offering you $100,000 to finish your run, don’t continue to push hard . Stop and recover. Don’t regard running in the heat as a toughness test. It’s actually a smartness test. Be smart. More at Marathon Handbook.


SHORT STUFF You Don’t Want To Miss

>>> Elliptical vs treadmill: How well does an elliptical workout simulate treadmill running?

>>> On thin ice: The evidence for Graston technique and prolotherapy is weak, so proceed cautiously

>>> Risk-benefit ratios: Although the benefits of midlife running “always outweigh the risks,” it’s only smart to know your limits


GREAT QUOTES Make Great Training Partners

"The marathon never ceases to be a race of joy, a race of wonder."

--Hal Higdon, writer, coach, and elite marathon runner 


That’s all for now. Thanks for reading. See you again next week.