Headline, Ottawa Citizen:“RUNNING COULD KILL YOU!”. Men’s Fitness: “HARDER, STRONGER, FASTER RUNNING CAN KILL YOU” Are you scared? ARE YOU SCARED? Every six months or so, headlines proclaiming the doom of people who like to...The postEpisode 2: Running Will Kill You! appeared first onSciRunner.
Headline, Ottawa Citizen:“RUNNING COULD KILL YOU!”. Men’s Fitness: “HARDER, STRONGER, FASTER RUNNING CAN KILL YOU” Are you scared? ARE YOU SCARED? Every six months or so, headlines proclaiming the doom of people who like to...
Headline, Ottawa Citizen:“RUNNING COULD KILL YOU!”. Men’s Fitness: “HARDER, STRONGER, FASTER RUNNING CAN KILL YOU” Are you scared? ARE YOU SCARED?
Every six months or so, headlines proclaiming the doom of people who like to run seem to pop up like little schadenfreude sundaes.  People love to tell runners that all their hard work is likely causing more harm than good, and after the deaths of celebrities like Jim Fixx, Micah True, and even poor old Pheidippides (he of Marathon fame), it is a little scary to contemplate. But how good is the science behind this idea?  Are you really likely to die mid-run?
TL:DR version?
Exercise, any exercise at all, is generally good for you.  It will increase your lifespan, reduce your risk of diabetes, reduce excess weight, and more.  Most people don’t get near enough.  Do some people die during marathons?  Yes, but it’s unclear whether marathons actually elevate your risk of early death–those people had underlying structural abnormalities or atherosclerosis already.  And the clinical significance of any kind of heart damage marker following extreme exercise is unclear–long distance athletes live longer than sedentary or even moderately active people, so it doesn’t appear that these markers mean anything in this population.
Recommendations:
Studies mentioned in the episode:
Pheidippides probably didn’t die
The rate of cardiac arrest in marathons is 1/184,000 participants
Atherosclerotic heart disease tends to be the cause of death during marathons
Marathons prevent deaths from traffic accidents
Cardiovascular disease is the leading cause of death worldwide
Even small amounts of running massively decrease your risk of death from heart disease
Among runners, those who run more need fewer diabetes and cholesterol-lowering drugs
Similarly, more intense running reduces diabetes and cholesterol drug use
Student athletes have fewer heart attacks than the general population
Most people are less active than they think they are
Copenhagen heart health study about risks of strenuous jogging
Running helps prevent diabetes, high blood pressure, and cardiovascular disease
Marathon runners have higher rates of markers of heart damage
Recreational Boston Marathon runners have elevated markers of heart damage following the race
Ironmans do not cause increases in heart damage markers
Recreational Berlin Marathon runners have elevated markers, but no indication of actual heart damage
Elevated heart damage markers following exercise likely are not meaningful
Cardiac arrhythmias are reduced following marathons
Alex Hutchinson attacks the “running too much” myth
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Cover photo by mebrett is licensed under CC BY 2.0
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