Editor's Blog1 min ago
Marathon Heroes
I think anyone who runs the Marathon is pretty special and it reminds me of a friend of mine whose daughter ran all around the British Isles including Northern Ireland ( during the troubles ) . She ran a Marathon every day for 3/4 months and was proclaimed Athlete of the Year. She was doing it for Cancer Research.
However I met up with him a year later and he told me she had lost 20% of her bone mass
which sounded serious to me. I haven't seen him since but I have often wondered if this is a risk athletes run when they exercise at that sort of level over a period of time. and if they do ,do the bones recover ?
However I met up with him a year later and he told me she had lost 20% of her bone mass
which sounded serious to me. I haven't seen him since but I have often wondered if this is a risk athletes run when they exercise at that sort of level over a period of time. and if they do ,do the bones recover ?
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.I thought that ones bone mass became stronger when you exercised, I was told that I had osteopena (the onset of osteoporosis), and that exercise would strengthen my bones. It may well be that marathon running (persistant jarring of the frame) for such a length of time has that effect on the body. Paula Radcliffe has been in a lot of Marathons, so there may be a recovery period.
I've mentioned it before (do you blame me!?) that my granddad is 88 and still runs between 13 and 17 miles every Saturday, he run the Liverpool half marathon a few weeks ago and beat a fair few people and he's running the Liverpool Marathon in October. He's run the London Marathon 16 times (I think) and the Chester Marathon a fair few times too!
It's fair to say I'm rather proud to call him my granddad!
It's fair to say I'm rather proud to call him my granddad!