How It Works

INSIDE THE BODY OF A RUNNER

A marathon is one of the toughest endurance running events on the planet, but race day is just a tiny part of the challenge. On average it takes a runner four-and-a-half hours to complete the 42.2-kilometre (26.2 mile) course, but before that they must endure months of training. During this period, runners average 80 kilometres a week or more, fundamentally changing the fabric of their bodies.

A marathon run drains thousands of calories, and the first major shift in runner physiology is in energy consumption. The body has three energy systems that supply fuel to working muscles, and they all depend on a small molecule called ATP. turning the triphosphate into a diphosphate, called ADP. To carry on exercising, the body needs to reverse the process.

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from How It Works

How It Works16 min read
Global Eye
Scientists have made a stem cell breakthrough in elephants that could mean researchers are one step closer to bringing back long-extinct woolly mammoths. Colossal Biosciences’ woolly mammoth team says it has successfully derived induced pluripotent s
How It Works5 min read
Surviving The Big Freeze
If a human were to let their body freeze, the result would be all-over frostbite and probably death. But there are creatures whose tissues are able to freeze solid in cold weather, then defrost in the spring, with no adverse effects. Take the wood fr
How It Works6 min read
Braindump
Several species of sharks are known to live in freshwater environments, but whether they should be considered true freshwater fish is debatable. Probably the most mysterious are the river sharks of the genus Glyphis. Fewer than ten species have been

Related Books & Audiobooks