Endurance exercise performance: the physiology of champions
- 1Departments of Anaesthesiology and Physiology, Mayo Clinic College of Medicine Rochester, MN 55905, USA2Department of Kinesiology and Health Education, University of Texas Austin, Austin, TX 78712, USA
- Corresponding author M. J. Joyner: Departments of Anaesthesiology and Physiology, Mayo Clinic College of Medicine, 200 First Street SW, Rochester, MN 55905, USA. Email: joyner.michael{at}mayo.edu
Abstract
Efforts to understand human physiology through the study of champion athletes and record performances have been ongoing for
about a century. For endurance sports three main factors – maximal oxygen consumption
, the so-called ‘lactate threshold’ and efficiency (i.e. the oxygen cost to generate a give running speed or cycling power
output) – appear to play key roles in endurance performance.
and lactate threshold interact to determine the ‘performance
‘ which is the oxygen consumption that can be sustained for a given period of time. Efficiency interacts with the performance
to establish the speed or power that can be generated at this oxygen consumption. This review focuses on what is currently
known about how these factors interact, their utility as predictors of elite performance, and areas where there is relatively
less information to guide current thinking. In this context, definitive ideas about the physiological determinants of running
and cycling efficiency is relatively lacking in comparison with
and the lactate threshold, and there is surprisingly limited and clear information about the genetic factors that might pre-dispose
for elite performance. It should also be cautioned that complex motivational and sociological factors also play important
roles in who does or does not become a champion and these factors go far beyond simple physiological explanations. Therefore,
the performance of elite athletes is likely to defy the types of easy explanations sought by scientific reductionism and remain
an important puzzle for those interested in physiological integration well into the future.
Footnotes
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(Received 24 August 2007; accepted after revision 26 September 2007; first published online 27 September 2007)
- 2008 The Authors. Journal compilation © 2008 The Physiological Society













