20.10.2011, 14:23
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#7
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Szenekenner
Registriert seit: 12.04.2011
Ort: Hamburg
Beiträge: 1.333
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Im Thema ganz interessant:
http://www.runnersworld.com/article/...9082-0,00.html
Zitat:
David Nieman, Ph.D., who heads the Human Performance Laboratory at Appalachian State University, and has run 58 marathons and ultras, uses the "neck rule." Symptoms below the neck (chest cold, bronchial infection, body ache) require time off, while symptoms above the neck (runny nose, stuffiness, sneezing) don't pose a risk to runners continuing workouts.
This view is supported by research done at Ball State University by Tom Weidner, Ph.D., director of athletic training research. In one study, Weidner took two groups of 30 runners each and inoculated them with the common cold. One group ran 30 to 40 minutes every day for a week. The other group was sedentary. According to Weidner, "the two groups didn't differ in the length or severity of their colds [..]
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Die "Neck Rule" erscheint mir einleuchtend und gefällt mir.
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Whatever quantitative measure of success you set out to achieve becomes either unattainable or meaningless. The reward of running—of anything—lies within us. ~Scott Jurek
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