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Ultra-endurance running (UER) poses extreme mental and physical challenges that present many barriers to completion, let alone performance. Despite these challenges, participation in UER events continues to increase. With the relative paucity of research into UER training and racing compared with traditional endurance running distance (e.g., marathon), it follows that there are sizable improvements still to be made in UER if the limitations of the sport are sufficiently understood. The purpose of this review is to summarise our current understanding of the major limitations in UER. We begin with an evolutionary perspective that provides the critical background for understanding how our capacities, abilities and limitations have come to be. Although we show that humans display evolutionary adaptations that may bestow an advantage for covering large distances on a daily basis, these often far exceed the levels of our ancestors, which exposes relative limitations. From that framework, we explore the physiological and psychological systems required for running UER events. In each system, the factors that limit performance are highlighted and some guidance for practitioners and future research are shared. Examined systems include thermoregulation, oxygen delivery and utilisation, running economy and biomechanics, fatigue, the digestive system, nutritional and psychological strategies. We show that minimising the cost of running, damage to lower limb tissue and muscle fatigability may become crucial in UER events. Maintaining a sustainable core body temperature is critical to performance, and an even pacing strategy, strategic heat acclimation and individually calculated hydration all contribute to sustained performance. Gastrointestinal issues affect almost every UER participant and can be due to a variety of factors. We present nutritional strategies for different event lengths and types, such as personalised and evidence-based approaches for varying types of carbohydrate, protein and fat intake in fluid or solid form, and how to avoid flavour fatigue. Psychology plays a vital role in UER performance, and we highlight the need to be able to cope with complex situations, and that specific long and short-term goal setting improves performance. Fatigue in UER is multi-factorial, both physical and mental, and the perceived effort or level of fatigue have a major impact on the ability to continue at a given pace. Understanding the complex interplay of these limitations will help prepare UER competitors for the different scenarios they are likely to face. Therefore, this review takes an interdisciplinary approach to synthesising and illuminating limitations in UER performance to assist practitioners and scientists in making informed decisions in practice and applicable research.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s40279-023-01936-8 | DOI Listing |
Clin Spine Surg
September 2025
Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, Duke University, Durham, NC.
Study Design: Narrative review.
Objective: To synthesize current knowledge on radiographic parameters, classification systems, and compensatory mechanisms essential to the diagnosis and surgical planning of cervical spine deformity (CD) correction.
Summary Of Background Data: CD encompasses a heterogeneous set of conditions associated with neurological impairment and impaired health-related quality of life.
Aesthetic Plast Surg
August 2025
Department of Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery, The Ninth People's Hospital, Shanghai Jiao Tong University School of Medicine, Doctor's Office, 16th Floor of the First Building, 639 Zhi Zao Ju Road, Shanghai, People's Republic of China.
Background: Incidence of iatrogenic upper eyelid retraction (UER) caused by blepharoptosis overcorrection and improper blepharoplasty is increasing fast among Eastern Asians. The aim of this study is to present our experience using techniques of pretarsal cicatrix release, recession of levator-Müller's muscle complex, and lengthening of levator-Müller's muscle complex to correct mild to severe UER, and evaluate their anesthetic surgical outcomes.
Methods: Patients with UER who underwent surgical repair using the stepwise management strategy from December 2018 to June 2022 were retrospectively reviewed.
The synergistic evolution of digital technological innovation (DTI) and urban economic resilience (UER) has become an inherent requirement for the high-quality development of urban agglomerations. Based on panel data at the prefecture-level city scale from 2011 to 2022, this paper explores the spatiotemporal patterns and driving factors of the coupling coordination between DTI and UER across the three major urban agglomerations in the Yangtze River Economic Belt (YREB). The study yields the following key findings: First, during the study period, the coupling coordination degree between digital innovation and UER experienced a fundamental shift from disorder to coordination, but high-quality coupling coordination has not yet been fully achieved.
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April 2025
Korea University, Tokyo, Japan.
This study investigates the characteristics of Japanese primary school mathematics lessons that adopt a problem-solving approach. We argue that these characteristics are reflected in three key aspects: collective teaching and learning, the lesson as a "drama" (i.e.
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