When running marathons, women get more affected by air pollution than men
March 3rd, 2010 - 2:44 pm ICT by ANIWashington, Mar 3 (ANI): The running times of women in marathons is compromised if the quality of air is poor, but the same doesn’t hold true for men, says a new study.
In the study, Virginia Tech civil and environmental engineer Linsey Marr evaluated marathon race results, weather data, and air pollutant concentrations in seven marathons over a period of eight to 28 years.
The researchers compared the top three male and female finishing times with the course record and contrasted with air pollutant levels, taking high temperatures that were detrimental to performance into consideration.
Marr said higher levels of particles in the air were associated with slower running times for women, while men were not significantly affected.
She added that the difference could be due to the smaller size of women’s tracheas, which makes it easier for certain particles to deposit there and possibly to cause irritation.
“Although pollution levels in these marathons rarely exceeded national standards for air quality, performance was still affected,” said Marr.
Her studies were conducted where major U.S. marathons are located, such as New York, Boston, and Los Angeles, where pollution tends to be highest.
She said that although the person might not be significantly impacted by low-yet-still-acceptable air quality, marathoners are atypical because of their breathing patterns.
“Previous research has shown that during a race, marathon runners inhale and exhale about the same volume of air as a sedentary person would over the course of two full days. Therefore, runners are exposed to much greater amounts of pollutants than under typical breathing conditions,” said Marr.
Particulate matter appeared to be the only performance-altering factor in air quality, with carbon monoxide, ozone, nitrogen dioxide and sulfur dioxide levels not impacting race times.
The study appears in the official journal of the American College of Sports Medicine, Medicine and Science in Sports & Exercise. (ANI)
- Does air pollution erode mental sharpness? - Feb 14, 2012
- Delhi air quality was worst in March: Study - Apr 02, 2012
- Air pollution can lead to hospitalisations for pneumonia in seniors - Dec 23, 2009
- High pollution levels ups heart attack chances - Sep 21, 2011
- Pollution at 'unhealthy levels' in Delhi, says CSE (Lead) - Dec 13, 2010
- Pollution levels rise in capital - Dec 13, 2010
- Prenatal exposure to pollution harmful for kids - May 21, 2012
- Climate change will also worsen respiratory diseases - Mar 15, 2012
- London mayor accused of hiding pollution - Apr 24, 2012
- Electric cars cause more pollution than petrol ones: Study - Feb 14, 2012
- How air pollution can aggravate heart problems - Mar 10, 2011
- Less polluting Diwali this year - Oct 27, 2011
- Delhi has high level of air pollutants - Jun 22, 2011
- New Year fireworks foul Beijing's air - Jan 24, 2012
- Air at Games Village, venues polluted, shows study - Oct 11, 2010
Tags: air pollutant concentrations, air pollution, breathing patterns, environmental engineer, high temperatures, linsey, marathon race results, marathon runners, marathoners, marathons, marr, nitrogen dioxide, pollution levels, quality performance, running times, sedentary person, study virginia, tracheas, weather data, york boston