My friend Kristofer coming out of T1 at the Buffalo Triathlon June 2009 |
[tags] Foto [/tags]
A recent study by the Minneapolis Heart Institute provides data that twice as many people die, per million during triathlons than marathons.
The Pioneer Press reported on Dr Harris’ research:
Marathon-related deaths made headlines in November 2007 when 28-year-old Ryan Shay died while competing in New York in the men’s marathon Olympic trials. Statistics show that for every million participants in these 26.2-mile running races, there will be four to eight deaths.The rate for triathletes is far higher –15 out of a million, the new study shows. Almost all occurred during the swim portion, usually the first event.
That most triathlon deaths occur during the swim portion of the event makes sense. Any injury or fatigue in the water could create a potential drowning incident. Both events are still relatively safe, in a 33 month period 14 triathletes died out of a total of 922,000 competitors.
Out of the 14 athletes, 6 were autopsied and four of those had documentable pre-exsisting heart conditions. The water temperature and stress of competition can exasperacte these conditions. A normal heart may also react negatively in these situations as well.
Their advice:
Doctors offer these tips to anyone considering a triathlon:
—Get a checkup to make sure you don’t have hidden heart problems.
—Train adequately long before the event, including open-water swims — not just in pools.
—Acclimate yourself to the water temperature shortly before a race, and wear a wetsuit if it’s too cold.
—Make sure the race has medical staff and defibrillators on site.
[tags] Triathlon, Marathon, Heart, Heart Research [/tags]