Yu Elaine, Lowe Jacques, Millon Jasmin, Tran Kristi, Coffey Christanne
Department of Emergency Medicine, University of California San Diego, San Diego, CA, United States.
Carle Illinois College of Medicine, University of Illinois Urbana-Champagne, Urbana, IL, United States.
Front Sports Act Living. 2023 Aug 1;5:1224581. doi: 10.3389/fspor.2023.1224581. eCollection 2023.
Non-professional climbers are increasingly attempting long routes in a single day. Many suffer injury or rely on search and rescue teams when they become too fatigued to finish. Predicting fatigue is difficult, and existing studies have only studied climbers over durations less than an hour, while many outdoor multipitch climbs require more than an hour of climbing.
To determine how strength, endurance, and dexterity reflect fatigue after 24 h of continuous climbing.
Volunteer competitors completed measurements of grip strength, static hang time to failure, and time to tie a figure-eight follow-through knot. Measurements were taken during the registration period before the competition and again within an hour after the competition ended. Measurements were compared using the paired -test. Subgroup analysis was applied to competitors by division. Linear regression was applied to determine the relationship between vertical feet climbed and the number of routes climbed during the competition on each metric.
Thirty-six total climbers (average age 29.4 years old) completed pre- and post-competition measurements. After 24 h of climbing ( = 36), mean grip strength decreased by 14.3-15 lbs or 14.7%-15.1% ( < 0.001) and static hang time decreased by 54.2 s or 71.2% ( < 0.001). There was no significant change in time to tie a figure-eight-follow-through knot. Grip strength and hang time decreases were significant in climbers with outdoor redpoints of 5.10a and above. Hang time decreased by 5.4 s per 1,000 vertical feet climbed ( = 0.044).
Climbers can expect to experience a 14.7%-15.1% decrease in grip strength and 71.2% decrease in static hang time after 24 h of continuous climbing. These changes may make it difficult to climb consistently over a long objective, and climbers can use these measures at home to train for longer climbing routes. Future studies on shorter climbing intervals can help determine rates of decline in performance measures.
非专业登山者越来越多地尝试在一天内完成长距离路线攀登。许多人在因过于疲劳而无法完成攀登时受伤或需要依靠搜救队。预测疲劳很困难,并且现有研究仅针对持续时间不到一小时的登山者进行研究,而许多户外多段攀登需要超过一小时的攀爬时间。
确定力量、耐力和敏捷度如何反映连续攀登24小时后的疲劳状况。
志愿者参赛者完成握力、静态悬挂至力竭时间以及系双8字结的时间测量。在比赛登记期间以及比赛结束后一小时内再次进行测量。使用配对检验比较测量结果。按组别对参赛者进行亚组分析。应用线性回归来确定在比赛中垂直攀爬英尺数与每个指标上攀爬路线数量之间的关系。
共有36名登山者(平均年龄29.4岁)完成了赛前和赛后测量。在攀爬24小时后(n = 36),平均握力下降了14.3 - 15磅或14.7% - 15.1%(P < 0.001),静态悬挂时间下降了54.2秒或71.2%(P < 0.001)。系双8字结的时间没有显著变化。在室外红点难度为5.10a及以上的登山者中,握力和悬挂时间的下降显著。每攀爬1000垂直英尺,悬挂时间下降5.4秒(P = 0.044)。
连续攀爬24小时后,登山者的握力预计会下降14.7% - 15.1%,静态悬挂时间会下降71.2%。这些变化可能使在长目标路线上持续攀爬变得困难,登山者可以在家中利用这些指标来训练更长的攀爬路线。未来关于更短攀爬间隔的研究有助于确定性能指标的下降速率。