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How Fast Can Humans Go?

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I found the following article very interesting especially the " super-fast twitch

fibers " . I had never heard of these fibers.

Ralph Giarnella MD

Southington Ct USA

*******************

Friday, Aug. 22, 2008

How Fast Can Humans Go?

By Deirdre Van Dyk

Usain Bolt may have just broken the human speed limit. Last week, he took two

gold medals in the Olympic 100m, shattering his own world record with a time of

9.69 secs., and the 200m with a time of 19.3 secs., obliterating by

two-hundredths of a second the long-standing world record set at

the Atlanta Games in 1996.

Bolt is an exciting showman and, clearly, a gifted runner, but is he an

inimitable oddity, or proof that athletes are simply getting faster overall?

World speed records have fallen like dominoes at these Olympic Games (in

swimming too, you may have heard), and experts think humans can get faster

still. Half a century or ago or so, we didn't believe a human could run a 4-min.

mile — until Bannister proved us wrong in 1954 when he ran it in 3 mins.

59.4 secs. At the 1936 Games in Berlin, sprinter Owens won the 100m gold

with a blistering time of 10.3 secs — today, that's par for junior level speed

athletes. We now have better equipment, better training and improved nutrition,

along with faster tracks and, crucially, a lot more endorsement money to be made

by running as fast as possible, and that's uncovered a deeper pool of better

runners than ever before.

Elite sprinters are not, however, simply improved versions of the average Sunday

runner. They are physiologically different. For example, a typical human has in

his skeletal muscles an equal balance of " fast-twitch " muscle fibers (quick

contracting, easily fatigued muscle tissue that generates high power) and

" slow-twitch " fibers (the muscle mass that uses oxygen — aerobic, rather than

anaerobic), on which endurance runners rely. Slow-twitch muscle can contract for

long periods of time with less fatigue, which helps some distance athletes run

up to 60 mi. per day. Sprinters legs are genetically blessed with 70%

fast-twitch and 30% slow-twitch muscles, which is what allows them to push off

so fast and so powerfully, according to Trappe, who heads the human

performance laboratory at Indiana's Ball State University and has studied

sprinters' muscles. But elite sprinters like Bolt may have even more of

something that other world-class sprinters

don't: superfast-twich muscles, which perform at double the rate of regular

fast-twitch muscles, creating even more force. Trappe says regular folks have 1%

to 2% superfast-twitch skeletal muscle mass, but in a sprinter like Bolt, that

figure may be up to 25%.

That helps explain why Bolt's legs move fast enough to be a blur. When people

run, they are essentially bouncing though the air from one leg to another, says

Lieberman, a professor of biological anthropology at Harvard University

who studies how and why the human body looks and works as it does. What

determines how fast people go is their stride length — a function of how long

the legs are, how powerfully they push off into a stride and how far forward the

body jumps — and their stride rate, which is how fast they can propel their

legs forward. While great endurance runners, get their speed from long strides,

sprinters get much of their speed from a fast stride rate — and from raw

power. They hit the ground harder, relative to their body weight, than

marathoners.

It appears that Bolt takes advantage of a little of both. At 6 ft. 5 in., he's

nearly half a foot taller than many other gold-medal sprinters; compared to his

Olympic competition, Bolt's step was 1 ft. longer, allowing him to cover 100m in

41 steps. The other athletes needed, on average, 47. That helps, considering

Bolt isn't the best starter — he's relatively slower off the block, but he

separates himself at the end of the race, when " he's still able to turn his legs

over fast enough with high power, " says Ed Coyle at the University of Texas's

Human Performance Laboratory. " He overcomes his average start and just doesn't

slow down, as others do, in the last 30 to 40 meters. He's able to relax and

coordinate his longer legs. "

Looking forward, " no one can really know exactly how fast a human may be able to

run, " says Dennis Bramble, professor of biology at the University of Utah.

Certainly, runners have been getting faster, as far as we know, but as

Weyand, an expert in biomechanics at Southern Methodist University, points out,

our history of recorded time in sprints is relatively brief. " We have no way of

knowing if humans might not have been even faster centuries or millennia ago, "

he says.

" Modern sprinters seem to be operating close to the limits of the human body, "

says Bramble. " Still, when someone who is not built like a classic sprinter —

[bolt is] taller and leaner than most — smashes the world record while making

it look easy, maybe all bets should be off. "

Click to Print

Find this article at:

http://www.time.com/time/health/article/0,8599,1835420,00.html

> > The question comes to mind that if the placebo effect

> works as well as it

> > does, if Doctors refrained from telling patients about

> the negative side

> > effects of drugs, would this lack of knowlege also be

> an influence?

> >

> > Carson Wood

> > Westbrook, ME USA.

> >

> > ==================================

> >

> > Placebo effect is rewriting

> the medical rulebook

> >

> > Members may be interested in:

> >

> > Why the placebo effect is rewriting the medical

> rulebook

> > 20 August 2008

> >

> >

> http://www.newscientist.com/channel/health/mg19926701.600-why-the-

> > placebo-effect-is-rewriting-the-medical-rulebook.html

> >

> > Magazine issue 2670

> > THE placebo effect has been known about since the

> beginnings of

> > medicine. Indeed, it used to be just about the only

> medicine doctors

> > could offer their patients - reassurance that a

> treatment will work,

> > with the result that it often did. What nobody

> realised until

> > recently is just how powerful and complex the effect

> is.

> >

> > It turns out that a patient's state of mind,

> awareness of their

> > condition and expectations of the care they are about

> to receive can

> > influence pretty much every facet of medicine, from

> consultations

> > with a doctor to clinical trials of a new drug. For

> example, one set

> > of researchers has found that the anxiety-relieving

> drug diazepam

> > doesn't work unless patients know they are taking

> it. Similarly,

> > morphine is significantly more effective when people

> are told they

> > are being given it. In both cases the placebo effect

> is critical to

> > the drug's effectiveness....

> >

> > =======================

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