Polarized training

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Apr 2014
7:59pm, 6 Apr 2014
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Canute
This week there has been some discussion of the evidence regarding cardiac damage on a Fetch thread titled ‘Jogging can be harmful' . http://www.fetcheveryone.com/viewtopic.php?id=55926 This had started as a discussion of a rather uninformative article in the Independent reporting a similarly uninformative account of an internet survey investigating possible reasons for cardiac damage in runners.

This week also saw the eventual publication of the study by Schwartz and colleagues originally presented at the American Heart Association meeting in 2011. They reported increased extent of coronary atheroma in men who had competed in the Twin Cities marathon annually for 25 years. Atheroma is associated with heart attack.

Although the evidence regarding increased coronary atheroma remains debateable, the evidence for increased risk of heart rhythm disturbances in athletes who have trained and competed at a demanding level for several decades is quite strong. Why do some athletes appear to accumulate damage to the heart over a period of many years, while others do not?

The mechanism of possible heart damage after decades of strenuous endurance training and competition is not clear, but it is likely that chronic inflammation plays an important part.

Heavy training and racing produces acute inflammation which leads to repair and strengthening . This is the mechanism of training benefit. However if there is inadequate recovery, inflammation can become chronic. Chronic inflammation damages body tissues including the heart. So it is plausible that failure to recover adequately from heavy training and racing contributes to the risk of heart damage suffered by some athletes. We face the challenge of defining what is heavy training and of determining when we are adequately recovered. Measurements such as resting HR that can be informative but can also be misleading.

So we face a challenge. If we want to perform well in endurance events, we need to do a high volume of training. If we want to reach our peak performance, we probably need to do some high intensity training. But achieving a high volume of training including some intense training, while ensuring adequate recovery from heavy training is tricky. I believe that many elite endurance athletes achieve this balance by adopting a polarised training strategy. I think the same strategy is good for recreational runners who want to perform at a demanding level. That is part of the reason I started this thread.
Apr 2014
8:17pm, 6 Apr 2014
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FenlandRunner
I think the key in the above post is the phrase 'while ensuring adequate recovery'.
Apr 2014
9:02pm, 6 Apr 2014
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Velociraptor
It's a fascinating area :)

Such a fine balance too, in the absence of a readily accessible way of determining what level of training stress any given individual can accommodate, and of tracking the various chemical substances in the body that would allow recreational athletes to make a decision on when to rest and when to press on based on a direct measurement of hormonal stress, muscle fibre damage, neuromuscular fatigue and the like.
SPR
Apr 2014
9:24pm, 6 Apr 2014
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SPR
One thought on your training week Canute, your AHR for your tempos was quite high, I'd have thought that was significantly over threshold, especially by the end of the run...
Apr 2014
9:35pm, 6 Apr 2014
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Canute
SPR,

Yes I think you are right. At present I am over-doing the tempo efforts. I am defining tempo as effort that I can manage with respiration rate up to approximately 45 breaths/min. Although 45 ‘easy’ breaths per minute would be OK, I am allowing myself to breath too deeply before increasing respiration rate. Maybe I could use HR as a criterion, though during exercise I think awareness of respiration is potentially better, because this is directly linked to accumulation of acidity. However it requires judgment. I am aiming to keep the proportion of ‘threshold’ level running less than 10% until I have got this right.
Apr 2014
9:29pm, 13 Apr 2014
951 posts
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Canute
Week 6 of polarised training
Easy run: 254 min 41Km, 6:13 /Km, aHR 122 (79% max) 756 b/Km
Easy elliptical: 50 min
Tempo: 15 min, aHR 87% max
High intensity: 12 min (4x3 min, peak HR 95% max)
Total duration: 331 min
Proportions easy/threshold/high: 91/5.0/4.0

Another week in which training was disrupted by a hectic work schedule. I am a bit disappointed by lack of improvement in aerobic fitness. The most positive thing was my long run today. At a little over 22Km it was my longest so far this year. I have been having quite a lot of trouble with my left proximal tib-fib joint – which was damaged in an episode of acute arthritis two years ago. I was scarcely aware of it when running today though it feels a bit fragile now.
Apr 2014
2:21pm, 14 Apr 2014
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Canute
My troublesome tib-fib joint is not too bad this morning after yesterday’s 22 Km run. As described on my Fetch blog, I am taking yesterday’s run as confirmation that it is not a crazy idea to train for a marathon this year. I will aim for the Robin Hood marathon at the end of September.
I think a polarised approach needs a little bit of tweaking for the marathon. While a strictly polarised approach minimizes tiem in the zone around lactate threshold, the key requirement for racing a marathon is sustaining a pace near lactate threshold for several hours. So the crucial race-specific modification to my polarized program will a judicious amount of threshold running designed to build the mental and physical capacity to race a marathon.
Apr 2014
6:00pm, 20 Apr 2014
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Canute
Polarised training, week 7
Easy run: 330 min 54 Km, 6:06 /Km, aHR 121 (78% max) 739 b/Km

Easy elliptical: 76 min
Tempo: 35 min, aHR xx% max
High intensity: 21 min (7x3 min) peak HR 97% max
Total duration: 462 min
Proportions easy/threshold/high: 87 / 7.5 / 4.5

Last Sunday’s 22Km run was a test to determine the likelihood that my troublesome left tib-fib joint would cope with marathon training this year. On Monday morning the joint was a bit painful but not crippling so I have set myself the tentative target of running the Robin Hood marathon in September. My target for the next month is to increase long run distance up to 30Km, and also determine whether or not my tib-fib joint can cope with running on consecutive days.

After a pleasing 8Km progressive run on Tues, in which I increased to an exhilarating tempo pace for the final Km, I decided to test the tib-fib joint within another run the next day. To my disappointment, not only the tib-fib joint itself but most of the connective tissues around my left knee complained bitterly. The only consolation was that I was running, albeit slowly, through the most spectacular display of bluebells I have ever seen in our local woods.

Today it was time to see how the joint coped with a 25 Km run. It felt pretty good for 23 Km but then began to ache. So afterwards, I stood in a wheelie bin full of cold water for 10 minutes. Week one of my marathon program has got off to a fairly good start – but it is clear that I will have to look after that tib-fib joint carefully if I am to be fit for a marathon in Sept.
Apr 2014
9:46am, 28 Apr 2014
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Canute
Week 8 polarised training
Easy run: 374 min 58.6 Km 6:23 /Km, aHR 120 (78% max) 766 b/Km

Easy elliptical: 76 min
Tempo: 15 min, aHR 132 86% max
High intensity: 15 min (5x3 min) peak HR 94% max
Total duration: 480 min
Proportions easy/threshold/high: 94/ 3.0 /3.0

A challenging week. My left knee has continued to be troublesome despite standing in a bin of cold water after each run, and I have experienced an exacerbation of asthma, with peak flow down from around 450 to 200 litres/min. As outlined a week ago, my current primary goal is increasing long run length up to 30 Km by mid-May, so I decided to minimise the amount of high intensity training and place the emphasis on a modest increase of long run length from 25.5 to 27.6 Km. Despite the disappointingly high HR, the drift was only moderate. It rose from 762 b/Km after initial stabilization in the third Km to 779 b/Km in the 21st Km over the over the same segment of path. Nonetheless, I would like to see minimal drift during a low aerobic run.

I will take things fairly easily this week and if all is well, push the long run to 30 Km the following week, and 32 Km the following week. Thereafter I will aim for two 32 Km log runs per month, occasionally including segments of MP pace. These will be the key ‘race-specific’ sessions but in accord with the principles of polarised training I will also aim to increase the proportion of higher intensity running to around 10%
May 2014
12:04am, 5 May 2014
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Canute
Week 9 polarised trainin (marathon training week 3)

Easy running: 296 min 42.4 km 6:58 min/Km,

Easy elliptical: 34 min
Threshold: 15 min, aHR 88%

High intensity: 12 min (4x3 min) peak HR 96% max
Total duration 357 min
Proportions, easy: threshold: high intensity, 92.4: 4.2: 3.4

I had known in advance that a hectic schedule at work this week would seriously encroach on training time this week, and had not set any specific training goals. Nonetheless had been dismayed to find just how tired I was by Friday evening despite having done very little training: only a brief tempo session on Tuesday and a brief interval session on the elliptical on Friday.

An orthostatic test on Saturday morning confirmed that I was stressed and exhausted, so the question was whether or not to rest entirely or to do an easy run. An easy run might have added little to my fitness, while jeopardising the prospects of a worthwhile training session on Sunday. Rest would have been the sensible choice but that didn’t really appeal to me. It was a lovely sunny but still cool spring day, perfect for recreational running.

So, with a rationale I will describe in more detail in my Fetch blog, I set off on a long run at a very slow pace, aiming to keep going until rising heart rate or aching legs indicated that my body had had enough for the day. By 31 Km, my legs were starting to feel tired and my HR was beginning to rise, so I decided it was time to stop.

Sunday morning, my troublesome tib-fib joint was aching a little, but otherwise I was fine, so I did an easy 11 Km recovery run. It has been a week in which work schedule seriously restricted training and provided further confirmation that I can no longer cope with long working hours. But in the end I feel quite pleased to have extended my long run distance. My goal for April and May had been to increase long run distance to 32 Km, so I am nearly there. Next I need to introduce some segments of marathon paced running into my long runs.

About This Thread

Maintained by Canute
Polarised training is a form of training that places emphasis on the two extremes of intensity. There is a large amount of low intensity training (comfortably below lactate threshold) and an appreciable minority of high intensity training (above LT).

Polarised training does also include some training near lactate threshold, but the amount of threshold training is modest, in contrast to the relatively high proportion of threshold running that is popular among some recreational runners.

Polarised training is not new. It has been used for many years by many elites and some recreational runners. However, it has attracted great interest in recent years for two reasons.

First, detailed reviews of the training of many elite endurance athletes confirms that they employ a polarised approach (typically 80% low intensity, 10% threshold and 10% high intensity. )

Secondly, several scientific studies have demonstrated that for well trained athletes who have reached a plateau of performance, polarised training produces greater gains in fitness and performance, than other forms of training such as threshold training on the one hand, or high volume, low intensity training on the other.

Much of the this evidence was reviewed by Stephen Seiler in a lecture delivered in Paris in 2013 .
vimeo.com

In case you cannot access that lecture by Seiler in 2013, here is a link to his more recent TED talk.

ted.com
This has less technical detail than his 2013 talk, but is nonetheless a very good introduction to the topic. It should be noted that from the historical perspective, Seiler shows a US bias.

Here is another useful video by Stephen Seiler in which he discusses the question of the optimum intensity and duration of low intensity sessions. Although the answer ‘depends on circumstances’ he proposes that a low intensity session should be long enough to reach the point where there are detectable indications of rising stress (either the beginning of upwards drift of HR or increased in perceived effort). If longer than this, there is increasing risk of damaging effects. A session shorter than this might not be enough to produce enough stress to achieve a useful training effect.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3GXc474Hu5U


The coach who probably deserves the greatest credit for emphasis on the value of low intensity training was Arthur Lydiard, who coached some of the great New Zealanders in the 1960's and Scandinavians in the 1970’s. One of his catch-phrases was 'train, don't strain'. However Lydiard never made it really clear what he meant by ‘quarter effort’. I have discussed Lydiard’s ideas on several occasions on my Wordpress blog. For example: canute1.wordpress.com

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