MBR Mountain Bike Rider

HOW TO FEND OFF FATIGUE

What makes us tired when we ride? Pretty much everything, it seems, from the climbs to the descents, the terrain, the temperatur­e and even how well we slept last night

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No matter the trail, weather, your skill level or fitness, there is one thing all mountain bikers have in common; at some point, we will reach the limit of what our body is capable of. The tell-tale signs may be different; from bursting lungs to burning muscles to our mind begging us to ease back; but the outcome is the same – we are going to have to drop the intensity of our ride if we want to continue. We are experienci­ng fatigue.

The good news is we can normally keep riding if we ease back a little (as opposed to exhaustion, where we simply cannot keep riding at all). However, fatigue will still limit our performanc­e, so it’s useful to try to understand it a little more in order to minimise its impact.

WHAT IS FATIGUE?

This may seem incredible, but researcher­s have not agreed on a universal definition of fatigue in sport and exercise. The lack of a universal definition is important for one good reason: how can you fully understand something if you can’t even define it? The scientific literature is filled with dozens of definition­s of fatigue, which are likely driven in part by the expertise of the scientists doing the research

(e.g. a muscle physiologi­st will likely define fatigue with the muscle as the focus, whereas a cardiovasc­ular researcher may focus on that system as the source of fatigue).

WHAT CAUSES IT?

There are a multitude of influencin­g factors. In fact, the range of factors that can influence how an individual experience­s fatigue during training or competitio­n is almost unlimited. Broadly speaking, though, they can be broken down by the individual, the environmen­t and the activity – see table.

To further complicate matters, any and all of the factors in the table above can influence one another, meaning that you must look at the overall picture in order to understand fatigue in any given context. Mountain biking is a prime example of this, as there is one person on the bike (so all of the INDIVIDUAL factors are relevant), it is a sport hugely affected by the ENVIRONMEN­T, and it is a physically demanding activity requiring a host of different physical attributes from the whole body (ACTIVITY). We could even add a fourth category of EQUIPMENT to cover all of the influencin­g factors associated with the bike and rider gear, but we won’t go there!

HEADS, SHOULDERS, KNEES, TOES (AND EVERYWHERE ELSE...)

The third challenge is that fatigue can occur in pretty much any body system, organ or process, and the fatigue you experience will almost always be affecting more than one system/organ/ process. Of course, riding a mountain bike relies on appropriat­e contractio­ns of the leg muscles. For those contractio­ns to occur, electrical signals must originate in your brain, travel down your spinal cord, through peripheral nerves in your lower limbs, and into your leg muscles. This stimulates complex chemical processes within your muscles that enable them to contract. So, any disruption in any of these processes can cause fatigue.

But it’s more than just that. What if it’s a hot, humid day, and you are losing a lot of fluid trying to regulate your body temperatur­e? Or how about a strong, persistent headwind, causing you to expend more energy than you anticipate­d? Perhaps your riding partner switched the route on you at the last minute, so you’re now doing much more aggressive climbing and descending than you’d anticipate­d. Now, as well as those electrical signals, you’ve got your cardiovasc­ular system (temperatur­e regulation), energy availabili­ty (headwind), and anaerobic/aerobic systems (climbing/descending) involved too. Hopefully you can see how easily the number of body systems, organs and processes potentiall­y involved in fatigue, can exponentia­lly increase.

TAKE-HOME MESSAGES

Learning a little about fatigue in sport and exercise can give us a real appreciati­on for and celebratio­n of the amazing machines that are our bodies, and the truly whole-body demands and benefits that mountain biking can afford us. In the next issue we’ll look at what we can do to adapt our riding to stave off fatigue, but in the meantime remember:

FATIGUE IS A COMPLICATE­D THING

It’s complicate­d in part because we can’t fully define it, there are many factors that influence how it manifests, and it can affect almost any region of the body.

To home in on how fatigue may be affecting you, think INDIVIDUAL, ENVIRONMEN­T, and ACTIVITY (and EQUIPMENT, if you’re feeling brave!).

FATIGUE CAN OCCUR IN ANY BODY SYSTEM, ORGAN OR PROCESS

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 ?? ?? Fatigue is multi-factorial and a headache to define
Fatigue is multi-factorial and a headache to define
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 ?? ?? Tiredness can rapidly ramp up in hilly terrain
Tiredness can rapidly ramp up in hilly terrain

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