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So far, so good. But what does Jack do after the race? He follows no definite plan. For several months, he oscillates between catching colds and warding off injuries as, caught in the postrace letdown, he apathetically tries to resume serious training. He doesn't return to a systematic training program until four months after the race.
If we turn the spotlight on Jack's complete marathon experience—from premarathon through race day to postmarathon—the problem becomes clear: all too often, runners plan their premarathon training and race-day activities in great detail, but they fail to plan for the hours and days and weeks after the marathon. It's almost as though, once the marathon is completed, they lose their running focus. In this article I'll implore those headed for Boston to ask this simple question: "What do I do after Patriot's Day?"
The Answer Is . . .
Simple: plan your postmarathon with as much care as you plan for everything that precedes the race. Your postrace plan should include two goals: (1) prepare for recovery without injury, and (2) set new targets for yourself.
Ultimately, a successful plan circumvents injuries during the restoration to full training and leads you naturally to the next target. Don't slip into a cycle of problems that impairs your return to top fitness or, even worse, sets you into a tailspin that undermines your will to run. For a proper recovery plan, you'll need some important building blocks: an understanding of common postmarathon ailments and the ability to identify, manage, and prevent them. It can also help to have an organizational template that allows you to create and implement a successful plan.
Setting new targets for your running is nearly as important as planning for recovery without injury. A new target may be a future event, race, or fitness level. For example, after one Boston Marathon, a friend of mine decided to use his marathon training as base work for master's track racing during the summer that followed. The target should be distant enough that it doesn't conflict with your first goal of proper recovery. However, the target should be near enough for it to motivate you through the postmarathon blues. Although postmarathon blues are not what most people consider injuries, they can be just as harmful; thus, it's important to quickly set new targets to shoot for. You can do this before the marathon, if the process doesn't distract you from your Boston goals. If you find yourself distracted, let setting new targets wait until after the race.
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Distance
Face it, even if you log your prerequisite long runs before the race, 26.2 miles is still a long way to run. Some runners are better prepared for the distance than others. For those marginally prepared for the distance, racing 26.2 miles can be an additional risk factor for postrace injuries. The muscle fatigue resulting from running farther than you are accustomed can linger for days, weeks, or even months. During this postrace fatigued state, you may be at risk for many of the overuse injuries that can befall a runner.
Pre-Existing Problems
A fact of marathon running is that some runners, while preparing for the event, will acquire injuries that preclude them from participating in the race. Others make it through the training period unscathed except for a nagging "ding" that does not deter them from racing. Racing with a pre-existing ding may be most common at Boston, given that the Boston Marathon represents the crowning glory for many runners. For others, the financial commitment of nonrefundable airline tickets may be the driving force to suck it up and race while dinged. Regardless of the motivation to race at less than 100 percent, doing so carries the risk of the ding blossoming into a full-scale injury during the postrace period.
Worn-Out Shoes
Most runners do not buy new shoes and break them in during the marathon-specific portion of their training program. Given that some shoes dramatically lose their shock-absorbing and protective characteristics after 350 to 500 miles, many runners' shoes will be shot by the time their owners start their postrace recovery program. To avoid this injury risk factor, consider buying a new pair of shoes after Boston. Alternate from your old pair to the new pair to allow a gradual adaptation to the new shoes. Your new pair should be broken in about the same time your feet and legs are ready to scale up the training regimen. For more on how to buy the best running shoes click here
All Systems Go? A Postmarathon Checklist
Before embarking on a course to your new postmarathon target, clear yourself of any problems lingering from your prerace training program or acquired during the race itself. In the days after the race, take inventory of any problems you may be harboring. To help you identify problems that may be present after the marathon (or may arise as you resume running), a brief review of some common postmarathon ailments follows.
For most of these problems, the initial care involves rest. Relative rest may be enough. By "relative rest" we mean exchanging nonplyometric, low-impact activities such as pool running, swimming, and cycling for your running. To read more about cross training click here. Additional self-care recommendations are made for each of the ailments discussed below.
If you're unsure of the diagnosis after reviewing this information and other running injury resources, seek professional help. Your running career is too valuable to jeopardize. Similarly, if you fail to improve with self-care, seek professional care. Most problems should improve at least somewhat after two weeks; if they don't, go see a pro.
Consider using herbal preparations, such as Echinacea (but only after reviewing product information).
If you do develop a cold, flu, or upper respiratory tract infection, remember that sleep, diet, and hydration remain important self-care weapons. Remember—if you have a fever, do not run. Also, if you must take medications (whether over-the-counter or prescription) for your illness, don't run. Seek professional care if you develop a persistent fever or cough. Consider herbal remedies for their therapeutic benefit.
Easy running can be resumed when there is no fever, no medications are required, and there's no residual fatigue or malaise. You should not resume hard running until there's no residual respiratory tract congestion (usually 2 to 3 weeks after easy running can be resumed).
Postmarathon Blues
After a marathon, some runners will experience depression. The cause for this depression varies. Is it from achieving a goal after a long training process, then not knowing how to top it? Is it from not achieving the goal? Is it from finishing the Boston Marathon, the greatest marathon the world has ever known, and then not knowing what to do next? Or is it from depletion or derangement of neurotransmitters?
It has been documented that choline, a neurotransmitter precursor, is depleted with marathon-like efforts. Perhaps marathon efforts impact neurotransmitters, thereby having a bearing on depression in a similar way. Regardless, postmarathon blues affect many runners in the days and weeks following the race. While there's no scientifically proven approach to postmarathon blues, there are some recommendations. Again, start with proper sleep, diet, and hydration. You might try supplements, including choline, and herbal remedies. Finally, be sure to refocus on a new target. There's nothing like a new running goal to blow away the blues.
While there are no scientifically proven methods to reduce the severity or duration of delayed onset postexercise muscle soreness, there are several anecdotal remedies. For the first 24 hours after the race, cooling the leg muscles intermittently might help. Walking in cold water or rolling the muscles with a frozen plastic water bottle are two ways to cool the muscles. After more than 24 hours have elapsed, warm soaks and hot-tubbing may be beneficial. Gentle massage therapy might also help. Over-the-counter anti-inflammatory medications (such as ibuprofen) or herbal remedies may also be of assistance.
Finally, don't resume running until the delayed onset postexercise muscle soreness has been resolved.
Blisters
If your postmarathon blisters are not tense or extensive, just leave them be. At most, use ice water soaks. If your blisters have broken open, your primary goal is to prevent infection. Soak your feet twice a day for 10 to 20 minutes in water with providone iodine solution added (10:1 water to providone solution), then dry your feet and cover them with clean socks. Continue this care until the blistered areas are dry (not draining or oozing) and pain free. Self-care by opening an intact blister should be considered only for tense, painful blisters. In this case, clean the area with providone iodine solution, then open the blister near its edge with a clean instrument. The opening should be at least one-quarter-inch wide. After the blister is open, treat it the same way as a blister that broke open during the race.
If the area around the blister becomes more painful, or if there's redness spreading from the site, suspect an infection. If a blister site becomes infected, the infection usually arises two to five days after the blister is exposed. Seek professional care for extensive blisters, suspected infection, or tense painful blisters that you cannot care for yourself. It's best to delay your return to running until blistered sites are pain free. Altering your stride to avoid painful areas can unduly stress another area and risk a new injury.
Metatarsalgia
The most common location for metatarsalgia is under the ball of the foot, near the base of the second toe. Think of this problem as a stone bruise of the bottom of the second metatarsal head and its associated joint. The symptoms include pain under the ball of the foot without numbness or tingling. It might feel like you are stepping on a pebble with every step. There's usually no pain or swelling on the top of the forefoot.
Metatarsalgia can be associated with abnormal foot pronation, loss of forefoot cushioning with shoe wear, using racing shoes with inadequate forefoot cushioning, or multiple foot strikes on pavement over the course of a marathon. Self-care should include ice massage for 10 to 15 minutes twice a day until pain free; over-the-counter anti-inflammatory medications; over-the-counter insoles; and new shoes (if your current shoes already have significant mileage).
Plantar Fasciitis
Symptoms of plantar fasciitis include pain at the bottom of the heel or in the arch, particularly with first steps after sleep or sitting more than 20 minutes. Pain is also worse after longer or more intense running efforts. The problem is felt to be a strain of the plantar fascia, one of the supporting structures of the arch. The bottom of the heel is far more commonly affected, compared to the arch. Self-care should include ice massage for 15 to 20 minutes twice a day until pain free; over-the-counter anti-inflammatory medications; over-the-counter arch supports; calf-stretching exercise; and new shoes (if your current shoes have significant mileage).
Anterior Tibial Stress Syndrome
Just as the eccentric muscle contradictions of downhill running and racing can create delayed onset postexercise muscle soreness of the quadriceps, they can create anterior tibial stress syndrome (also called "shin splints"). Another factor favoring the development of this condition is the combination of weaker anterior (front of the leg) muscles and tighter, stronger calf muscles. This condition is marked by pain along the muscles in front of and to the outside of the tibia (shin). The pain is aggravated by downhill running. With anterior tibial stress syndrome, the pain should be more diffuse and muscle-oriented, which differentiates it from a stress fracture, which is more localized and bone-oriented. Also in contrast to anterior tibial stress syndrome, tense swelling of the muscle compartment, along with severe pain with stretching, and perhaps numbness or tingling on the top of the foot, may be a compartment syndrome. A suspected stress fracture or compartment syndrome should be evaluated by a professional without delay. Self-care of anterior tibial stress syndrome should include ice massage for 15 to 20 minutes twice a day until pain free; over-the-counter anti-inflammatory medications; gentle stretching exercises of the muscles in front of the shin, followed by strengthening exercises when pain free; and calf-stretching exercises.
Iliotibial Band Friction Syndrome
Knee pain is another common postmarathon problem. Iliotibial band friction syndrome (and the two conditions that follow) can be one of the sources. Symptoms include pain on the outside of the knee, with or without localized swelling. The pain is worse when the knee reaches 20 degrees of flexion, particularly during the process of foot impact during running. Shock transference to the knee when muscle-supporting mechanisms are fatiguing and running on canted road surfaces are two potential marathon-specific factors that can lead to this condition. Self-care should include ice massage for 15 to 20 minutes twice a day until pain free; over-the-counter anti-inflammatory medications; new shoes (if your current shoes already have significant mileage); and a general hip-, thigh-, and leg-stretching program that focuses on iliotibial band stretching.
Patellar Tendinitis
While not the most common knee injury in runners, patellar tendinitis may be among the more frequent post-Boston Marathon knee ailments. Downhill running can be an aggravating factor for patellar tendinitis as well. Symptoms include tenderness of the patellar tendon (running from the knee cap to the leg) and pain on foot impact in running. Self-care should include ice massage for 15 to 20 minutes twice a day until pain free; over-the-counter anti-inflammatory medication; new shoes (if your current shoes have significant mileage); and a general hip-, thigh-, and leg-stretching program.
To be able to adapt this model to your own postrace recovery program, you need to be aware of some transition indicators. Transition indicators are signals that it is OK to move on to the next microcycle in your recovery schedule. Some transition indicators may be as simple as a period of elapsed time. For example, the first microcycle lasts for the first 24 hours following the race. Some advise one day of recovery for every mile raced, meaning the recovery period following a marathon should be 26 days. However, some will interpret this guideline as a transition indicator to return to racing, while others interpret it as a transition indicator to return to more intense training efforts, including speed work and long runs. The advice here, given the goal of avoiding illness and injury, is to adopt the latter interpretation and delay your return to racing until six weeks following Boston.
Still other transition indicators are physiological. The presence of muscle soreness and stiffness should preclude you from transitioning from one microcycle to another. The same holds true if you're detecting the presence of any ailment, including those previously reviewed. Your postrace body weight can be a useful early indicator of hydration status, when compared with your prerace body weight.
Heart-rate monitoring can be another valuable transition indicator. Resting heart rates (obtained just prior to rising) 10 beats per minute or more above your prerace rate can be used as an indicator of persisting fatigue and incomplete recovery.
A more sensitive use of heart-rate monitoring would be to record your heart rate just before rising from bed in the morning and then again 20 seconds after rising. Subtract the first recorded rate from the higher standing rate. If all is well, the resulting calculated value should not vary more than five beats per minute from day to day or from prerace to postrace. When these heart-rate monitoring indicators are not favorable, restrain from transitioning to the next microcycle, and even consider returning to the previous microcycle schedule until normal.
Immediately after the race, keep walking, despite the urge to collapse to the ground. Start drinking cool, carbohydrate and electrolyte replacement fluids as soon as possible; only in cases of hypothermia should you drink warm fluids instead. Within the first two hours after the race, continue to replace fluids, begin to consume solid carbohydrate replacement, walk at least one mile, perform some gentle stretching, avoid diuretics such as alcohol and caffeine, and avoid warm baths and hot tubs. Options for the first two hours—or for that matter, any time during the first 24 hours—include walking or gently stretching in a cool pool and gentle massage.
After the first two hours, with proper rehydration, you should be able to urinate before six hours have elapsed following completion of the race, and your postrace meals should mirror your prerace meals—that is, heavy in carbohydrates to replace those you just burned in running from Hopkinton to Boston.
For the remainder of the first 24 hours, don't worry about snacking—in fact, plan on it; continue to rehydrate; avoid prolonged sitting positions and travel; begin any supplements or anti-inflammatory medications you plan to use; begin self-care of any ailments or injuries you may have acquired; and try to get horizontal and rest.
You should use this period for restorative efforts, including continued rehydration; consuming a well-balanced, nutritious diet with perhaps a greater focus on protein calories than your normal training diet; and allowing for more sleep than your normal training allotment.
Also use this time to review your training program and race. Consider what you did well and what you would like to change next time around. After reviewing your training and race, begin the process of picking a new target (if you haven't already). As for activities during this period, gentle stretching, massage, cool pool walking, and light strolling are acceptable. Avoid running, jogging, and cross-training.
Continue to provide self-care for any ailments or injuries that you have. Do not transition to the next microcycle until you have no muscle soreness, no injuries or ailments, and you have restored your body weight to prerace levels. Also, if you're using heart-rate monitoring indicators, you should no longer be recording abnormal values.
If you have an injury or ailment and all other transition indicators are normal, you may transition to a suitable cross-training endeavor that does not conflict with the proper care of your injury or ailment.
Along with these two caps, take care to slowly progress the frequency and distance of your runs. Running might be initiated only every other or every third day, with cross-training or days off in between. By the end of this period, you should be comfortably handling the frequency and distance level of your training just before your marathon-specific program started, but without speed work or long runs.
Throughout this microcycle, carefully monitor yourself for all of the injuries and ailments previously reviewed and for heart-rate indicators. Back off if indicated. In some cases, it might be necessary to return to Microcycle 2 and start over.
After achieving your baseline training frequency and distance at the end of Microcycle 3, you need only to gradually introduce (a) faster running in the form of lactate threshold and supra-threshold (max Vo2) training and (b) long runs. Avoid introducing all of these elements in the first week of this micro-cycle. The focus on these additional training elements should be based on the new target race. You need to remain vigilant for signs of injury, ailment, or overtraining. Again, back off if indicated.
When you complete this microcycle, you will have accomplished your two goals for a post-Boston recovery: you remain uninjured, and you have reached your new target, the next race.
Congratulations: you not only ran Boston successfully, you've recovered from it!
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