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Getting Around 'The Wall'

Your body can stall if it uses up its glucose stores. But you can avoid that.

THE L.A. MARATHON: A HOW-TO GUIDE

February 25, 2008|Jeannine Stein, Special to The Times

You're at mile 20 in the marathon, feeling no pain, striding at a comfortable pace, wind at your back. Suddenly you feel a wave of fatigue so strong it's as if your body wants to melt into the pavement. Then comes a rush of dizziness -- and disorientation. You've hit the wall.

The bane of long-distance runners and endurance athletes, the dreaded wall can derail the best marathon plans. But it's neither inevitable nor insurmountable.

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What happens

The feared episode occurs when the body uses up its stockpile of glycogen, a stored form of glucose that's kept in the liver and muscles. Glycogen is the main fuel used during sustained exercise and largely comes from carbohydrates such as pasta, bread, fruits and vegetables.

When the glycogen stockpile is gone, "the body doesn't have that fuel source available and must then transfer to another fuel source, which is fat," says Dr. John DiFiori, chief of the sports medicine division at UCLA. "It can be used as energy, but it's not as efficient an energy source as glycogen."

Low blood sugar doesn't just distress the muscles, says Dr. Robert Sallis, director of sports medicine at Kaiser Permanente Medical Center in Fontana and president of the American College of Sports Medicine. "The brain needs sugar to work as well," he says, "and actually it's more sensitive to low sugar than the muscles are." In a marathon, that depletion can happen at any time -- often around mile 20, sometimes at about two hours. The telltale signs can develop slowly or quickly; many runners describe it as a switch being flipped.

When hitting the wall, runners should slow their pace and immediately take in carbs in the form of sports drinks, gels, energy bars or fruit, says Sallis. He suggests taking in carbs every 45 minutes or so during the race and being aware of any major drop in energy or feelings of wooziness. "For a lot of people who are doing their first marathon, their longest training run has been 20 miles, so the rest is unchartered territory."

Sallis adds that if runners decide to pass on the carbs and keep going, "most are still able to get through it. It's not typically something that makes you collapse -- it just slows you way down. Most people still finish." The body, he says, has enough fat stores (even in thin people) to keep it going. But feeling as if you can't go on at all, he says, may be a sign of something more serious, such as heat stroke.

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