Ultramarathons may accelerate ageing in red blood cells

A study suggests that running ultramarathons over mountainous terrain leads to greater age-related damage in red blood cells compared to shorter races. Researchers from the University of Colorado Anschutz examined blood samples from participants in both a 40-kilometre trail race and a 170-kilometre ultramarathon. The findings highlight potential cellular impacts of extreme endurance exercise.

Exercise benefits health, but extreme forms like ultramarathons could harm blood cells. Scientists led by Angelo D’Alessandro at the University of Colorado Anschutz analyzed blood from 11 adults, averaging 36 years old, shortly before and after a 40-kilometre trail race over mountainous terrain. A separate group of 12 similar-aged participants underwent the same analysis after a 170-kilometre ultramarathon on comparable ground.

Both events increased damage to red blood cells from reactive oxygen species, molecules that rise when cells deliver more oxygen during exertion. However, the ultramarathon caused substantially more such age-related damage. D’Alessandro noted, “Anecdotally, the blood after an ultramarathon looks like the blood of somebody who’s just been hit by a car.” The cells in ultramarathon runners also shifted faster from a disc shape—ideal for navigating blood vessels—to a spherical form associated with ageing.

Team member Travis Nemkov explained, “This spherical shape means they get stuck in the spleen and eaten up by immune cells.” He attributed the damage to exercise-induced inflammation and the forceful circulation during intense activity. Ultramarathon participants saw a roughly 10 per cent drop in red blood cell counts post-race, though Nemkov said this is too minor to cause anaemia and the body likely recovers quickly.

Previous research has connected long-distance running to issues like temporary immune suppression and anaemia. The team plans to investigate effects one day after races and whether these changes influence performance. Nemkov added, “This could just be what the damage signals look like to make the body more resilient to endurance running, or it could have a negative impact.”

The study appears in Blood Red Cells & Iron (DOI: 10.1016/j.brci.2026.100055).

Verwandte Artikel

Illustration of a woman with depression symptoms overlaid with microscopic view of aging monocytes in blood, linking to study on women with and without HIV.
Bild generiert von KI

Study links monocyte “biological aging” in blood to emotional depression symptoms in women with and without HIV

Von KI berichtet Bild generiert von KI Fakten geprüft

A study of 440 participants from the Women’s Interagency HIV Study found that accelerated epigenetic aging in monocytes—an immune cell type—tracked more closely with emotional and cognitive depression symptoms such as hopelessness and loss of pleasure than with physical symptoms like fatigue. The work, published in The Journals of Gerontology: Series A, adds evidence that cell-type-specific aging measures could contribute to future biological tools to complement symptom-based depression screening, though researchers say more validation is needed before clinical use.

Just a few minutes of activity that leaves people out of breath each day was associated with substantially lower risks of developing eight major diseases and of dying over about seven years in a study of roughly 96,000 UK Biobank participants who wore wrist accelerometers for a week. The research, published March 30, 2026 in the European Heart Journal, suggests that how intensely people move may matter alongside how much they move.

Von KI berichtet

Researchers at Kyoto University have traced the origins of human blood cells to single-celled organisms that lived about 700 million years ago. Their analysis shows that modern immune cells reflect an ancient evolutionary path dating back to the emergence of multicellular animals.

A long-term Finnish study has found that inconsistent bedtimes during middle age can nearly double the risk of serious cardiovascular events. People who varied their sleep times widely and spent less than eight hours in bed faced the greatest danger.

Von KI berichtet

Der Sportmediziner Dr. Andi Kurniawan hat davor gewarnt, dass intensive körperliche Anstrengung und extreme Wetterbedingungen während der Hajj-Pilgerreise gesundheitliche Probleme bei den Pilgern auslösen können. Zu den häufig wiederkehrenden Erkrankungen zählen Diabetes mellitus, Bluthochdruck und koronare Herzkrankheiten. Plötzliche Aktivitätsschübe können zudem zu Hypoglykämie oder Hyperglykämie führen.

Diese Website verwendet Cookies

Wir verwenden Cookies für Analysen, um unsere Website zu verbessern. Lesen Sie unsere Datenschutzrichtlinie für weitere Informationen.
Ablehnen