Mechanical Power in Endurance Running: A Scoping Review on Sensors for Power Output Estimation during Running
Metadatos
Afficher la notice complèteAuteur
Jaén Carrillo, Diego; Roche Seruendo, Luis E.; Cartón Llorente, Antonio; Ramírez Campillo, Rodrigo; García Pinillos, FelipeEditorial
Mdpi
Materia
Biomechanics Endurance runners Long-distance athletes Wearable devices
Date
2020-11-13Referencia bibliográfica
Jaén-Carrillo, D., Roche-Seruendo, L. E., Cartón-Llorente, A., Ramírez-Campillo, R., & García-Pinillos, F. (2020). Mechanical Power in Endurance Running: A Scoping Review on Sensors for Power Output Estimation during Running. Sensors, 20(22), 6482. [doi:10.3390/s20226482]
Résumé
Mechanical power may act as a key indicator for physiological and mechanical changes
during running. In this scoping review, we examine the current evidences about the use of power
output (PW) during endurance running and the di erent commercially available wearable sensors to
assess PW. The Boolean phrases endurance OR submaximal NOT sprint AND running OR runner
AND power OR power meter, were searched in PubMed, MEDLINE, and SCOPUS. Nineteen studies
were finally selected for analysis. The current evidence about critical power and both power-time and
power-duration relationships in running allow to provide coaches and practitioners a new promising
setting for PW quantification with the use of wearable sensors. Some studies have assessed the
validity and reliability of di erent available wearables for both kinematics parameters and PW when
running but running power meters need further research before a definitive conclusion regarding its
validity and reliability.