The bane of an ultramarathoner’s existence: no more!
April 12, 2016 2 Comments
One of the aspects of CJSM that I love is our ‘published on line first’ function, whereby the articles which have gone through peer review and subsequent post-review author corrections are disseminated ‘on line’ before they can make it into the paper version of the journal. It’s our version of ‘breaking news.’
The news that broke yesterday will be music to long-distance runners’ ears: say good-bye to blisters.
Yesterday, we published “Paper Tape Prevents Foot Blisters: A Randomized Prevention Trial Assessing Paper Tape in Endurance Distances II (Pre-TAPED II)”. The lead author is an emergency room physician from Stanford University, Grant Lipman. Dr. Lipman has published other research on endurance running in our journal, most recently a well-received piece on “The Incidence and Prevalence of Acute Kidney Injury During Multistage Ultramarathons,” which was also published ‘on-line first.’
I must confess, the news of the Pre-TAPED trial was picked up so quickly by media outlets that I first heard about it on National Public Radio (NPR). As an editor of CJSM, I normally have the ‘inside scoop,’ but this study generated so much immediate interest that NPR and others scooped me, including media outlets in the UK such as The Times of London. These folks are already singing the praises of the ‘unlikely hero’ of this story: inexpensive, surgical paper tape which can be found over the counter at any pharmacy and roughly costs a dollar a roll. Cheap…..and effective.
Lipman and his study team recruited 128 runners participating in the 2014 250-km (155-mile) 6-stage RacingThePlanet ultramarathons in Jordan, Gobi, Madagascar, and Atacama Deserts. The team devised a clever approach to testing their hypothesis that the paper tape would prevent blisters: Read more of this post