Publication Date:
2006
abstract:
Carrying heavy loads in the Himalayan region is a real challenge. Porters face extreme ranges in terrain condition, path steepness, altitude hypoxia and climate for 68 h a day, many months a year, since they
were boys. It has been previously shown that, when carrying loads on level terrain, porters metabolic economy is higher than in Caucasians but the reasons are still unknown. We monitored Nepalese porters
both during 90 km trekking in Khumbu Valley and at two different altitudes (3490 and 5050 m above sealevel), where they were compared to Caucasian mountaineers during (22%) gradient walking. Both subject
groups carried a load of up to 90% body mass. The remarkably higher performance of porters during uphill locomotion (C60% in speed, C39% mechanical power) is only partly explained by the lower cost of
loaded walking (K20%), being also the result of a better cardio-circulatory adaptation to altitude, which generates a higher mass-specific metabolic power (C30%). Consequently, Nepalese porters show higher efficiency, both during uphill and downhill loaded walking. Their higher economy on steep paths cannot be ascribed to a better exchange between potential and kinetic energy, as in our experiments the body centre of mass travelled monotonically uphill (or downhill). A different oscillation pattern of the loaded headtrunk segment, together with the analysis of the different components of the mechanical work during
load carrying, suggests that achieved motor skills in balancing the loaded body segment above the hip could play a role in determining the better economy of porters.
Iris type:
01.01 Articolo in rivista
Keywords:
Nepalese porters; Metabolic power; Economy; Efficiency; Gradient walking; Altitude
List of contributors:
Saibene, Francesco; Minetti, ALBERTO ENRICO
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