Muscle glycogen remains subnormal several days after muscle damaging exerci
se. The aims of this study were to investigate how muscle acid-soluble macr
oglycogen (MG) and acid-insoluble proglycogen (PG) pools are restored after
a competitive marathon and also to determine whether glycogen accumulates
differently in the various muscle fiber types. Six well-trained marathon ru
nners participated in the study, and muscle biopsies were obtained from the
vastus lateralis of the quadriceps muscle before, immediately after, and 1
, 2, and 7 days (days 1, 2, and 7, respectively) after the marathon. During
the race, 56 +/- 3.8% of muscle glycogen was utilized, and a greater fract
ion of RIG (72 +/- 3.7%) was utilized compared with PG (34 +/- 6.5%). On da
y 2, muscle glycogen and MG values remained lower than prerace values, desp
ite a carbohydrate-rich diet, but they had both returned to prerace levels
on day 7. The PG concentration was lower on day 1 compared with before the
race, whereas there were no significant differences between the prerace PG
concentration and the concentrations on days 2 and 7. On day 2 the glycogen
concentration was particularly low in the type I fibers, indicating that l
ocal processes are important for the accumulation pattern. We conclude that
a greater fraction of human muscle MG than of PG is utilized during a mara
thon and that accumulation of RIG is particularly delayed after the prolong
ed exercise bout. Furthermore, factors produced locally appear important fo
r the glycogen accumulation pattern.