Bone, Muscle

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Bone, Muscle

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Adaptation of Bone to Exercise. Exercise creates mechanical forces that cause deformation ... Exercise training can strengthen the quantity and quality of CT ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Bone, Muscle


1
Bone, Muscle Connective Tissue Adaptations to
Physical Activity
  • Strength Conditioning
  • University of Massachusetts Boston
  • Timothy R. Morgan, DC

2
Adaptation of Bone to Exercise
  • Exercise creates mechanical forces that cause
    deformation of specific regions of the skeleton
  • In response to these mechanical forces, bone
    cells (osteoblasts) migrate to the site where the
    strain was applied
  • These bone cells manufacture and deposit collagen
    molecules, which form into fibers to form a bone
    matrix
  • This bone matrix becomes mineralized in time
    resulting in greater rigidity

3
Mineralization of Bone
Normal Bone
  • Bone mineralization occurs both on the dense,
    outer surface of bone (periosteum) and in the
    thin, internal, porous trabecular bone resulting
    in thickening of the bone and internal
    strengthening
  • Trabecular bone responds more rapidly than does
    cortical bone
  • Trabecular bone is found within the ends of long
    bones and vertebral bodies whereas cortical bone
    forms the compact outer shell of all bones
  • Collagen deposition can be realized after 8-12
    weeks of mechanical loading, with mineralization
    occurring more slowly
  • Osteoporosis a disease marked by critically low
    BMD

Osteoporotic Bone
4
Bone StrengtheningExercise Program Design
  • Programs designed to stimulate new bone formation
    should incorporate
  • Specificity of loading
  • Proper exercise selection
  • Progressive overload
  • Program variation
  • Structural exercises
  • Weight bearing exercises

5
Exercise Specificity
  • Specificity of Loading employing exercises that
    directly load a particular area exercises are
    prescribed depending on the desired effect
  • Program Variation prescribed exercises must
    apply multi-directional loads to all regions of
    the body and should be varied in order to
    constantly provide a unique stimulus for new bone
    formation
  • i.e. walking/running may increase BMD of the
    femur, but not the wrist
  • i.e. overhead dumbell presses in the seated
    position can increase BMD at the shoulders,
    wrists potentially within the spine, but the
    hips and femur are not significantly loaded

6
Exercise Selection and BMD
  • BMD is optimally built during the early adult
    years, corresponding to the time in life when
    the individual is in the anabolic phase of life,
    and when higher impact activities are better
    tolerated by the body
  • Loading the skeleton at sites (hips, spine,
    wrists) where osteoporosis is particularly
    consequential is very important
  • Structural Exercises exercises which allow
    greater absolute loads to be used in training,
    involve many muscle groups and joints, and direct
    mechanical force through the spine and hips

7
Progressive Overload
  • Progressive Overload progressively placing
    greater-than-normal demands on the body
    specifically to the muscles, bones and connective
    tissues
  • Minimal Essential Strain (MES) the threshold
    stimulus that initiates a beneficial growth
    response from muscles, bones and connective
    tissues
  • MES is created by activities that create forces
    that exceed the intensity of normal daily
    activities (forces that exceed those which the
    body is accustomed)
  • The MES for young, healthy individuals is greater
    than that of older individuals therefore,
    exercise stimulus must be greater in order to
    return the same benefits
  • Conversely, the MES for weakened tissue (i.e.
    injury or age-related decline) is less and
    therefore requires less stimuli to return
    benefits

8
Progressive Overload and MES (cont.)
  • Regardless of the age, training level and/or
    physical state of the individual, the physical
    activities chosen need to be weight bearing
  • MES is believed to represent 1/10th the force
    required to fracture the bone
  • Through a training program, increases in the
    force production capacity of muscle directly
    results in a proportional increase in the
    strength of bone and connective tissue
  • Periods of inactivity, immobilization or lack of
    weight bearing exercise see a more rapid loss of
    Bone Mineral Density (BMD) than bone formation
  • Preservation of BMD can be easily attained
    through the prescription and performance of
    exercises specific to the individuals need

Forces that reach or exceed a threshold stimulus
initiate new bone formation in the area
experiencing the mechanical strain.
9
Exercise Selection (cont.)
  • Isolation Exercises exercises which isolate a
    single muscle group these types of exercises
    should be de-emphasized as they rely on body
    positioning and equipment supports to isolate the
    agonist rather than encouraging the coordination
    of agonist, antagonist, synergist, stabilizer and
    neutralizer muscles
  • As a consequence to their design, isolation
    exercises prevent the beneficial transmission of
    mechanical forces to other regions of the body

10
Progressive Overload Injury
  • Regardless of the desired training effect, a
    properly designed exercise program employs the
    systematic and progressive application of forces
    to the body
  • Applying forces with an intensity and/or volume
    that exceed the tissues ability to handle them
    will result in injury
  • Instantaneous tissue damage can occur as a result
    of a single episode of excessive force intensity
  • Chronic tissue damage can occur as a result of
    high volume training with inappropriate rest and
    recovery between exercise bouts

11
Stress Fractures
12
Essential Components of Mechanical Loading
  • Components of Mechanical Load that stimulate
    bone growth include
  • Magnitude of the load (intensity)
  • Rate (speed) of loading
  • Direction of the forces
  • Volume of loading (number of repetitions)
  • The stimulus for bone growth increases as
  • The magnitude of the load increases
  • The rate of contraction increases (high power
    output)
  • The bond loading pattern is varied
  • If the magnitude and rate of the load applied is
    sufficient, the volume of repetitions can be
    limited to a total of 30-35

13
l
Exercise Prescription Guidelines for
Stimulating Bone Growth
From Conroy Earle, ESTC 2000
14
Adaptation of Muscle to Exercise
  • Hypertrophy muscular enlargement that happens
    from resistance training occurs primarily due to
    an increase in the cross-sectional area of the
    existing muscular fibers
  • Increase in the synthesis of Actin Myosin
    contractile proteins
  • Increase in the number of myofibrils within a
    muscle fiber
  • New myofilaments (contain A M) are added to the
    external layers of the myofibril, increasing its
    diameter
  • Hyperplasia a theory holding that muscular
    fibers undergo longitudinal splitting in response
    to resistance training effectively creating new
    muscle fibers
  • This theory is not widely accepted, but cannot be
    discounted as a possibility
  • Specificity of Training the type or mode of
    exercise (Strength, Size, Endurance) dictates the
    changes in the muscle or other connective tissues

15
Training Programs for Strength, Size Endurance

16
Strength, Size, Endurance (cont.)
  • Strength Training increases cross sectional
    area of muscles used Type II fibers recruited
    more readily, and therefore undergo more
    hypertrophy than Type I fibers in response to
    this type of training
  • Hypertrophy (Size) Training exercise reps
    limited within the range of 6-12, but load must
    be great enough to elicit either concentric or
    eccentric contraction failure .
  • Bodybuilders will often perform up to 12-20 sets
    of an exercise targeting a particular muscle or
    muscle group
  • Hypertrophy training may result in a Type I fiber
    predominance, much like endurance training
  • Bodybuilders exhibit a larger amount of collagen
    connective tissue deposition within the muscle,
    contributing to increased cross sectional area
  • Endurance Training Increases the aerobic
    capacity of both Type I and Type II fibers
    however because Type I fibers have a much higher
    aerobic potential than Type II fibers, most of
    the gains in aerobic capacity attributable to
    endurance training is a result of the increase in
    Type I fiber aerobic potential
  • Endurance Training may result in a conversion of
    Type IIb fibers to Type IIa
  • There is little evidence that suggests that Type
    II fibers undergo a conversion to Type 1 fibers

17
Adaptation of Connective Tissue to Exercise
  • Connective Tissues (CT) are essentially the
    structural glue that holds the body together
  • Exercise training can strengthen the quantity and
    quality of CT
  • Changes in CT health and integrity can have a
    positive or negative effect on athletic
    performance
  • Healthy, responsive CT adaptations results in a
    stronger musculoskeletal system whereas
    weakened, injured CT can serve as the weak link
    within the kinetic or kinematic chain

18
Collagen Response to Training
  • Collagen is the primary structural component that
    gives strength and integrity to all CTs,
    including ligaments, tendons, fascia and bone
  • Collagen fibers are arranged in manners which
    support the demands of the particular CT in which
    they are found
  • i.e. longitudinally in ligaments, tendons or in
    multi-directional sheets in bone and fascia
  • As with bone, mechanical loading of CT results in
    a specific and directional strengthening of the
    CT due to synthesis and re-arrangement of
    collagen fibers
  • As bone growth occurs in response to mechanical
    loading, the tendon or ligament insertion becomes
    buried in the layers of expanding bone

19
Connective Tissue Adaptation (cont.)
  • The force of muscular force is transmitted to the
    endomysium, perimysium, to the epimysium and
    eventually to the tendon and bone
  • A strengthened and more extensive CT network is
    necessary to withstand the increased muscular
    force generation capacity seen strength and
    hypertrophy training programs
  • Clinical Note It is thought that one
    detrimental effect of anabolic steroid use is the
    inadequate growth and strengthening of CTs in
    response to the rapid, prolific growth of
    muscular tissue the enhanced force generating
    capacity of the muscle may cause CT injuries,
    particularly to the intramuscular CT, fascia and
    tendons

Healthy people undergoing strenuous exercise
training experience changes in the
force-generating capabilities of muscle,
resulting in a coordinated and proportional
increase in the load-bearing capacity of bone and
other connective tissues.
20
References
  • Baechle, TR. Earle, RW. Essentials of Strength
    Training and Conditioning, 2nd Ed. 2000. Human
    Kinetics.

References
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