Title: LESSON ONE
1LESSON ONE
- ADMINISTRATION
- OXYGEN UPTAKE
- HEART RATE RESPONSE
- ONSET OF BLOOD LACTIC ACID (OBLA)
2COMPONENTS OF FITNESS
- CARDIORESPIRATORY ENDURANCE
- MUSCULAR STRENGTH
- MUSCULAR ENDURANCE
- BODY COMPOSITION
- FLEXIBILITY
3STROKE VOLUME
- sv
- VOLUME OF BLOOD PUMPED PER BEAT
4CARDIAC OUTPUT
- VOLUME OF BLOOD PUMPED PER MINUTE
- CO HR X SV
5AEROBIC FITNESS ASSESSMENT
- VO2 MAX THE MAX AMOUNT OF O2 THAT THE BODY IS
ABLE TO UTILIZE PER MINUTE OF PHYSICAL ACTIVITY - VO2 MAX IS CONSIDERED THE SINGLE, BEST INDICATOR
OF A PERSONS LEVEL OF AEROBIC FITNESS - VO2 MAX OCCURS WHERE A FURTHER INCREASE IN WORK
IS NOT ACCOMPANIED BY AN ADDITIONAL INCREASE IN
O2 CONSUMPTION
6FICK PRINCIPLE
- THE AMOUNT OF OXYGEN USED IS A FUNCTION OF HOW
MUCH BLOOD IS SENT TO MUSCLE AND HOW MUCH O2 IS
IN THE BLOOD - (A-V) O2 DIFFERENCE
- FICK EQUATION
- VO2 CARDIAC X (A-V) 02
- OUTPUT DIFFERENCE
7ENERGY SYSTEMS
- PHOSPHAGEN (ATP CP)
- ANAEROBIC GLYCOLYSIS
- AEROBIC RESPIRATION
- AEROBIC GLYCOLYSIS
- BETA OXIDATION
8SUBSTRATE UTILIZATION
- DEPENDENT ON 3 FACTORS
- INTENSITY/DURATION
- STATE OF TRAINING
- DIET
9O.B.L.A
- LACTIC ACID ACCUMULATION
- EXPRESSED AS A PERCENTAGE OF MAXIMAL O2 UPTAKE
- NORMALLY OCCURS BETWEEN 55 AND 65 OF VO2 MAX
- OCCURS AT 80 VO2 MAX IN HIGHLY TRAINED ATHLETES
10OBLA FACTS
- INTENSITY DEPENDENT
- CAN BE TRAINED
- CAN BE POSTPONED
11HEART RATE RESPONSE
- HEART RATE AND OXYGEN UPTAKE HAVE A LINEAR
RELATIONSHIP - HEART RATE IS CONSIDERED A GOOD WAY TO ESTIMATE
EXERCISE INTENSITY.
12DETERMINING TRAINING HEART RATE
- ESTIMATE MAXIMUM HR (MHR)
- 220 - AGE MHR
- DETERMINE HEART RATE RESERVE
-
- HRR MHR - RESTING HEART RATE
- TRAINING HEART RATE (THR)
- (____ X HRR) RHR THR
13LESSON TWO
- FACTORS AFFECTING AEROBIC FITNESS
- LONG TERM ADAPTATIONS
- SHORT TERM RESPONSES
14FACTORS AFFECTING AEROBIC EXERCISE
- MODE OF EXERCISE
- HEREDITY
- POTENTIAL FOR FITNESS
- GENDER
- AGE
- BODY COMP0SITION
- LEVEL OF ACTIVITY
15SHORT TERM RESPONSES TO AEROBIC EXERCISE
- INCREASE IN PULMONARY VENTILATION (RESPIRATION)
- INCREASE IN HEART RATE
- INCREASE IN STROKE VOLUME
- INCREASE IN CARDIAC OUTPUT
- INCREASE IN MUSCLE TEMPERATURE
- INCREASE IN BLOOD FLOW TO HEART
16LONG TERM ADAPTATIONS TO AEROBIC EXERCISE
- DECREASE IN RHR
- LOWER HR AT A GIVEN WORKLOAD
- DECREASE IN HR RECOVERY TIME
- INCREASE NUMBER AND SIZE OF FUNCTIONAL
CAPILLARIES - INCREASE IN CARDIAC OUTPUT
- INCREASE IN STROKE VOLUME
- INCREASE IN THE NUMBER AND SIZE OF MITACHONDRIA
- INCREASE IN THE ABILITY TO MOBILIZE AND UTILIZE
FAT - DECREASE IN BLOOD LIPIDS
- DECREASE IN RESTING BLOOD PRESSURE
17LONG TERM ADAPTATIONS TO AEROBIC EXERCISE
- MUSCULOSKELATAL BENEFITS
- INCREASED MUSCULAR STRENGTH
- INCREASED CAPILLARY DENSITY IN MUSCLE
- STRENGTHENING OF TENDONS, LIGAMENTS, AND JOINTS
- COUNTERACTS OSTEOPOROSIS
- MISCELLANEOUS BENEFITS
- ENHANCED TOLERANCE TO HEAT
- RELEASE OF ENDORPHINES RUNNERS HIGH
18LESSON THREE
- AEROBIC FITNESS ASSESSMENT
- EXERCISE PRESCRIPTION
- EXERCISE ADHERENCE
- LOGBOOKS
19EXPRESSING VO2
- ABSOLUTE VO2/VO2 MAX
- L/min
- RELATIVE VO2/VO2 MAX
- ml O2/Kg/min
20ASSESSING VO2 MAX
212 MILE RUN TEST
- MEN
- VO2MAX 99.7 - (3.35 X TIME)
- WOMEN
- VO2MAX 72.9 - (1.77 X TIME)
22BENEFITS OF TESTING
- ASSESSES STRENGTHS AND WEAKNESSES
- PROVIDES BASELINE DATA
- PROVIDES FEEDBACK
- PROVIDES HEALTH ASSESSMENT
- PROVIDES UNDERSTANDING
23PRINCIPLES OF EXERCISE
- OVERLOAD
- PROGRESSION
- RECOVERY
- SPECIFICITY
- REGULARITY
- VARIETY
- BALANCE
24EXERCISE PRESCRIPTIONFITT PRINCIPLE
- FREQUENCY 3 - 5 TIMES PER WEEK
- INTENSITY 60-90 OF MHR
- 12-14 RPE SCALE
- 50-80 VO2 MAX
- TIME 20-30 MINUTES
-
- TYPE LARGE MUSCLE GROUPS
- RHYTHMIC
- CONTINUOUS
253 PHASES OF AN AEROBIC EXERCISE PROGRAM
- PREPARATORY PHASE
- USUALLY LASTS 4-6 WEEKS
- CONDITIONING PHASE
- USUALLY LASTS 12-20 WEEKS
- INTENSITY 70 - 80 HRR
- DURATION/FREQUENCY INCREASED BY 10 PER WEEK
- MAINTENANCE PHASE
- BEGINS 6 MONTHS AFTER STARTING PROGRAM
- CONTINUES FOR A LIFETIME
26EXERCISE ADHERENCE
- FUN
- CROSS-TRAINING
- REGULARITY
- PROPER EQUIPMENT
- TRAINING PARTNER
- SET GOALS
- AVOID OVERTRAINING
- KEEP A LOG
- ASSESSMENTS
- MONITOR HEALTH
27LESSON FOUR
- RUNNING BASICS
- DIFFERENT RUNNING MODALITIES/TRAINING METHODS
- INTERVAL RUNNING
28RUNNING MODALITIES AND TRAINING METHODS
- LONG SLOW DISTANCE
- FARTLEK SPEED PLAY
- FAST, CONTINUOUS
- INDIAN RUNS
- INTERVALS
29INTERVAL TRAINING
- DEFINITION SERIES OF REPEATED BOUTS OF EXERCISE
ALTERNATED WITH PERIODS OF RELIEF - VARIABLES
- (TO EMPHASIZE A PARTICULAR ENERGY SYSTEM)
- RATE AND DISTANCE OF WORK (BASED ON PERFORMANCE
TIME) - NUMBER OF REPETITIONS
- RELIEF TIME BETWEEN INTERVALS
- FREQUENCY OF TRAINING PER WEEK
30BENEFITS OF INTERVAL TRAINING
- ALLOWS FOR QUALITY, HIGH INTENSITY WORK
- APPLIES PRINCIPLE OF SPECIFICITY
- CAN STRESS ALL ENERGY SYSTEMS
- TRAINS NERVOUS SYSTEM
31FORMULA FOR DETERMINING INTERVAL PACE (4 -8 X
400M)
- MILE TIME 800 MINUTE
- 400 METER 200 MINUTE
- SUBTRACT 1-4 SECONDS
- 156-159
32LESSON FIVE
- FATIGUE
- DELAYED ONSET OF MUSCLE SORENESS (DOMS)
- CONTRAINDICATIONS
- ENVIRONMENTAL CONSIDERATIONS
33MECHANISMS OF FATIGUE
- POSSIBLE CAUSES
- DECREASED ATP SUPPLY
- INCREASE IN LACTIC ACID
- DEHYDRATION
- MOTIVATION
- HYPERTHERMIA
- DEPLETION OF GLYCOGEN
- ELECTROLYTE IMBALANCE
34POSSIBLE CAUSES OF MUSCLE SORENESS
- ACUTE LACK OF BLOOD FLOW (O2) AND GENERAL
FATIGUE OF MUSCLES - DELAYED ONSET OF MUSCLE SORENESS (D.O.M.S.)
- 12 HOURS AFTER EXERCISE
- MAY LAST 2-4 DAYS
- TEARS TO MUSCLE AND CONNECTIVE TISSUE
- INCREASE FLUID RETENTION
- MUSCLE SPASMS
- NOT A SPRAIN OR INJURY
- PREVENTION WARM UP, START SLOW, COOL DOWN
PROPERLY
35SYMPTOMS OF OVERTRAINING
- MUSCLE SORENESS
- HEADACHES, SORE THROAT, MILD COLD
- IRRITABILITY
- INSOMNIA
- LACK OF INTEREST IN DAILY ACTIVITIES
- LOSS OF APPETITE
- SUDDEN DROP IN WEIGHT
- CONSTIPATION OR DIARRHEA
- SKIN ERUPTIONS
- ABNORMALLY HIGH RHR
36EXERCISING IN THE COLD
- DRESS IN LAYERS
- AVOID PROFUSE SWEATING
- AVOID WIND CHILL FACTOR
- DRINK PLENTY OF WATER
- ____________________________
- HYPOTHERMIA
- FROSTBITE
37MAJOR FORMS OF HEAT ILLNESS
- HEAT CRAMPS MUSCLE PAIN AND SPASM
- HEAT EXHAUSTION WEAK, RAPID PULSE, LOW BLOOD
PRESSURE, HEADACHE, AND DIZZINESS - HEAT STROKE CEASATION OF SWEATING, DRY, HOT SKIN
AND VERY HIGH BODY TEMPERATURE - THE MOST SERIOUS
AND COMPLEX HEAT PROBLEM
38FACTORS TO MODIFY HEAT TOLERANCE
- GRADUALLY ACCLIMATIZE
- DRINK PLENTY OF WATER BEFORE DURING AND AFTER
- ALLOW FOR EVAPORATION - LIMITED IN HUMID WEATHER
-
- REPLACE ELECTOROLYTES LOST THROUGH SWEATING
- AVOID EXERCISE DURING HOTTEST TIME OF DAY
39EFFECTS OF DEHYDRATION
- REDUCED CIRCULATORY CAPACITY
- REDUCED MAX CARDIAC OUTPUT
- ALTERED AUTONOMIC NERVOUS CONTROL OF SWEAT GLANDS
- REDUCED WORK CAPACITY
40FLUID REPLACEMENT WITH CARBOHYDRATE
- INCREASE IN BLOOD GLUCOSE
- INCREASE IN GLUCOSE UTILIZATION BY MUSCLE
- INCREASE IN ENDURANCE
41BENEFITS OF FLUID REPACEMENT
- IMPROVED REGULATION OF BODY TEMPERATURE
- INCREASED SWEAT RATE
- DECREASED BODY CORE TEMP
- INCREASED PLASMA VOLUME
- INCREASED STROKE VOLUME
- INCREASED PERFORMANCE