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Ch 9 Physiology & Exercise

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Ch 9 Physiology & Exercise Chapter by Carol L Christensen In Women In Sport Notes by N. Bailey Introduction to the Chapter Chapter Focus: physiological differences ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Ch 9 Physiology & Exercise


1
Ch 9 Physiology Exercise
  • Chapter by Carol L Christensen
  • In Women In Sport
  • Notes by N. Bailey

2
Introduction to the Chapter
  • Chapter Focus
  • physiological differences and similarities
  • Other physiological concerns

3
Records Improving
  • Performance records improving for both men and
    women
  • Women are closing the gap
  • For both aerobic capacity speed events
  • Much overlap between the sexes
  • Look at data on page 180

4
Factors Affecting Performance Differences
  • Hormonal differences ate menarche
  • Socio-cultural differences
  • Clothing, activity level, lack of opportunities
    for women, lower monetary rewards
  • Social myths women are more easily injured,
    media coverage that marginalizes women athletes,
    gender roles

5
Physiology Performance
  • Pre-puberty and Puberty
  • Aerobic Capacity
  • Anaerobic Capacity or Power
  • Muscle Strength and Physiology
  • Body Composition

6
Puberty
  • 12 yrs Average age of puberty for girls
  • Prior to that differences accounted for by
    differential training and skills, not physiology
  • Boys mature 2 3 years later
  • Mature male larger size due to increased length
    of growth period

7
Aerobic Capacity
  • Females at a disadvantage de to smaller size
    (fewer rbc, lower hemoglobin concentration,
    smaller heart, lungs, and lower blood volume
  • 15 to 25 disadvantage
  • Performance records demonstrate that this
    difference can be somewhat overcome with training
    and coaching

8
Anaerobic Capacity or Power
  • Women have less muscle mass
  • And lower Anaerobic Power
  • AnT Anaerobic threshold is related to endurance
    performance.
  • The point where anaerobic energy sources are used
    at the cell site
  • When lactic acid accumulates
  • Women cant maintain as fast a pace

9
Strength
  • No differences in muscle tissue itself
  • Differences in strength greater than that for
    anaerobic and aerobic power
  • Large overlap, but generally women have 66 of
    the strength of men
  • Upper body, 56 as strong as men
  • Lower body, 72 as strong
  • No Difference in fast and slow twitch

10
Body Composition
  • Female athletes closer to male athlete
    counterparts than to untrained women
  • Average young woman 22 to 24 body fat
  • Average woman athlete 17 to 14
  • Average 60 yr- old woman professor ?
  • Average untrained male 14 16

11
Response Environment Conditions
  • Temperature Regulation
  • Hot Environments
  • Cold Environments
  • Altitude
  • Air Pollution

12
Importance of Topic
  • Various environments impose demands on the body
    during exercise
  • In extreme conditions all are affected
  • With moderate changes some people are affected
    and some are not
  • Responders experience symptoms with mild
    conditions v. Non-responders

13
Temperature Regulation
  • Hyper- hypothermia occurs in extreme temps
    are life threatening
  • Exercise increases metabolism therefore, heat
  • Okay in cold climate, a problem in hot
  • Hot environment sweat 90 heat loss

14
Temperature Mechanisms
  • Convection wind blowing on body
  • Conduction contact with colder or warmer surface
  • Radiation heat transfer through electromagnetic
    waves
  • Evaporation of sweat that we mentioned in the
    last slide

15
Hot Environments
  • Higher heart rate, higher sweat rate, increased
    glucose use for energy, increased blood flow to
    the skin
  • Responses help maintain temperature
  • Men women with similar aerobic fitness levels
    respond similarly to heat
  • In extremes disadvantaged because of greater
    surface area to gain heat

16
Safety Precautions
  • Heat stroke, exhaustion dehydration
  • Drink plenty of fluids, especially water
  • Reduce intensity, duration
  • Avoid hottest part of the day
  • Acclimatization reduced sweat rate,earlier
    onset, increase plasma volume takes about 14 days

17
Cold Environments
  • Greater oxygen consumption during sub-maximum
    work
  • Increased glucose use for energy
  • Less blood flow to the skin
  • Hypothermia and frostbite
  • Dress in layers, dry clothing, protect the hands
    and the head

18
Different Responses?
  • In general, similar physiological responses
  • Women at greater risk greater surface area
    relative to body mass helps cool
  • Less muscle mass produces less heat
  • With proper precautions both men and women
    withstand cold temperatures

19
Altitude
  • Low level of oxygenhypoxia
  • Higher heart rates, increased ventilation,
    reduced aerobic power
  • Endurance performance is impaired
  • Adaptations 4 to 6 months
  • Increases in hematocrit, hemoglobin, myoglobin
    and rbc attenuates hypoxia

20
Air Pollution
  • At high levels chest tightness, difficulty deep
    breathing, eye irritation, headaches, dry throat
  • Endurance performance impaired by high carbon
    dioxide
  • Smog alerts exercise indoors, avoid car exhaust
  • Men and women affected equally

21
Responses To Training
  • Virtually the same for all individuals
  • Altered by environmental conditions substances
    like drugs alcohol
  • Increases in heart rate, cardiac output,
  • ventilation, and metabolism
  • When fitness levels are similar no sex
    differences

22
General Response
  • Regular program of exercise results in increased
    VO2 Max, strength, power and speed.
  • Type of training influences type of response
    specificity principle
  • Training programs should be based on capacities,
    skills and abilities, not sex
  • Men will gain more than women

23
Specific Training Responses
  • Training depends upon particular stressors. For
    example
  • Yoga for strength and flexibility
  • Weight training for strength loss of body fat
  • For Strength increase resistance
  • For endurance increase reps

24
For Strength and Endurance
  • Lift 2 to 3 days per week
  • Do at least one set of 8-12 repetitions
  • Choose a weight that causes fatigue at the end of
    the last repetition
  • Better to underestimate the weight at first in
    order to prevent muscle injury

25
Gender Differences
  • Womens earliest strength increase result of
    increased muscle fiber recruitment
  • Mens earliest increase due to increase in muscle
    fiber size
  • After several weeks of training women also
    experience hypertrophy

26
Anaerobic Training
  • Interval training for 50 to 400 meter runs
  • Timing of the work and rest intervals determines
    the specific training result
  • For most running games require both aerobic and
    anaerobic training
  • Wind sprints anaerobic aerobic training needed
    for running games

27
Stretching
  • Never stretch a cold muscle
  • Warm up by walking, jogging before stretching
  • Static stretch better than ballistic
  • Stretch the muscle until slight tension is felt,
    not pain. Hold for 15 to 60 seconds
  • No evidence of injury prevention

28
Warming Up Cooling Down
  • Gradual adjustment to increase demands of
    exercise oxygen delivered to muscle cells,
    decreased time for muscle contraction
  • Do low intensity activity similar in nature to
    the workout activity
  • Cool down same activity only less intensity.
    Best time to stretch

29
Special Physiological Concerns
  • Menarche
  • Menstruation
  • Menopause
  • Pregnancy
  • Osteoporosis
  • Injuries

30
Menarche
  • Training at young age may delay onset of puberty
    or maybe not
  • Trained females begin menstruation from .5 to 2.5
    years later
  • No evidence that delay is harmful in any way
  • Early maturing girls may drop out of sport so we
    find these data

31
Menstruation
  • Research results unclear about effects on
    performance
  • Individual variability obscures any patterns of
    performance.
  • Some evidence suggests that regular exercise
    decreases incidence and severity of painful
    menstrual periods

32
Menstrual Disruption
  • Higher incidence of menstrual disruption in
    younger, highly motivated athletes, in
    intensively trained athletes, and in sports that
    emphasize lean body type
  • Amenorrhea related to osteoporosis
  • Female Athletic Triad also a concern

33
Menopause
  • A drop in circulating hormones, especially
    estrogen
  • Hot flashes not harmful
  • Not much studied
  • No difference in ability to improve fitness
    levels
  • Exercise recommended for fat control delay
    effects of aging

34
Pregnancy
  • Increased blood volume, cardiac output, fat and
    weight distribution, changes in most systems
  • No difference between athletes and non-athletes
    in major disorders
  • Athletes shorter periods of labor and fewer
    complications

35
Recent Research
  • Exercising pregnant women have higher ventilation
    volumes, higher ratings perceived exertion,
    energy expenditure
  • Dont do maximum effort
  • High risk pregnancy avoid exercise
  • Most benefit from exercise 3days per week
    non-weight bearing

36
Osteoporosis
  • 4 times more likely in women
  • Three major risk factors low estrogen, low
    calcium, lack of physical activity
  • Prevention should start in the teen years
  • ERT recommended
  • Low impact exercises

37
Injuries
  • In most activities no difference in injury rates
  • Anterior cruciate ligament injuries the exception
    to this rule
  • Difference in injury rate probably not related to
    anatomy
  • Prevention and rehabilitation methods the same
    get into good shape
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