Title: Preventing Injuries through Fitness Training
1Preventing Injuries through Fitness Training
2Objectives
- Identify the concept of periodization and the
types of exercise that are performed in each
phase. - Identify principles of conditioning
- Explain the importance of the warm-up and
cool-down periods. - Describe the importance of flexibility, strength,
and cardiorespiratory endurance for athletics and
injury prevention. - Identify the specific techniques and principles
for improving flexibility, muscular strength, and
cardiorespiratory endurance.
3Foundations of Conditioning
Objective Identify the principles of
conditioning
SAID PRINCIPLE
Specific
Adaptation to
Imposed
Demands
4Warm-Up and Cooldown
Objective Explain the importance of warmup and
cooldown periods.
- Warm-up Exercises
- Why are they important?
- Helps prepare body for workout by stimulating the
CRS. - How do they reduce injuries?
- Warms muscles up so they are not tight before
workout - What type of stretches should be done?
- Dynamic
- Cool-down
- Benefits Decreases muscle soreness, helps to
elongate muscles after workout. - How long? 5-10 minutes
- What type of stretches should be done?
- Static
5Flexibility
Objective Describe the importance of
flexibility, strength, cardiorespiratroy
endurance for both athletic performance and
injury prevention.
- Flexibility - the range of motion possible about
a given joint or series of joints. - Why is it important?
- Essential to normal daily function
- Essential for high performance
- How can it be limited?
- Bony structure
- Excess fat
- Skin wounds
- Muscles
- Neural tissues
- Connective tissue
- How is it measured?
- Goniometer
6Flexibility
- Active vs. Passive Range of Motion
- Active What the patient can do on their own
- Passive What the clinician can push them to do
- Agonist vs. Antagonist Muscles
- Agonist Muscle being targeted
- Antagonist Opposing muscle
7Stretching Techniques
- Ballistic Bouncing movement. Controversial
because the jerk of the muscle when it is tight
can cause muscle injury. - Static Passive stretch. Increases ROM and helps
reduce soreness. - Dynamic Controlled muscle contractions that
mimic sport specific activities. - Proprioceptive Neuromuscular Facilitation (PNF)
Stretching and muscle contractions that have been
proven to be most beneficial for increasing ROM.
(contract relax, slow reversal, hold relax) - Deep Tissue Stretches the fascia around the
muscles. - Neural Flossing Breaks up adhesions on the nerve
after an injury.
8Stretching Techniques Examples
9Muscular Strength and Endurance
- Muscular Strength the maximum force that can be
applied by a muscle during a single maximum
contraction. - Muscular Endurance the ability to perform
repetitive muscular contractions against some
resistance
10Types of Skeletal Contractions
- Isometric Muscle contraction where there is no
change in muscle length. - Concentric Muscle contraction where the length
of the muscle shortens. - Eccentric Muscle contraction where the length
of the muscle lengthens.
11What Determines the Amount of Strength?
- Size of muscle
- Number of muscle fibers
- Neuromuscular efficiency
- Biomechanical Factors
- Fast-Twitch v. slow-twitch muscle fibers
- Type 1 (ST) Carry O2, fatigue resistant,
aerobic. - Type 2 (FT) Fast fatiguing, anaerobic
- Level of physical activity
- Overtraining
12Resistance Training Techniques
Technique
Equipment/Activity
Action
Isometric exercise Force develops while muscle
length remains constant Any immovable
resistance Progressive resistance Force
develops while the muscle shortens or
lengthens Free weights, Universal, Exercise
(PRE) Nautilus, Eagle, Cybex, Body
Master Isokinetic training Force develops while
muscle is contracting Cybex, Orthotron, Biodex
at a constant
velocity
Circuit training Uses a combination of
isometric, PRE, or isokinetic May use
any equipment exercise in a series of
stations
Plyometric exercise Uses a
rapid eccentric stretch of the muscle to Hops,
bounds, and depth
facilitate an explosive concentric contraction
jumps Calisthenics Uses body weight
for resistance No equipment needed
(Sit-ups,push-ups,ect.)
13Resistance Training Techniques
Isometric Exercise
Progressive Resistive Exercise
Plyometric Exercise
Calisthenics
Isokinetic Exercise
14Exercise Terminology
- Repetition The number of times a weight is
lifted - Repetition Max The max number of weight that
can be lifted once - Set the total number of reps completed
- Recovery period Rest interval between sets
- Frequency How often you exercise
- Intensity The amount of weight lifted or how
hard you work during exercise (Based on THR) - Time How long you exercise
- Type What type of activity are you doing
(Cardio, Weight lifting)
15Cardiorespiratory Endurance
- Cardiorespiratory endurance ability to perform
activities for extended periods. The better your
endurance, the greater the resistance to fatigue. - Aerobic activity Requires oxygen. Continuous,
long duration activities - Anaerobic activity - Does not require oxygen.
Short, high intensity, explosive exercises.
16Cardiorespiratory System
- Components of the cardiorespiratory system
- Heart, lungs, blood vessels, blood
- Exercise effects on the heart
- Body contains about 5L of blood
- Stroke volume amount of blood pumped with each
beat - Cardiac output Amount of blood pumped in 1
minute. - CO SV x HR
- Ex. In class comparison
17Cardiorespiratory System
- What determines how efficiently the body is using
oxygen? - Maximum aerobic capacity (VO2 Max)
- Greatest rate at which O2 can be taken in and
used during exercises. - How is it measured? (ml/kg/min)
- Max HR 220 age
- http//www.youtube.com/watch?vi7kn3mkO7Ec
18Cardiorespiratory Systems training
- 3 main systems used to produce energy to work our
muscles. - ATP Sudden bursts of energy. Last only about 10
sec. - Glycolytic Glycogen from muscles and liver is
broken down to produce ATP. Anaerobic activities
that can last up to 2 minutes. Produces lactate. - Oxidative Uses O2 to breakdown food to produce
ATP. Aerobic activities that produce 2x as much
ATP and not as much lactate.
19Improving Cardiorespiratory Endurance
- Methods for improving cardiorespiratory endurance
- Continuous training Aerobic activity
- FITT
- Interval training Intermittent activities
- Fartlek training Running interval training to
increase speed
20Conditioning Seasons and Periodization
Objective Identify the concept of periodization
and the types of exercise that are performed in
each phase.
- Periodization an approach to conditioning that
uses various types and intensity of training
throughout the year. - Goals
- Individualization
- Peak performance
- Decrease injury
- Variety
21Periodization Training
22Periodization
23For more information
- Fitness World
http//www.fitnessworld.com - Health and Fitness Worldguide Forum
http//www.worldguide.com/Fitness/hf.html - Tips on Fitness http//www.geocities.com/HotSpring
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