Zusammenfassung der Ressource
Exercise Physiology
- Energetics
- The study of the energy demands of work
- Ergometry
- Assesses individual
performance, as well
as associated
physiological changes
- Performance Capacity
- Ability to respond to a physical load
- e.g. how quickly someone can run a mile
- Limited by the rate at which the
body can convert chemical
energy in food to mechanical
energy of the muscles.
- This efficiency is
affected by size, gender,
fitness level and skill
- Good efficiency
- Effectiveness of muscles
and other systems
- Cardiovascular system
has to efficiently transport
oxygen, CO2 and glucose
around the body
- Respiratory system must acquire
O2 and eliminate CO2 effectively
- Efficiency refers to the
energy expenditure in relation
to the work accomplished
- Efficiency = work done / energy consumed
- Rarely exceeds 25%
- Most energy is
lost at heat
- Makes the
process
inefficient
- Considers the effects
of hard physical labour
on the human body
- Key to maximising
performance is the ability
to inspire and transport
oxygen, and to utilise
both oxygen and food
substrates efficiently
- Measuring
- Work done
- Directly obtained
from calibrated
exercise apparatus
- Converted energy
- Indirectly obtained
- Calorimeter
impractical
for humans
- Oxygen consumption
- Oxygen is consumed in
all biological oxidation
reactions and so it reflects
the energy generated
- Air collected in Douglas
bag or measured directly
by continuous monitoring
- Expired air is sampled for
O2 and CO2 concentration
and the total volume of
expired air is recorded
- Energy consumed
- Respiratory quotient
(RQ) of the food
substrate is a measure
of the energy generating
potential of the food
- Calculated from the
ratio of CO2 produced
over O2 consumed
- e.g. less CO2 is
given off compared to
O2 consumed in fat,
so the RQ is 0.7
- Respiratory Exchange
Ratio (RER) is
calculated in the same
way as RQ, but reflects
the production of CO2
- Determined from O2
taken up and the RQ
- Converted energy = O2 consumed x RQ
- Muscles
- Short term stores of
ATP and creatine
phosphate
- Used over
short periods
of work
- ATP stores only available
for contractile processes
for a few seconds
- CP donates a
phosphate group to
ADP to make ATP
- Reserves used up
in the first minute
- Feeling of tiredness
comes from the utilisation
of stores in muscle cells
and the start of anaerobic
respiration
- Forms lactic acid
- Aerobic respiration
does not contribute
until a few minutes
prior to the start of work
- Glycolysis
- Produces 2
ATP for 1
glucose
molecule
- Quicker
than aerobic
respiration
- Less efficient,
uses up glucose
quickly
- Creates pyruvic acid
- Converted to lactic acid
- Oxidative phosphorylation
- 36 ATP per
glucose
molecule
- 28 net
ATP
- Exercise is initially anaerobic as stores are
used up. RER increases due to CO2
concentration. Anaerobic continues until a
steady state is established. Aerobic respiration
will then start and RER will stabilise. Subjects
must be in a steady aerobic state in order to
measure muscle efficiency
- Fatigue
- Fall in pH due to
lactic acid build up
- Ratio of fast and
slow twitch fibres
- Vary, but
cannot be
changed
- Endurance training
allows muscles to use
oxygen more efficiently
- Mitachondria
numbers increase -
energy stores rise
- Number of capillaries
increase and blood
vessels enlarge
- Increases blood flow and
reduces blood pressure
- Reverts entirely after
6 months if muscles
are not used
- Stroke volume can
increase where heart
rate cannot improve
- This allows more blood
to flow per heart beat
- HR has an
individual maximum,
governed by fatigue
- Lower
resting HR
- Relative increase in HR in
an athlete is greater than in
a sedentary person
- Same amount of O2 is
consumed at a lower HR
- Breathing
- Increases during exercise
- pH based reflex response
- CO2 dissolved in the blood
produces carbonic acid
- Acidity increase detected by
peripheral receptors. Sent to
respiratory centre in the medulla
- Breathing rate
increases. Take in more
O2, expire more CO2
- VO2 max is the maximum
oxygen consumption and
it is a measurable
indicator of fitness
- Training increases strength of
ventilator muscles and tidal
volume - amount of air per breath