Week 7 - PA Guidelines & Training Principles Flashcards

1
Q

Recommendations for the components of a complete exercise program include the following:

A
  • aerobic exercise
  • resistance exercise
  • flexibility exercise
  • neuromotor exercise
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2
Q

Recommendations for Aerobic Exercise

A

At least 5 days/week moderate
- 30-60 min/day

At least 3 days/week of vigorous activity
- 20-60 min/day

OR a combination moderate-to-vigorous 3-5 days/week

Includes using major muscle groups in a continuous, rhythmic manner

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3
Q

Resistance training recommendations

A

Train each major muscle group 2-3 days / week

  • strength development: 60-70% of one repetition max for novice/intermediate
    — 80%+ experienced
  • muscular endurance development: 50% 1-RM or lower
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4
Q

Flexibility training recommendations

A

at least 2-3 days/week (daily is most effective)

  • stretch to point of feeling tightness or slight discomfort
  • includes exercises (static, dynamic, ballistic, or proprioception neuromuscular facilitation)

for each of the major muscle-tendon units

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5
Q

Neuromotor Exercise recommendations

A

at least 2-3 days/week

consider at least 2-30 minutes

activities depend on the individual with recommendations for fall reduction including exercises involving balance, agility, coordination, gait, proprioception, and other multifaceted activities such as Tai Chi and yoga

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6
Q

Components of the Exercise Training Session

A
  • Warm-up
  • Conditioning
  • Cool-down
  • Stretching
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7
Q

Warm-up

A

at least 5-10 min of light-to-moderate intensity cardiorespiratory and muscular endurance activities

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8
Q

Conditioning

A

at least 20-60 min of aerobic, resistance, neuromotor, and/or sports activities

(exercise bouts of 10 min are acceptable if the individual accumulates at least 20-60 min of daily aerobic exercise)

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9
Q

Cool-down

A

at least 5-10 min of light-to-moderate intensity cardiorespiratory and muscular endurance activities

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10
Q

Stretching

A

at least 10 min of stretching exercises performed after the warm-up or cool-down phase

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11
Q

7 training principles

A
  1. overload
  2. progression
  3. specificity
  4. individualization
  5. periodization
  6. rest/recovery
  7. reversibility
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12
Q

Overload — ‘hard enough’

A
  • Training regime of greater intensity than the individual is accustomed to
  • Only in the TRAINED MUSCLE

Question: for CRF improvement, one must train at 30% HHR or greater
– Light = 30=39%
– Moderate 40-59%
– Vigorous = 60-89%

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13
Q

Overload Diagram

A
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14
Q

Overload — How to: sprinting

A

Consider FITT to increase demands and challenges

Progressive overload requires either manipulating training frequency, intensity, or duration, or combining the 3 factors

Walking, or other moderate-intensity exercise, has a low risk of injury compared to running or higher intensity competitive sports

To improve sprinting, add sprint intervals

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15
Q

FITT

A

frequency, intensity, type, time

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16
Q

Progression

A

To improve, training must progress

10% rule

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17
Q

Progression Example

A
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18
Q

Progression Dumbbells Example

A
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19
Q

Progression — How to

A

Increase intensity (ie. weight, speed)
– More repetitions
– Less rest, weight (less weight, increase reps)
– Decrease speed, sets (increase repetitions in each set but lower sets with higher intensity)
– New exercises

Question: to progress your training, you can incorporate less RESISTANCE
– If you want to increase repetitions, lower resistance

20 rep, 3 rounds then increase weight

Start low and go slow

Small attainable, achievable goals

More sets with less days in between training days

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20
Q

Progression — Prevention of MSK injury

A

Question: on top of gradual progression of exercise volume and intensity, what else can be done to reduce activity-related MSK injury?

– Proper warm-up and cool-down, proper cool-down, and dynamic stretching

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21
Q

Principle of Progressive Overload Diagram

A
22
Q

Sample Walking and Jogging Program

A
23
Q

Specificity

A

Specific exercises elicit specific adaptations to promote specific training effects

24
Q

4 types of Specificity

A
  1. Movement
  2. Metabolic
  3. Temporal
  4. Mode
25
Q

Movement Specificity

A

choosing an activity that creates chain reaction that would occur in sport

ie. mechanics

26
Q

Metabolic Specificity

A

anaerobic vs. aerobic

  • which energy system you are using
27
Q

Temporal Specificity

A

increase work capacity in exercise

ie. thinking time of day

Ie. friday night hockey game at 7pm
- Practise at that time of day

Not sport specific, whatever works best for you
- Do favour morning
- Difficult to sleep, high adrenaline

BEST ANSWER: SO YOU ACTUALLY DO IT

28
Q

Mode Specificity

A

the way the body responds to physical activity is specific to the activity itself

  • Ie. someone that jogging, jogging won’t improve bench press
29
Q

the NFL combine “bench press” test is an example of MOVEMENT specificity being ignored

A
30
Q

you’re training for a triathlon. You do not like swimming. Your friend tells you, “with all your run/bike training. You don’t need to train in swimming. The aerobic gains from your running and biking will translate in the water.”

A

FALSE
- Improving overall aerobic health, will not make you a good swimmer

31
Q

Specificity of Swim Training Study (1974)

A

10 weeks of swim training did not lead to increased aerobic fitness in RUNNING
- Vice versa

32
Q

Specificity of Swim Training Study (1974) Results

A
33
Q

Individualization

A

Adaptations to training are unique to individuals and vary with:

A) one’s baseline fitness
B) individual ‘responsiveness’

Other … (see ACSM Ch. 6)

34
Q

Individuality — Twins Research

A

After 20 weeks of training aerobic system, BOTH TWINS have the same effect

If one brother improved, the other improved

Same physiologically speaking

35
Q

Twins Research Chart

A
36
Q

Periodization

A

Timing

The organization of an individual’s training into cycles to promote peak condition

Training cycles

Think of as HIGH VOLUME, LOW INTENSITY OR LOW VOLUME, HIGH INTENSITY

37
Q

Periodization Diagram

A

Macrocycle = season
Mesocycles = moments training for/training blocks
Microcycle = weeks

38
Q

Rest/Recovery

A

How sports teams are using Fatigue science to discover the secrets of sleep (The Globe and Mail)
– A company selling sleep monitors to the NFL, Fatigue Science has developed the Readiband sleep tracker and SAFTE biomathematical fatigue model software in conjunction with the US Army Research Lab and Johns Hopkins University
– The system “translates all the complexity and nuance around a person’s sleep into a performance prediction”
– Seahawks won the Super Bowl in 2014.
— “We have specialized doctors who monitor us for concussion symptoms and wrist wear that helps the team track our sleep patterns”

39
Q

Sleep hygiene

A

The habits that lead to healthy sleep, from limiting caffeine and alcohol intake to monitoring the temperature and humidity of the bedroom to scaling back on nighttime smartphone use

40
Q

Rest between:

A
  • sets
  • days
  • meso-cycles
  • seasons
41
Q

Without adequate rest impedes progress diagram

A
42
Q

without adequate rest:

A

1) injuries occur
2) adaptations will not be gained
3) mood - cranky & tired

43
Q

Reversibility

A

Loss of physiologic and performance training adaptations (detraining/regression/atrophy) can occur rapidly

44
Q

Question: once enhanced fitness has been achieved, does an individual have to train at the same exercise volume to maintain these adaptations?

A

Trick question

Not necessarily same difficulty, but cannot just stop completely

45
Q

Use it or Lose it!

A

Question: training effects can be attained by training other limbs
- FALSE

Will reverse after 2 WEEKS!

46
Q

Reversibility Diagram

A
47
Q

ACSM Guidelines

A
48
Q

Aerobic (Cardiovascular Endurance) Evidence-Based Recommendations: FITT-VP

A

Frequency, Intensity, Time, Type, Volume, Pattern, Progression

49
Q

FITT-VP Recommendations

A
50
Q

CANFITPRO — FITT for Fitness Components

A