Exercise Physiology Flashcards

1
Q

What do systolic and diastolic BP tell you about CO and TPR?

A

Systolic BP - reflects CO more
Diastolic BP - reflects TPR more

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2
Q

What is exercise physiology?

A

The description and explanation of the functional changes brought about by a single or by repeated bouts of exercise often with the objective of improving the exercise response

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3
Q

What is the definition of fitness?

A

The ability to perform muscular work

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4
Q

What are the components of exercise?

A

Neural control
Muscle strength
Range of motion/flexibility
Endurance ability
Body composition

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5
Q

How would you test flexibility?

A

Sit and reach test
Touch your toes

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6
Q

How would you test strength?

A

Handgrip dynamometer to index whole body strength

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7
Q

What are the three modes of muscle contraction?

A

Isotonic
Isometric
Isokinetic

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8
Q

What does isotonic muscle contraction involve?

A

Speed of contraction

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9
Q

What does isometric muscle contraction involve?

A

N of force generated

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10
Q

What does isokinetic muscle contraction involve?

A

Mean torque in Nm
Range of motion

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11
Q

What is explosive power?

A

Upward leap
Broad jump
Rebound leap
Stair climbing test
Wingate tests of anaerobic capacity
- descendent of the match test

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12
Q

What are the requirements for aerobic testing?

A

Must involve large muscle groups
Workload must be measurable and reproducible
Results must be comparable and repeatable
The test must be tolerable in health

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13
Q

What is the equation for the Harvard step test?

A

Duration in seconds x 50 /
Integrated recovery HR

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14
Q

What is an incremental test?

A

When the workload is increased steadily until the individual is no longer able to continue
Treadmill or cycle ergometer
Calculates
- VO2 as it reaches a plateau
- VO2 at anaerobic threshold

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15
Q

What is body composition made up of?

A

% body fat
BMI
Blood lipids

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16
Q

How do you measure % body fat?

A

Skinfold thickness
Underwater weighing
DEXA

17
Q

How do you measure BMI?

A

Weight in kg / (height in m)2
Waist hip ratios more useful now
< 0.8 - female
< 0.9 - male

18
Q

What are the main principles of training?

A

Overloading the system
Repetition at approaching max effort
Specificity
Tailored to the individual

19
Q

What adaptations to endurance occur muscles?

A

Larger and more numerous mitochondria
Capillarisation
Fibre types
Myoglobin

20
Q

What are the differences in changes to heart muscle between endurance training and resistance training?

A

Endurance - heart muscle wall grows and thickens slightly
Resistance - heart muscle wall thickens but also makes the chamber smaller less room for blood

21
Q

What is the conversation threshold?

A

70% VO2 max

22
Q

What is the karvonen method?

A

HR(threshold) = HR(rest) + 0.6(HR(max) - HR(rest))

23
Q

What 3 strategies are used for training?

A

HR zones
Training lactate tolerance
Interval training

24
Q

What are strategies for strength training?

A

Progressive resistance exercises
Isokinetics
Isometrics (remember specificity)

25
Q

What are the benefits to training?

A

reduced BP
Reduction in risk of stroke m/ heart diseases and osteoporosis
Body composition - reduce obesity
Bone density
Psychology