Lab 3 Flashcards

1
Q

What are the three major substrates for energy production

A
  1. carbohydrates
  2. fats
  3. proteins
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2
Q

What are the 3 major substrates stored as in the body

A
  1. carbohydrates –> glycogen (liver and muscle)
  2. fat –> triglycerides (adipose tissue and intramuscular depots)
  3. protein –> bodily protein (muscle…)
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3
Q

What are the major sources of fuel for OXIDATIVE ATP production

A

fat and carbohydrates

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4
Q

what is not considered a major contributer to energy production during exercise… why

A

protein because your body burns carbs and fat first

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5
Q

when does the body increase its role for protein as a fuel source

A

conditions of muscle glycogen depletion

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6
Q

How do you monitor substrate utilization during exercise

A

indirect calorimetry

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7
Q

What does indirect calorimetry work

A

utilizes measurements of expired CO2 and O2to calculate respiratory exhange ratio (RER)

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8
Q

What is RER

A

espiratory exchange ratio
ratio of (VCO2/VO2)
can be used to estimate substrate utilization

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9
Q

how does RER estimate substrate utilization

A

b/c fats and carbohydrates use and produce different amounts of CO2 and O2

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10
Q

How to determine numbers for RER values

A

Every RER value ahs corresponding caloric equivalent for O2 and estimated contribution of carbs and fats to E contribution

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11
Q

What has to be known to calculate total energy expenditure

A

VCO2/VO2
(carbohydrate + fat)

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12
Q

given total energy expenditure what can be calculated

A

absolute amount of energy production from given substrate can be calculated

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13
Q

What does the mitochondria do in the cell for glucose

A

mitochondria can oxidize glucose at a much higher rate than free fatty acids

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14
Q

What happens when exercise intensity increases from mild, to moderate, to hard what is effected – known as what

A

relative contribution of carbohydrates becomes increasingly important

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15
Q

What is the crossover concept

A

exercise intensity increases and and increase in contribution of carbohydrate as energy source

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16
Q

due to adaptations with endurance trainings what happens to the crossover point

A

it will shift to the right on the graph of substrate utilization versus VO2max to a higher relative and absolute work rate

17
Q

In a untrained individual to a trained athlete how does the crossover experience differ

A

untrained indiviudal (50% CHO/ 50% fat) occurs at 30% VO2max
trained athlete will experience the crossover at about 40-50% VO2max

18
Q

Why does the delay in “crossover” exist

A

delay in the “crossover” from fats to carbs is advantageous due to conservation of limited glycogen stores

19
Q

what is important to differentiate for contributions of fat and carbs

A

differentiate between the absolute and relative contributions of fats and carbs at given work rate

20
Q

At low intensity what happens to the relative (%) contribution of fats…what happens to abs number of total calories –> what happens to absolute amount of fat oxidation

A
  • relative (%) contribution of fats is higher
  • abs number of total calories is lower
  • absolute amount of fat oxidation is lower (40% of 10kcal/min = 4kcal/min)
21
Q

At moderate intensity what happens to the relative (%) contribution of fats…what happens to relative number of total calories –> what happens to absolute amount of fat oxidation

A

relative (%) contribuations of fats is lower, absolute number of total calories is higher –> absolute amount of fat oxidation is higher

22
Q

oxygen consumption represents what

A

total energy expenditure during submaximal, steady-state exercise

23
Q

what happens as exercise intensity increases

A

VO2 and total energy expenditure increase linearly

24
Q

What is happening in this lab

A

3, 6-minute exercsie bouts on bicycle ergometer or treadmill at 3 incremental intensities with 5-minute break between each intensity

25
Q

What is the RER for fat in this equation: C16H32O2 + 23O2 –> 16CO2 + 16H2O

A

R= VCO2/VO2 = 16CO2/23O2 = 0.7

26
Q

What is the RER for carbs in this equation: C6H12O6+ 6O2 –> 6CO2 + 6H2O

A

R = 6CO2/6O2 = 1.0

27
Q

what are the factos that determine fuel selection

A
  1. intensity
  2. duration
  3. training status == higher oxidative capacity (crossover shift right (increase fat utilization [longer], increase mitochondrial density, increase capillary density, increase FFA transpo and oxidation, spare glycogen)
  4. Diet (CHO supplementation)
28
Q

if you increase intensity what happens to the carbohydrate contribution

A

increase CHO contribution

29
Q

Where is the “fat burning zone”

A

oxidation of fat is highest at an exercise intensity of 50% VO2 max and lowest at 100% VO2max

30
Q

as exercise duration increases what happens with fuel utilizaiton

A

FAT utilization increases and decrease in CHO utilization

31
Q

If you have an acute diet manipulation how does it affect substrate utilization

A

consuming CHO before or during exercise INCREASES CHO utilizaiton and decreases FAT utilization

32
Q

If you have an chronic diet manipulation how does it affect substrate utilization

A
  • Consuming a high CHO diet increases CHO utilization during submax exercise
  • consuming high FAT diet increases FAT utilization
33
Q

When is the best time to ingest CHO before exercise

A

fuel 2-4 hours before exercise

34
Q

glucose inhibits what to make fats less available

A

glucose inhibits lipolysis

35
Q
A