lecture 2: primary movement patterns and spotting Flashcards

1
Q

muscles

A

all movement is based on muscle contraction:
- muscle produces force
- pulls on the tendon,
- rotates bone around joint

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2
Q

tendon

A

attaches muscle to bones

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3
Q

what works together to produce static and dynamic movement

A

1: agonists
2: antagonists
3: synergists
4: fixators

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4
Q

agonist

A

the muscle most directly involved in bringing about a movement, aka the “prime mover”

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5
Q

synergist

A

muscles that work with the agonist to assist movement
- secondary contributions to movement

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6
Q

antagonist

A

muscles that work in opposition to resists the movement of the agonist
- resist movements, stabilize joints, slow down movements
- enables co-contractions

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7
Q

fixator

A

muscles that hold a joint in place and provide stability while agonists are contracting
- makes agonist movements more effective
i.e. stablize on joint during biarticular muscle contraction
- stabilize scapula while shoulder moves

  • important for muscles that cross multiple joints
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8
Q

muscle contractions

A
  • muscles contract to produce force
  • if force of muscle exceeds force on limb, muscle shortens
  • if force of muscle matches force on limb, muscle length does not change
  • if force of muscle is less than force on limb, muscle actively lengthens
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9
Q

types of muscle contractions

A

1: concentric contraction
2: isometric contraction
3: eccentric contraction

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10
Q

concentric contraction

A

muscle force ECEEDS force on limb: muscle is shortening

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11
Q

isometric contraction

A

muscle force matches force on limb: length does not change

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12
Q

eccentric contraction

A

muscle force is less than force on limb: muscle actively lengthens

ie. jumping up onto a bar and then slowly letting yourself come down

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13
Q

movements generally have concentric, isometric, and eccentric phases, but exercises can also be – or –

A

1: eccentric- only
2: isometric- only

ie. a wall sit or plank because you are holding the position so you are not getting any lengthening

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14
Q

exercise categories

A

1: compound exercises
2: isolation exercises

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15
Q

compound exercises

A
  • AKA multi-joint exercises
  • recruit one or more large muscles areas
  • involve two or more primary joints
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16
Q

examples of compound exercise

A

bench press, shoulder press, squat, deadlift

17
Q

isolation exercises

A
  • single joint exercises
  • recruit smaller muscle areas
  • involve only one primary joint
18
Q

examples of isolated exercises

A
  • biceps curl
  • hamstring curl
    -tri ceps extension
  • calf raise
19
Q

primary movements can be categorized into 3 types

A

1: pushes
2: pulls
3: stands

20
Q

push movements

A
  • bench press (flat, incline, decline)
  • shoulder press
  • lateral raise
  • push press
  • dips
21
Q

pull movements

A
  • rows (cable, bent-over, dumbbell)
  • pull-downs
  • rear-flys
22
Q

stand movements

A
  • squats
  • deadlifts
  • cleans
  • leg press
23
Q

resistance training fundamentals

A
  • grip style and width
  • range of motion
  • breathing
  • weight belts
24
Q

grip style

A
  • closed vs open
  • hook
  • pronated
  • supinated
  • alternated
25
Q

open vs closed grip

A

closed: thumb covers fingers to “close” the circle

open: the thumb stays at the side

26
Q

pronated vs supinated

A

pronated: palms are facing ground

supinated: palms facing up

(generally: pronated is to be used when weight is over head, supinated when weight is below)

27
Q

what can an alternated or hook grip do?

A

increase grip strength

(alternated is the strongest grip)

28
Q

different grip width

A
  • narrow
  • intermediate
  • wide
29
Q

range of motion

A
  • recommendations are to utilize the entire range of motion during a life
  • partial ROM is still beneficial, but full ROM leads to greater adaptation
30
Q

breathing

A
  • breathing is focused around the sticking point (transition from eccentric to concentric phase of the life)
  • exhaling on concentric and inhaling on eccentric phase (inhale when you are recovering and exhale when you are doing the work)
  • valsalva maneuver increases lifting abdominal pressure which stabilizes spine an cane increase lifting performance
31
Q

weight belts

A
  • provide similar effect as valsalva (increase abdominal pressure and provides spinal stabilization and protects the back)
32
Q

we can target specific muscles (– , –) by modifying exercise selection (including – and –, – , and –)

A
  1. agonists
    2: synergists
    3: modifying grip style
    4: width
    5: range of motion
    6: breathing