Physiological adaptions to strength, speed, power Flashcards

1
Q

List the primary neurological adaptations to strength training?

A
  • improved synchronization and improvement
  • increased firing frequency
  • decreased autogenic inhibition
  • reduced co-activation (agonist and antagonist fired simultaneously)
  • cross education training effects: contralateral increase in limb strength
  • post-activation potentiation (PAP)
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2
Q

What are the primary muscular adaptations to strength training?

A
  • microdamage: microtears from being under tension
  • intracellular signalling: mechanical stretch and force on the muscle stimulates a cascade of events that signal protein synthesis -> hypertrophy
  • Hypertrophy: increase CSA
  • possible hyperplasia (increase number of cells)
  • changes to connective tissue: increased ligament strength and tendon stiffness
  • changes in pennation angles
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3
Q

What is post-activation potentiation and how is it used?

A
  • phenomena where a muscles recent contractile history affects its current performance
  • small sets of dynamic movement prior to exercise effort (power) e.g. squats to box jump
  • caused by:
    • increased sensitivity of actin-myosin to Ca2+
    • increased synaptic excitation within the spinal cord that allows for increased post-synaptic potentials = greater force development.
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4
Q

What is the intracellular signalling pathway adaptation to strength training?

A
  1. resistance training
  2. muscle stretch increase
  3. increase in insulin growth factor 1
  4. increase in Akt (protein kinase)
  5. increase in mTOR (mammalian target of rapamycin)
  6. protein synthesis
  7. muscle hypertrophy
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5
Q

Changes to the anaerobic energy system with strength training?

A
  • no changes to enzymes
  • no change to ATP + PCr storage
  • possible increase on glycogen stores in muscle
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6
Q

Cardiac adaptations to strength training?

A
  • cardiac hypertrophy
    • LV wall, IV septum and IV mass due to increased blood pressure
    • concentric hypertrophy
    • may be due to steroid use or in proportion to muscle mass
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7
Q

Detail the process of muscular hypertrophy

  • What occurs?
  • What’s important?
A
  • increase in CSA due to an increase in actin and myosin filaments
  • more sarcomeres are laid down
  • increase number of sarcomeres leads to increased number of possible cross-bridges = increased forces
  • satellite cells proliferate leading to increased myonuclei servicing each fibre
  • = increased protein synthesis
  • protein synthesis must outpace breakdown to make a size difference
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8
Q

When does hypertrophy occur?

A
  • detectable 3 weeks after training
  • occurs with strength/resistance training
  • rapid at the start then a gradual process
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9
Q

Explain the concept of the concurrent training effect

  • what is it?
  • why does it occur?
A

When endurance training is added to strength training; strength is less developed and the rate of force development is compromised.
Proposed reasons:
- neural adaptations conflicted
- conflicting fibre type adaptations
- interference with protein synthesis pathways required for hypertrophy

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10
Q

Describe the relationship between power and strength

A

Power is the rapid application of strength. Strength is needed prior to power development training.

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11
Q

Describe how strength, power and speed are related

A
  • Speed is the application of strength, power and anaerobic energy system adaptations
  • optimal development of each factor is required for speed performance
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12
Q

What is speed assisted training and its purpose?

A

e.g. overspeed training
= neuromuscular and cadence development
- cadence relies on the motor control system keeping up with the speed of movement

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13
Q

What is speed resisted training and its purpose?

A

added resistance to movement e.g parachutes

= power development

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14
Q

What is chronic hypertrophy?

A

increase in muscle size that occurs with regular training.

Generally involves an increased size of muscle fibres CSA and an increase in the whole muscle size.

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15
Q

What is transient hypertrophy?

A

Temporary increase in muscle size that occurs immediately after training due to oedema in tissue caused by a shift in plasma from the blood into the interstitial and intercellular space

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