Aerobic Performance Flashcards
1
Q
aerobic E sys:
1. aerobic activity
2. main source of E
A
- cardiovascular endurance activities, tasks you can sustain over time
- sustain activity w/O2, breathe faster and deeper than normal, increase HR and BF to working muscles to supply with O2 and back to lungs
2
Q
- max aerobic power
- aerobic capacity
- why hard to measure directly
A
- highest amt of chem E transformed in aerobic machinery of mitochondria/unit time, measured as maximal O2 uptake (VO2max)
- total chem E available for aerobic work, measured using surrogate variables like endurance performance, time to exhaust, or biochem indicators
- hard to assess in children bc have to push to max (ethics)
3
Q
- max aerobic power limitations
- VO2max test
A
- influenced by anaerobic E production, hard to isolate, when low to mod intensity or when it lasts for 8 or more mins, anaerobic E production influence is small
- maximal exercise test on treadmill/bike by comparing O2 used during exercise and CO2 expelled, accurate measurement of current cardioresp fitness, effectiveness of training program, predict maximal steady-state speed or wattage
4
Q
- measurement issues of VO2max in children and strategy
- age and challenges
- protocols
A
- hard to maximally exercise, important to obtain full cooperatiion from child, explain using age appropriate terms, familiarization to protocol and equipment, and encouragement
- effective for 8+ y/o, challenging for younger children bc req child to follow fixed cadence and excessive increments of work rate
- same ergometers used for all ages, physically move seat and pedal shaft to size, metronome/gamification to obtain constant cadance
5
Q
VO2max
1. treadmill vs. cycle ergometer
2. arm vs. cycle ergometer
3. treadmill and children
4. attention
A
- treadmill uses larger muscle mass, 10% lower VO2max for cycling
- 60-70% lower on arm than cycling bc low amount of muscle mass worked
- for children under 10, familiarization trials to reduce risk of tripping, req spotter, and some children will terminate test prematurely for fear of failure
- limit to 8-10 mins for children bc have short attention spans and increase work rates carefully
6
Q
achieving max O2 uptake:
1. in adults
2. in children
A
- HR of 220 bpm - age, respiratory exchange ratio of 1.05 or higher, plateau in VO2 despite increase in work
- often achieve HR and RER but 40-50% achieve plateau, children who do achieve plateau have higher Vo2
7
Q
cardiovascular response during aerobic exercise
1. Fick equation
2. dimensions of heart
A
- VO2 = HR * SV (CaO2-CvO2) > O2 in arterial and venous blood
- increase size of heart with age, increase size, increase SV so even though HR decrease with age have increased CO
8
Q
economy of movement
1. def
2. in children
3. stride length
4. co-activation
A
- metabolic cost of task
- at same running speed for ages 7-16, younger children have higher O2 cost
- higher mech cost of locomotion due to shorter stride and greater freq of strides, req more chem E
- for younger children, not efficient with muscles req co-activation, monitor activation with EMG, when muscle group contracts, antagonist muscle group relaxes, when co-contraction is excessive, increase E cost
9
Q
- factors of maximal aerobic power
- max HR changes
- lung function changes
A
- primary sources = sex, body size, maturity status; other source = struc, physi, biochem factors assoc with aerobic E output
- max HR highest in children at 195-205 bpm, max HR declines with age beginning at puberty
- max pulmonary ventilation increase with age, double at 8 y/o, children have higher breathing freq but less breathing vo and lower capacity of O2 transport sys
10
Q
high VO2max and use of VO2max
A
high VO2max is good predictor of athletic performance, benchmark to track progress and determine cardiorespiratory fitness