Aerobic Training Flashcards

1
Q

VO2 Max

A

The maximum volume of oxygen that can be taken in and consumed by the body in 1 minute

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2
Q

How do u calculate oxygen consumed?

A

O2 breathed in - O2 breathed out

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3
Q

What is volume of oxygen measured in?

A

ml
kg
min

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4
Q

As intensity of exercise increases what happens

A

Our volume of oxygen increases until it reaches our zone of VO2 max, as a result we cannot get anymore oxygen in and have to slow as exercise intensity increases we result in working anaerobically causing fatigue and the eventual failure of said exercise (e.g msf test)

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5
Q

Factors affecting VO2 max

A

Physiology:
Muscle fibre types
Capillary density
Mitochondria
Alveolar surface area
Haemoglobin

Genetics >90%

Training:
Aerobic
Fartlek
Continuous

Lifestyle:
Exercise
Smoking

Age: 30-35

Gender:
Males higher
Women lower

Body composition- overweight - less efficient

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6
Q

What is the direct gas analysis? Pros and cons.

A

Ramp test - increasingly harder
Measures O2 in and out (difference is consumption)

Good:
Valid reliable and good for measure gives a trustworthy number for VO2

Bad:
Maximal
Lab test - exclusive

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7
Q

What is the multi-stage fitness test? Pros and cons.

A

20metre shuttles
1 minute stages
2 missed shuttles=fail
Score converted into VO2 max prediction

Good:
Groups/teams
Simple protocol

Bad:
Poor for non runners
Predicting VO2
Maximal test

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8
Q

What is the queens college step test? Pros and cons

A

41.3cm per test
22 steps per min for female
24 steps per min for male
3 minutes
HR measured after 5 seconds. For 15 seconds x4 to find relative aerobic fitness at rest

Good:
Sub-maximal
Simple protocol
Groups/teams

Bad:
Measurement might have errors
Prediction of VO2 max not measure

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9
Q

What is the 12 minute cooper run? Pros and cons.

A

As far as possible in 12 minutes
Distance measured
Must be measurebale
Flat surface

Good:
Simple protocol
Groups/teams

Bad:
not good for no runners
Tedious
Maximal
Prediction not a measurement

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10
Q

Continuous training. Pros and cons.

A

20 minutes up to 2 hours (glycogen limit usually)

60-80% maximal can be 85%

Running, cycling, walking

Good:
Simple
cheap
Available to all

Bad:
Tedious
Time consuming
Reduces speed
Can lead to chronic injuries

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11
Q

H. I. I. T aerobic training, and pros

A

High intensity interval training

Periods of high intensity work and recovery

20-60 minutes
4-10 sets
10 reps
2:1 exercise to rest ratio

Good:
Burns more calories
Faster adaptations
Performance intensity
Quicker (time efficient - less tedious)
Athletes of different levels together

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12
Q

H. I. I. T how it works?

A

4-30 minutes

Warm up
High intensity intervals
Moderate intensity recovery 50%
Cool down

Work relief ratio
2:1

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13
Q

Impacts of H. I. I. T

A

CV affected during recovery
Increase metabolic rate
Increase glucose metabolism
Short duration

However:
Loss of technique
Equipment, safety
Motivation is key

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14
Q

Cardiovascular adaptions to aerobic training

A

Increase in heart strength - myocardial hypertrophic -> SV goes up -> decreased resting heart rate -> increased exercising HR range

Increased maximal Cardiac Output (Q)
Means u can work higher intensity for longer without fatigue

More blood plasma

More RBC (haematocrit) -> O2 carrying capacity

Better Removal of waste

Capacity for transporting fats

Increase strength of smooth muscle in blood vessels -> VR more efficient

Cappilerisation

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15
Q

What is myocardial hypertrophy?

A

An increase in muscle size of the heart

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16
Q

Respiratory adaptions to aerobic training

A

Increase in Strength of respiratory muscles -> greater lung capacity

More tidal volume -> less breathing frequency at rest —> which means increased breathing frequency range for exercise

Increased rate of diffusion

Capillarisation

More oxygen delays fatigue lactic acid higher aerobic threshold

17
Q

Muscular adaptions to aerobic training

A

Increased size of mitochondria
Increased density of mitochondria

Increase in myoglobin stores (substance in muscles stores, transports oxygen)

Increase in glycogen stores -> more aerobic capacity

Increased fat stores

Increased proportion of slow oxidative fibres

18
Q

Metabolic adaptions to aerobic training

A

Increase in enzyme activity

Increase in buffering capacity -> less likely OBLA

Reduced fat mass

Less insulin resistance

Increased capacity to use fats at higher intensities (oxidise fats)

19
Q

Neural adaptions to aerobic training?

A

Increased speed of recruitment