Chapter 13 : Resistance Training Flashcards
3 Stages of the General Adaptation Syndrome
- Alarm Reaction
- Resistance Developement
- Exhaustion
Alarm Reaction
Initial reaction to stressor such as increased heart rate
Resistance Developement
Increased functional capacity to adapt to stressor such as increasing motor unit recruitment
Exhaustion
A prolonged intolerable stressor produces fatigue and leads to a breakdown in the system or injury
The SAID Principle
States that the body will adapt to the specific demands that are placed on it,
3 types of Specificities
Mechanical
Neuromuscular
Metabolic
Muscular Specificity
Refers to the weight and movements placed on the body
Neuromuscular Specificity
Refers to the speed of contraction and exercise selection.
Metabolic Specificity
Refers to the energy demand placed on the body.
Progressive Adaptations from Resistance Training
Stabilization Muscular Endurance Muscular Hypertrophy Strength Power
Stabilization Resistance Exercises (7)
- Ball Squat, Curl to Press
- Ball Dumbbell Chest Press
- Standing Cable Row
- Single Leg Dumbbell Curl
- Ball Squat
- Single-leg Dumbbell Scaption
- Multiplanar Step-up to Balance
Strength Resistance Exercises (6)
- Squat Curl to Two Arm Press
- Barbell Bench Press
- Seated Cable Row
- Seated Dumbbell Shoulder Press
- Lunge to Two-arm Dumbbell Press
- Barbell Squat
Power Resistance Exercises (6)
- Barbell Clean
- Two Arm Medicine Ball Chest Press
- Two-arm Push Press
- Rotation Chest Pass
- Medicine Ball Pullover Throw
- Squat Jump