endurance training unit 3 Flashcards
what are the general goals?
losing weight and enhancing cardiovascular fitness
what are the 4 types of specificity in the training?
central vs. peripheral, oxygen requirements between modes, muscle activation and biomechanical, and metabolic specificity.
what is central vs peripheral adaptation specificity?
central= cardiac output. peripheral=skeletal muscle, av O2 difference
what is oxygen requirement specificity?
depends on the mode. and example is the VO2 max on a treadmill versus a cycle
what is an example of muscle activation between exercise modes specificity?
it depends on the mode, if we want to run a marathon we do not want to spend all of our time riding a bike. we need to train the muscles we are going to use during the event
what is an example of metabolic specificity?
this is intensity, if we want to run a marathon this is a low intensity sport compared to someone who needs to train for a 100 m dash.
what is the 3 criteria in order for something to be “aerobic”
repetitive in nature= one foot in front of the other over and over, prolonged in duration= sustained in nature not just 2 minutes, and involves large muscle mass. if it is a small muscle mass you probably cant sustain.
what is an example of a sport that is considered aerobic?
cross country counts, usually we dont say that hockey is aerobic.
what are things that we base what type of exercises we would prescribe for a general goal such as CV fitness?
availability of equipment, environmental concerns (outside?), physical ability (disease? weakness?), fitness level (if low maybe low intensity), other limitations (hard at seeing? bad coordination?), familiarity with mode (have they exercised/done this before?), personal preference (if they hate it they are not going to do it), variety (so the program not boring), specific goal (weight loss? need to do something with high caloric expenditure)
how to we choose exercise mode/selection for a person with specific goals such as training for an event?
the main mode is based on specificity, secondary modes based on: enhancement of aerobic or anaerobic power, injury prevention or management (if knee injury use cycle ergometer), muscular strength or endurance, active recovery (when the season ends light activity)
what is PAD and what could we do to have them exercise?
peripheral artery disease, this causes pain in the calves when walking, claudication is a risk so we could do arm ergometer.
what are 4 things that intensity is linked with?
cardiovascular enhancement, durtion of exercise (longer=usually lower intensity), bioenergenics ( if really high intensity burning carbs, if really low like sitting burning fat), perception of difficulty (need to be able to tolerate)
how to we prescribe, monitor, and record intensity?
subjective perception (RPE 6-20 they tell us how it feels), heart rate (very objective easy to use), oxygen consumption (need metabolic cart, but can use HR to correlate after completed once), estimated METS (3.5 ml per met so 10 mets is 35 ml, high variability), and other quantifiable values such as fastest race time in past 3 months.
how do we use HR to measure intensity?
we often set a target heart rate, sometimes we need to know HR max sometimes we dont, can estimate based on a set percent of estimated max.
what are 2 ways we can determine HR max?
we can exercise them until they get there or we can estimate. often we dont exercise them that much because it can be dangerous. the most common estimate is 220-age (+ or - 10-15 beats, this is very high standard error of the estimate). thus we should use the one with the smallest error: 205.8- (0.685 * age) + or - 5-8 beats.
what is the best method for determining the percentage of HR max we should work at?
the percent of HR reserve. we need to know HR max and resting HR.
HRR= ([HRmax - RHR] *intensity)+ RHR. this is sometimes also called the rate reserve method.
why is the percentage of HR max flawed in determining what intensity we should exercise at?
because it uses our max heart rate and does not include resting. this is bad because our “target HR” could actually be lower than our resting HR. for example say max is 200 and want to exercise at 30% and their RHR is 70. this would tell us 200*.3=60 bpm which is 10 less than our resting