Lecture 15 - Exercise: Muscle Bone And Systemic Changes Flashcards

1
Q

Muscle fatigue

A
  • reversible weakness associated with intense actibity

- eg: run up a mountain

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2
Q

Muscle damage

A
  • mild self repairing condition
  • muscular dystrophy is characerised by greatly increased stretch induced damage
  • eg: run down a mountain
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3
Q

Delayed onset msucle soreness

A
  • a form of muscle damage
  • reduced force, takes days to recover
  • loss of muscle enzymes in the blood
  • overstretched sarcomeres
  • mainly occurs in contractions involving stretching
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4
Q

When are sarcomere unstable

A
  • on the descending aspect of the tension length curve
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5
Q

Satellite cell activation and regeneration

A
  • SM contain satellite cells which can divide, form new muscle cells and fuseto form a replacement multinucleate muscle fiber
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6
Q

Exercise induced hypertrophy : How

A
  • may involve exercise-induced muscle damage
  • involves increased protein synthesis, reduced protein breakdown
  • myofibrils thicken
  • increased number of sarcomeres
  • synthesis of more muscle proteins
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7
Q

Exercise and formation of bone

A
  • exercise promotes laying down of new bone more distally
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8
Q

Cardiovascular response: why does HR increase

A
  • withdrawal of PNS activity

- increased SNS activity

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9
Q

Systemic changes in exercise

A
  • systemic wide vasoconstriction but local vasodilation
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10
Q

Muscle mass and VO2

A
  • there is a linear relationship between the total amount of power produced and the amount of oxygen required for taht production of power in one muscle
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11
Q

Substrates and ATP generation changes over time

A
  • non oxidative pathway initially and then the glycolysis pathway kicks in
  • after 6 hours of exercise, there is a major shift away from glucose oxidation to FA oxidation over time
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12
Q

Substrates and ATP generation changes with intensity

A
  • the amount of energy required to support more activity
  • optimal fat burning range is around 65%
  • if you work harder, more utilisation of muscle glycogen
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13
Q

Duchenne muscular dystrophy

A
  • 1 in 3500 male birth
  • muscle nromal at birth and then increasing muscle weakness with age
  • mild intellectual impairment
  • cardiac involvement
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14
Q

Why does absence of dystrophin cause muscle damage

A
  • dystrophin is a cytoskeletal protein which connects the contractile proteins to a group of proteins in the cell membrane
  • dystrophic muscle is more susceptible to stretch induced muscle damage
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15
Q

Exercise as a therapeutic modality

A
  • increased energy expenditure decreases lipid content thereby reducing the processes that inhibits insulin signalling
  • increased utilisation of glucose leads to upregulation of processes involved in glucose metabolism
  • also net improvement in insulin sensitivity
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16
Q

Cardiac output is worload dependent

A

Predominanlty due to increased HR and to a lesser extent to SV