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
2
Q
Muscle damage
A
- mild self repairing condition
- muscular dystrophy is characerised by greatly increased stretch induced damage
- eg: run down a mountain
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
4
Q
When are sarcomere unstable
A
- on the descending aspect of the tension length curve
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
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
7
Q
Exercise and formation of bone
A
- exercise promotes laying down of new bone more distally
8
Q
Cardiovascular response: why does HR increase
A
- withdrawal of PNS activity
- increased SNS activity
9
Q
Systemic changes in exercise
A
- systemic wide vasoconstriction but local vasodilation
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
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
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
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
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
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