Exercise Physiology: Dr. Patrick W. SPKFR
Exercise Physiology: Dr. Patrick W. SPKFR
Exercise Physiology: Dr. Patrick W. SPKFR
– Use of ATP as energy to perform muscular activity. Two ways to produce ATP:
– Anaerobic system
– Without oxygen
– High energy expenditure, short time (6-60 seconds)
– Aerobic system
– With oxygen
– Lower rate of energy expenditure, longer period of time (more than 3 minutes)
Types of Exercise
– Anaerobic exercise – WHITE MUSCLE FIBERS:
(sprinting, weight-lifting) - large in diameter
– short duration, great - light in color (low myoglobin)
intensity (fast-twitch - surrounded by few
muscle fibers); creatine capillaries
phosphate + glycogen - relatively few mitochondria
(glucose) from muscle - high glycogen content (they
have a ready supply of
o2
Muscle metabolism
Exercise
intensity
• Low ATP and
creatine phosphate
stimulate glycolysis
creatine and oxidative
ADP, Pi,
phosphate
in skeletal muscle
phosphorylation.
cells
• Exercise can
increase rates of ATP
formation and
Glycolysis Oxidative phosphorylation breakdown more than
tenfold
Creatine phosphate and stored ATP – first few seconds
Glycolysis – after approx. 8-10 seconds
Aerobic respiration – maximum rate after 2-4 min of exercise
– immediately available
and can't generally be
maintained more than 8-
10 s
– ATP stored in the muscle
is sufficient for about 3 s
of maximal effort
– ATP and CP
regeneration needs the
energy from oxygen
source
Lactic anaerobic source
(for "short" intense sports: gymnastic, 200 to 1000 m
running, 100 to 300 m swimming)
Blood
lactic
acid
(mM)
Lactate
threshold;
endurance
Relative work rate (% V02 max) estimation
Training reduces blood lactic acid levels at work
rates between approx. 50% and 100% of VO2max
Sustaining Muscle
contractions: ATP
Sources/Time
Muscle
glycogen
content Exhaustion
(g/kg muscle)
Classification BMI
Male Female
Underweight <18.5 kg/m2
– Static stretching
– Slowly moving into a stretching position and holding for a certain period of time (10-30
seconds; 5 times).
– Contract-relax technique
– Relaxing of the muscle to be stretched by contracting the opposite muscle
(hamstrings/quadriceps)
– Measurement of flexibility-goniometer
Effects of Training
Oxygen
consumption
(liters/min)
(VO2max)
Work rate
(watts)
V02 peak
Oxygen (untrained)
consumption
(liters/min) 100% V02 max
(untrained)
175
Work rate (watts)
Cardiorespiratory
endurance
Arterial blood
pH
– 'emotional
hyperventilation‘
– at any rate, impulses
descending from the
cerebral cortex are
responsible
During the exercise, stimuli from the muscles, joints
and perhaps such sensory receptors as pressure
endings in the feet, contribute to the elevation of
ventilation
– so do chemicals, originating in
the active muscles.
– in dynamic exercise, they are
carried in the blood to the
arterial and medullary
chemoreceptors, and probably
have their main effects there
– in isometric efforts the
ventilatory drive originates in
chemically sensitive nerve
endings
Recovery and ventilation
– Cessation of muscular
effort
– Normal blood K+ and
CO2 oscillations (2-3
min)
– Decreased acidity
(several minutes)
– High temperature
Respiratory Ventilation:
Exercise Induced hyperventilation
HR Cardiac
output
Cardiac
contractility
Maintenance of
Muscle ventricular filling
“pump”
– in isometric (heavy
static) exercise, SBP
may exceed 250 mmHg,
and diastolic (DBP) can
itself reach 180
Homeostatic Balancing of
Exercise: “Controlled
Disruption”
Figure 25-8: Peripheral resistance and arterial blood pressure during exercise
Muscle chemoreflex
Strength
training
Chronic Effects of Dynamic Exercise
(cardiovascular adaptations to dynamic exercise training)
250ml/min
1400ml/min 1100ml/min 750ml/min 500ml/min 1200ml/min
Coronary artery
Rest
Coronary
blood flow
↑ Cardiac output
↑ Coronary flow (fivefold)
↑ Endothelial cell
Coronary artery
shear stress
Nitric oxide Prostacyclin ↑ Endothelial-dependent
vasodilation +
cholinergic fibers
Exercise
stimulation (sympathetic
system)
Nitric oxide
Vasodilator
Prostacyclin capacity
How do
muscle
respond
to exercise?
Response to chronic moderate
exercise
– Increased fatigue resistance is mediated by:
- ↑ muscle capillary density
- ↑ myoglobin content,
- ↑ activity of enzymes (oxidative pathways)
- ↑ oxidative capacity linked to ↑ numbers of mitochondria
Figure 25-9b: The effect of exercise on glucose tolerance and insulin secretion
Health Advantages of Regular
Exercise: Quality of Life