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Muscular Strength and Endurance

Muscular Strength and Endurance. Chapter 8. Test your knowledge. For women, weight training typically results in which of the following? Bulky muscles Significant increases in body weight Improved body image

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Muscular Strength and Endurance

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  1. Muscular Strength and Endurance Chapter 8

  2. Test your knowledge • For women, weight training typically results in which of the following? • Bulky muscles • Significant increases in body weight • Improved body image • C. Because the vast majority of women have low levels of testosterone, they do not develop large muscles or gain significant amounts of weight in response to a moderate weight training program. Men have higher levels of testosterone, so they can build large muscles more easily.

  3. Test your knowledge • To maximize strength gains, it is a good idea to hold your breath as you lift a weight. True or False? • FALSE. Holding one’s breath while lifting weights, called the Valsava maneuver, can significantly (and possibly dangerously) elevate blood pressure; it also reduces blood flow to the heart and may cause faintness. You should breathe smoothly and normally while weight training. Some experts recommend that you exhale during the most difficult part of each exercise.

  4. Test your knowledge • Regular strength training is associated with which of the following benefits? • Denser bones • Reduced risk of heart disease • Improved body composition • Fewer injuries • ALL FOUR. Regular strength training has many benefits for lifetime wellness for both men and woman.

  5. Muscular strength and endurance • Muscular strength amount of force a muscle can produce with a single maximum effort. • Muscular endurance  ability to resist fatigue while holding or repeating a muscular contraction. • 40% of your body mass is muscle • You depend on them for movement • Site of large portion of energy reactions (metabolism) • Strong, well developed muscles help you perform daily activities with greater ease, protect you from injury and enhance your well being.

  6. Muscle physiology • Myofibril  protein structure • Muscle fibers (cells) • Fascicles  bundle of fibers • Connective tissue • Muscle  bundle of fascicles • Tendons  join muscles to bone • Nerves  transmit impulses to the brain

  7. Types of muscle fibers • Slow – twitch fibers • Contract slowly • Depend on aerobic (oxidative) energy system • Fatigue resistant • Fast – twitch fibers • Contract rapidly and forcefully • Fatigue more quickly • Depend more on anaerobic (nonoxidative ) energy system. • Most muscles contain a mixture of slow-twitch and fast-twitch fibers.

  8. The type of fiber that acts during a particular activity depends on the type of work required. • Endurance activities slow-twitch fibers • Strength and power activities  fast-twitch fibers

  9. Motor units • Made up of a nerve connected to a number of muscle fibers • The number of muscle fibers in a motor unit varies from two to hundreds depending on the amount of strength required. • Small motor units contain slow-twitch fibers • Large motor units contain fast-twitch fibers • Strength training improves the body’s ability to recruit motor units (muscle learning)

  10. Benefits of muscular strength and endurance • Improved performance of physical activities • A person with improved muscular strength and endurance can perform everyday tasks with ease. • Allows you to achieve high levels of performance in sports. • Improves oxygen consumption

  11. Benefits of muscular strength and endurance • Injury prevention • Enables you to maintain good posture • Encourages proper body mechanisms during everyday activities such as walking and lifting • Proper alignment • Makes tendons, ligaments and cartilage cells stronger and less susceptible to injury.

  12. Benefits of muscular strength and endurance • Improved body composition • Strength training improves body composition by increasing muscle mass • Helps with losing fat because metabolic rate is related to muscle mass. • Increases muscle temperature, which in turn slightly increases the rate at which you burn calories.

  13. Benefits of muscular strength and endurance • Enhanced self-image and quality of life • Provides stronger, firmer-looking muscles and a toned, healthy-looking body • In men, larger muscles combine with high levels of the hormone testosterone for a strong tissue building effect. • Improves quality of life by increasing energy, preventing injuries, and making daily activities easier and more enjoyable.

  14. Benefits of muscular strength and endurance • Improved muscle and bone health with aging • Good muscular strength helps people live healthier lives • Prevents sarcopenia loss of muscle mass • Maintains motor nerve connections and the quickness of muscles. • Lessens bone loss even if its taken up later in life.

  15. Benefits of muscular strength and endurance • Prevention of chronic disease • Prevents and manages both CVD and diabetes by • Improving glucose metabolism • Increasing maximal oxygen consumption • Reducing blood pressure • Increasing HDL cholesterol and reducing LDL cholesterol.

  16. Assessing muscular strength and endurance • Muscular strength • Muscular strength is assessed by measuring the maximum amount of weight a person can lift one time. • This single maximum effort is called repetition maximum (RM) • It can also be estimated by doing multiple repetitions with a sub-maximal (lighter) weight. • Muscular endurance • Assessed by counting the maximum number of repetitions of a muscular contraction a person can do (push-ups) or the maximum amount of time a person can hold a muscular contraction (flexed-arm hang)

  17. Creating a successful strength training program • When muscles are stressed by a greater load than they are used to, they adapt and improve their function. • The type of adaptation depends on the stress applied • Strengthening exercises are classified as: • Static exercise • Dynamic exercise

  18. Static exercise (isometric) • Involves muscle contraction without a change in the length of the muscle or the angle in the joint on which the muscle acts • Useful in strengthening muscles after an injury or surgery • Used to overcome weak points in an individual’s range of motion. • Recommended to hold an isometric contraction maximally for 6 seconds (5 – 10 repetitions)

  19. Dynamic exercise (isotonic) • Involves muscle contraction with a change in the length of the muscle • Important for developing strength that can be transferred to other forms of physical activity • Two types • Concentric muscle contraction: occurs when the muscle applies enough force to overcome resistance and shortens as it contracts. • Eccentric muscle contraction: occurs when the resistance is greater than the force applied by the muscle and the muscle lengthens as it contracts.

  20. Dynamic exercise techniques • Constant resistance exercise • Uses a constant load throughout a joint’s entire range of motion • There are points in a joint’s range of motion where the muscle controlling the movement is stronger and points where it is weaker. • Variable resistance exercise • The load is changed to provide maximum load throughout the entire range of motion. • Uses machines that place more stress on muscles at the end of the range of motion. (Nautilus pull-over machine)

  21. Dynamic exercise techniques • Eccentric (plyometric) loading • Involves placing a load on a muscle as it lengthens. • The muscle contracts eccentrically in order to control the weight. • Plyometrics • A sudden eccentric loading and stretching of muscles followed by a forceful concentric contraction

  22. Dynamic exercise techniques • Speed loading • Involves moving a weight as rapidly as possible in an attempt to approach the speeds used in movements like throwing a softball or sprinting • Isokinetic • Involves exerting force at a constant speed against an equal force exerted by a special strength training machine.

  23. Static vs. Dynamic Exercise Static Dynamic • Requires no equipment • Build strength rapidly • Useful for rehabilitation injured joints • Have to be performed at several different angles for each joint to improve strength throughout the joint’s entire range of motion • Can be performed without equipment or with equipment • Excellent for building strength and endurance • Tend to build strength through a joint’s full range of motion

  24. Weight machines vs. free weights

  25. Other training methods and types of equipment • Resistance bands • Elastic strips or tubes of rubber material that are inexpensive, lightweight and portable • Exercise Balls • Extra large inflatable balls • Can be used to work the entire body • Particularly effective working the so-called stability muscles in the abdomen, chest and back muscles.

  26. Pilates • Involves the use of specially designed resistance training devices, although some classes feature just mat or floor work. • Focuses on strengthening and stretching the core muscles in the back, abdomen, and buttocks to create a solid base support for whole body movement • Gives emphasis to concentration, control, movement flow and breathing.

  27. No-equipment calisthenics • Uses your own body weight as resistance for strength training • Include exercises such as curl ups, push ups, step ups, heel raises, chair dips, and lunges.

  28. Applying the FITT principle • Frequency of exercise: • At least two days per week for weight training • 1 day of rest between workouts • Split routine: work out upper body one day and lower body the other. • Intensity of exercise: • Choose weights based on your current level of muscular fitness and your fitness goals. • Exercise should be heavy enough to fatigue your muscles but light enough for you to complete the repetitions. • A program should include both higher intensity exercises and lower intensity exercises to develop fast-twitch and slow-twitch muscle fibers.

  29. Time of exercise: repetitions and sets • To improve fitness you must do enough repetitions of each exercise to fatigue your muscles • The heavier the weight, the fewer repetitions. • Set refers to a group of repetitions of an exercise followed by a rest period. • Doing more than one set of each exercise increases strength development. • Rest intervals depend on the amount of resistance (1-3 min) • You can save time in your workouts alternating sets of different exercises.

  30. Type or mode of exercise: • For overall fitness include exercises for your neck, upper back, shoulders, arms, chest, abdomen, lower back, thighs, buttocks and calves about 8 – 10 exercises in all. • It is important to balance between agonist and antagonist muscle groups • Do exercises for large muscle groups or for more than one joint before you do exercises that use small-muscle groups or single joints.

  31. Warm up and cool down • Warm up before every weight training session and cool down afterward

  32. Getting started and making progress • Learn the exercises first • Choose a weight that you can move easily through 8 – 12 repetitions • 1 set for each exercise • Rest 1 – 2 min between exercises • Gradually add weight and sets to your program over the first few weeks. • Apply the two for two rule: When you can perform two additional repetitions with a given weight on two consecutive training sessions increase the load. • Maintain your gains by training 2-3 days per week. Monitor your progress.

  33. Weight training safety • Use a proper lifting technique • Use spotters and collars with free weights

  34. Weight training safety • Be alert for injuries • Be cautious about the use of supplements and drugs • Most of these substances are ineffective, expensive and may be dangerous • A balanced diet should be your primary nutritional strategy.

  35. LAB Lab 8.1 Lab 8.2 • Repetition maximum RM • Functional leg strength tests • Curl – up test • Push – up test • Squat endurance test

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