html5-img
1 / 17

Exercise Physiology

Exercise Physiology. APL2/L3. Exercise: What do you use/how does it happen?. 1. When you exercise or exert yourself, where does the energy come from? 2. Is weight lifting the same as running on a treadmill in terms of energy usage?

nigel-west
Télécharger la présentation

Exercise Physiology

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Exercise Physiology APL2/L3

  2. Exercise: What do you use/how does it happen? • 1. When you exercise or exert yourself, where does the energy come from? • 2. Is weight lifting the same as running on a treadmill in terms of energy usage? • 3. Do you obtain the same results if you weight lift vs do cardio exercise? • 4. Does the amount of time you exercise each session matter in ques #3?

  3. Adenosine Triphosphate Energy storing molecule “usable energy” ATP: Our Body’s “gasoline”

  4. 1.ATP (6 sec): stored in mitochondria. 2. CP: Creatine phosphate (10 sec) A lot of it in muscles and builds ATP back up. (Creatine phosphate + ADP ↔ ATP + creatine) 3. Glycogen: stored glucose in liver and muscles.(anaerobic) Fat: used last. Greatest potential energy source. Three Main Energy Pathways

  5. Cellular Respiration: • Process which releases energy from organic compounds in cells. • 3 reactions make up Cellular Respiration: glycolysis, citric acid cycle (Krebs), electron transport chain • RESULT: CO2, H2O and energy. ½ IS HEAT, ½ IS USED TO MAKE ATP (ENERGY NEEDED BY MUSCLE CELLS)

  6. Glycolysis: • Breaking of glucose: 6-carbon glucose molecule→two 3-carbon pyruvic acid molecules. • High energy electrons are delivered to ETC • 2 molecules ATP produced

  7. Part II of Aerobic Respiration Charged Ions are produced and gotten ready for ETC. 6-8 ATP produced Krebs cycle: aka Citric Acid Cycle

  8. Electron Transport Chain

  9. Put this info next to ETC slide • High energy electron carriers such as NADH and hydrogen (H+) generated from glycolysis and Krebs hold most of the energy (in the form of electrons) from the original glucose molecule. • These electrons are passed along in the mitochondria. • Energy from the “handing off” to oxygen (the last electron carrier) is used to make ATP from ADP and phosphate

  10. ATP • Between ETC and Krebs Cycle: 36-40 molecules of ATP are produced. • A lot of heat is given off

  11. Put these notes next to last slide • If you want to lose fat or increaseendurance: exercise needs to be slower, for longer periods of time. i.e- 30-60min at 60-70% of max heart rate. • If you want to build muscle: muscles must be forcefully exercised to cause hypertrophy (increase in muscle fiber size, not increase in # of fibers or # of muscles)

  12. Hypertrophy of Muscles • Muscles forcefully exercised will enlarge • There is ↑ in muscle fiber size, not number of muscles. • i.e: body builder/weight -lifter, prof. athlete

  13. Atrophy of Muscles • Muscles not used will decrease in size • This is called muscle atrophy • i.e: spinal cord patients: very thin and frail

  14. Muscle fatigue and Oxygen Debt • Normally, we breath enough O2 to support aerobic use of glucose. However… • Strenuous use of muscles result in: anaerobic respiration: glucose is broken into pyruvic acid → lactic acid • Lactic acid: not enough ATP to convert it to glucose at this time. • Results in: O2 debt= muscle cramping/fatigue

  15. Cont. • If not enough oxygen coming in=electrons cannot continue to pass through. • Electrons will be given back to pyruvic acid in a Rx that forms lactic acid. • The debt will be repayed later when there is enough oxygen to make ATP to convert the lactic acid to glucose.

  16. Quick Quiz (2 pts/bullet) • 1. is gasoline for our body? • 2. What are the 3 energy pathways in the cell? • 3. What 3 reactions make up cellular respiration and what do they produce? • 4. When (time-wise) and under what conditions (type of work-out) does anaerobic respiration occur? • 5. How do muscles enlarge? What is increased muscle mass called?

More Related