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Overview and Basics of Exercise Physiology

Overview and Basics of Exercise Physiology. Dianna Purvis MS, ACSM Department of Military and Emergency Medicine CHAMP. Topics to Cover. Background Skeletal Muscle Fiber Types Energy Systems Physiological Responses to Exercise Maximal Aerobic Capacity and Exercise Testing

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Overview and Basics of Exercise Physiology

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  1. Overview and Basics of Exercise Physiology Dianna Purvis MS, ACSM Department of Military and Emergency Medicine CHAMP

  2. Topics to Cover • Background • Skeletal Muscle Fiber Types • Energy Systems • Physiological Responses to Exercise • Maximal Aerobic Capacity and Exercise Testing • Terms and Concepts Associated with Exercise

  3. As a Nation…We Are Getting Fatter, More Unfit, and at a Younger Age!

  4. Physical Activity Plays a Key Role Disease Prevention

  5. The Dose-Response Relationship for Exercise

  6. Why Is This Important? • The importance of cardiorespiratory fitness (VO2 max) cannot be overemphasized • ↓ cardiorespiratory fitness = ↑ morbidity & mortality all causes • NHANES survey 2001/2002 • that 11-30% of adults surveyed had VO2 max values in ACSM’s poor category…33.6% adoloscents! • Despite importance of high aerobic fitness, public health surveys show a high level of poor aerobic fitness in the US population

  7. How do YOU want YOUR Patients to look and feel?

  8. How Much Exercise? • Daily Aerobic Activity • 10,000 steps per day • 150 – 300 min/week (CDC) • ACSM guidelines • Strength exercises 2-3 times per week • Body weight • Resistance • Stretch daily • Consider yoga for flexibility and stress management

  9. CDC/ACSM • http://www.cdc.gov/physicalactivity/everyone/guidelines/adults.html(CDC) • http://www.acsm.org(ACSM) • http://www.aafp.org/online/en/home/clinical/publichealth/aim/foryouroffice.html(AIM: Exercise Prescription Tools for Clinicians)

  10. The Exercise and Physical Activity Pyramid Adapted with permission of the Metropolitan Life Insurance Company.

  11. Skeletal Muscle

  12. Skeletal Muscle Fiber Types • Slow-Twitch Type I • Fast-Twitch Type IIa Type IIx • Characterized by differences in morphology, histochemistry, enzyme activity, surface characteristics, and functional capacity • Distribution shows adaptive potential in response to neuronal activity, hormones, training/functional demands, and aging

  13. Characteristics of Human Muscle Fiber Types

  14. ATP Is GeneratedThrough 3 Energy Systems • ATP-PCr system • Glycolyticsystem • Oxidative system The process that facilitates muscular contraction is entirely dependent on body’s ability to provide & rapidly replenish ATP

  15. Energy Systems for Exercise

  16. 1. The ATP–PCr System

  17. ATP-PCr Stores Deplete Rapidly

  18. 2. The Glycolytic System • Requires 10-12 enzymatic reactions to break down glycogen to pyruvate or lactic acid, producing ATP • Occurs in the cytoplasm • Glycolysis does not require oxygen (anaerobic) • Without oxygen present, pyruvic acid produced by glycolysis becomes lactic acid • ATP-PCr and glycolysis provide the energy for ~2 min of all-out activity

  19. Conversion of Pyruvic Acid to Lactic Acid

  20. Energy Sources for the Early Minutes of Intense Exercise The combined actions of the ATP-PCrand glycolytic systems allow muscles to generate force in the absence of oxygen; thus these two energy systems are the major energy contributors during the early minutes of high-intensity exercise…

  21. 3. The Oxidative System • The oxidative system uses oxygen to generate energy from metabolic fuels (aerobic) • Oxidative production of ATP occurs in the mitochondria • Can yield much more energy (ATP) than anaerobic systems • The oxidative system is slow to turn on • Primary method of energy production during endurance events

  22. Common Pathways for the Metabolism of Fat, Carbohydrate, and Protein

  23. Anaerobic vs. Aerobic Energy Systems • Anaerobic • ATP-PCr : ≤ 10 – 30 sec • Glycolysis: < 2 – 3 min • Aerobic • Krebs cycle • Electron Transport Chain 2 minutes +

  24. INTERACTION OF ENERGY SYSTEMS Immediate Short-term Long-term

  25. Energy Transfer Systems and Exercise 100% % Capacity of Energy System Anaerobic Glycolysis Aerobic Energy System ATP - CP 10 sec 30 sec 2 min 5+ min Exercise Time

  26. Glycolysis ß-Oxidation Aerobic and Anaerobic ATP Production Pyruvate Limited O2 Lactate Acetyl-CoA ATP Krebs Cycle FADH2 NADH+H+ H2O + ATP

  27. Pulmonary Ventilation • Minute ventilation or VE (L/min) = Tidal volume (L/breathing) X Breathing rate (Breaths/min) • Measure of volume of air passing through pulmonary system:air expired/minute

  28. Stroke Volume (SV) • Amount of blood ejected from heart with each beat (ml/beat)

  29. Cardiac Output (CO) • Amount of blood ejected from heart each min (L/min) • CO = SV X HR • Rest: ~ 5 L/min • Exercise: ~10 to 25 L/min • Stroke Volume x Heart Rate • Fick Equation: VO2= CO X (a - v O2) • Primary Determinant = Heart rate

  30. Heart Rate and VO2max 100 90 80 70 % of Maximal Heart Rate 60 50 40 30 0 20 40 60 80 100 % of VO2max

  31. Maximal Oxygen Consumption (Aerobic Power or VO2 max) • Greatest amount of O2 a person can use during maximal physical exercise • Ability to take in, transport and deliver O2 to skeletal muscle for use by tissue • Expressed as liters (L) /min or ml/kg/min • Single most useful measurement to characterize the functional capacity of the oxygen transport system • Provides a quantitative measure of capacity for aerobic ATP resynthesis

  32. Factors Affecting VO2max Intrinsic • Genetic • Gender • Body Composition • Muscle mass • Age • Pathologies Extrinsic • Training Status • Time of Day • Sleep Deprivation • Dietary Intake • Nutritional Status • Environment

  33. Determinants of VO2max • Muscle Blood Flow • Capillary Density • O2 Diffusion • O2 Extraction • Hb-O2 Affinity • Muscle Fiber Profiles • Cardiac Output • Arterial Pressure • Hemoglobin • Ventilation • O2 Diffusion • Hb-O2 Affinity Peripheral Factors Central Factors

  34. Requirements for VO2max Testing • Minimal Requirements • Work must involve large muscle groups • Rate of work must be measurable and reproducible • Test conditions should be standardized • Test should be tolerated by most people • Desirable Requirements • Motivation not a factor • Skill not required

  35. Common Criteria Used to Document VO2 max • Primary Criteria • < 2.1 ml/kg/min increase with 2.5% grade increase often seen as a plateau in VO2 • Secondary Criteria • Blood lactate ≥ 8 mmol/L • RER ≥ 1.10 • ↑ in HR to 90% of age predicted max +/- 10 bpm • RPE ≥ 17

  36. Aging, Training, and VO2max 70 Athletes Moderately Active 60 Sedentary 50 40 VO2max (ml/kg/min) 30 20 10 0 20 30 40 50 60 70 Age (yr)

  37. Effect of Bed rest on VO2max 0 %Decline in VO2max 1.4 - 0.85 X Days; r = - 0.73 -10 % Decline in VO2max -20 -30 -40 0 10 20 30 40 Days of Bedrest Data from VA Convertino MSSE 1997

  38. VO2max Classification for Men (ml/kg/min) Age (yrs) 20 - 29 30 - 39 40 - 49 50 - 59 60 - 69 Low <25 <23 <20 <18 <16 Fair 25 - 33 23 - 30 20 - 26 18 - 24 16 - 22 Average 34 - 42 31 - 38 27 - 35 25 - 33 23 - 30 Good 43 - 52 39 - 48 36 - 44 34 - 42 31 - 40 High 53+ 49+ 45+ 43+ 41+

  39. VO2max Classification for Women (ml/kg/min) Age (yrs) 20 - 29 30 - 39 40 - 49 50 - 59 60 - 69 Low <24 <20 <17 <15 <13 Fair 24 - 30 20 - 27 17 - 23 15 - 20 13 - 17 Average 31 - 37 28 - 33 24 - 30 21 - 27 18 - 23 Good 38 - 48 34 - 44 31 - 41 28 - 37 24 - 34 High 49+ 45+ 42+ 38+ 35+

  40. Typical Ways to Measure VO2max • Treadmill (walking/running) • Cycle Ergometry • Arm Ergometry • Step Tests

  41. Terms and Concepts Associated with Exercise • Rating of Perceived Exertion • Training Heart Rate • Energy Expenditure • Thresholds and Exercise Domains • O2 Deficit and Excess Post-Exercise O2 Consumption

  42. Approaches to Determining Training Heart Rate • Rating of Perceived Exertion • 60 to 90% of Maximal HR • Max HR = 180 • 60% = 108 and 90% = 162 • 50 to 85% of Heart Rate Reserve • Max HR = 180 and Resting HR = 70 • HRR = 180 - 70 = 110 • 50% = 70 + 65 = 135; 85% = 94 + 70 = 164 • Plot HR vs. O2 Uptake or Exercise Intensity

  43. 6 7 Very, very light 8 9 Very light 10 11 Fairly light Lactate Threshold 12 13 Somewhat hard 14 2.0 mM Lactate 15 H ard 2.5 mM Lactate 16 17 4 .0 mM Lactate Very hard 18 19 Very, very hard Rating of Perceived Exertion: RPE/Borg Scale

  44. Estimating Maximal Heart Rate • OLD FORMULA: 220 – age • NEW FORMULA: 208 - 0.7 X age • New formula may be more accurate for older persons and is independent of gender and habitual physical activity • Estimated maximal heart rate may be 5 to 10% (10 to 20 bpm) > or < actual value.

  45. Energy Expenditure • MET: Energy cost as a multiple of resting metabolic rate • 1 MET = energy cost at rest ~3.5 ml of O2/kg/min • 3 MET = 10.5 ml of O2 /kg/min • 6 MET = 21.0 ml of O2 /kg/min • 1 L/min of O2 is~ 5 kcal/L • VO2 (L/min) ~ 5 kcal/L = kcal/min • 1 MET = 0.0175 kcal/kg/min

  46. Lactate/Lactic Acid • A product of glycolysis formed from reduction of pyruvate in recycling of NAD or when insufficient O2 is available for pyruvate to enter the Krebs Cycle • Extent of lactate formation depends on availability of both pyruvate and NAD • Blood lactate at rest is about 0.8 to 1.5 mM, but during intense exercise can be in excess of 18 mM

  47. Intensity of exercise at which blood lactate concentration is 1 mM above baseline Production exceeds clearance Expressed as a function of VO2max, i.e., 65% of VO2max Can indicate potential for endurance exercise Lactate formation contributes to fatigue Impairs oxidative enzymes Lactate Threshold

  48. 1.0 mM above baseline Lactate Threshold

  49. Pyruvate:Lactate

  50. Blood Lactate as a Function of Training Blood Lactate (mM) 25 50 75 100 Percent of VO2max

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