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Fitness

Fitness. Fitness. physical activity or exercise body movement muscle contraction energy expenditure promotes health reduces risk of some diseases. Fitness Benefits. health of the entire body restful sleep nutritional health optimal body composition optimum bone density

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Fitness

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  1. Fitness

  2. Fitness • physical activity or exercise • body movement • muscle contraction • energy expenditure • promotes health • reduces risk of some diseases

  3. Fitness Benefits • health of the entire body • restful sleep • nutritional health • optimal body composition • optimum bone density • resistance to infectious diseases • low risk of some cancers • strong circulation and lung function

  4. cardiovascular disease and type 2 diabetes • anxiety and depression • self image • quality of life as you age

  5. Physical Activity? • minimum of 30 minutes/day for health rewards • can be accumulated • 60 minutes/day • maintain healthy body weight

  6. Physical Activity Pyramid

  7. Guidelines to improve cardio respiratory, body composition, strength, flexibility

  8. Developing Fitness • flexibility • muscle strength • muscle endurance • cardiorespiratory endurance

  9. Overload Principle • to improve, the body must be worked at frequencies, durations or intensities that gradually increase demands

  10. Response to Physical Activity • hypertrophy • gain in size and strength of muscle • atrophy • diminishing in size and strength

  11. Body’s Response • do a variety of physical activities • weight training • cardio • different muscles on different days • allow for rest, repair of damage and replenishment of nutrient • use caution before starting

  12. Weight Training • builds lean mass • maintains muscle strength and endurance • maintenance of bone bass • enhances performance in sports • muscle strength • high weight and low repetitions • muscle endurance • less weight and high repetitions

  13. Cardiorespiratory Endurance • time active at an elevated heart rate • enhances oxygen delivery to and removal of waste from cells • aerobic: in the presence of oxygen • more oxygen benefits mind & body • improving endurance • 20 minutes or longer • using large muscle groups

  14. benefits of cardiorespiratory conditioning • increased cardiac output • increased oxygen delivery • lower resting pulse • increased breathing efficiency • better circulation • reduced blood pressure

  15. Muscles that use oxygen efficiently burn fat longer. Muscles that use oxygen efficiently are fit muscles.

  16. Balanced Fitness Program • choose activities you enjoy and can do • utilize aerobic, stretching, weight training

  17. Energy Systems • ATP • present in small amounts in all body tissue • can deliver instantly • CP • creatine phosphate • stored in muscles • used to replenish AT • enough for 10 seconds

  18. Energy Nutrients Activity: CP ATP + creatine Rest: ATP + creatine CP • generate ATP from carbs, fat, protein • used for prolonged demands • always a mixture • at rest • ½ energy from fatty acids, rest from glucose and some amino acids • how much depends on diet

  19. power surges • anaerobic activities • glucose is chief energy source • endurance activities • fat is chief energy source • aerobic activities

  20. Glucose and Physical Activity • stored in liver and muscles as glycogen • about 2000 kcal of energy • muscles fatigue as glycogen is depleted • glycogen storage • high carb diet enhances endurance

  21. Intensity and Glucose • determines how long glycogen will last • moderate uses both glucose and fatty acids • intense quickly uses glycogen • lactic acid • product of anaerobic glycolysis • accumulates with intense activates • burning pain and fatigue

  22. Duration and Glucose • 1st 20 minutes = glycogen • liver and muscle • after 20 minutes fuel source is more fat and some glycogen

  23. Glucose Depletion • generally in a couple hours of strenuous activity • replenish • high carb diet (70% of energy intake) • take glucose (sport drink) • high carb food after activity • carb loading • train muscles

  24. glucose during activity • muscles can get glucose from food/beverages consumed • glucose after activity • enlarges glycogen storage • within 15 minutes=storage increase by 300% • training and glucose • depletion leads to more storage

  25. Fat and Activity • dietary fat instead of carb • poor performance • greater fatigue • perceive activity to be more strenuous • body fat • 70,000 kcal of energy • liberated as fatty acids into blood • muscles does not own fat

  26. Duration, Intensity, Training • after 20 minutes fat stores is major fuel • intensity • greater intensity uses less fat • fat needs oxygen to be broken down Yeah, 20 minutes, now I can burn fat

  27. training • repeated aerobic activity • relies more heavily of fat for fuel • heart and lungs benefit • slow glucose release from liver which increases fat use

  28. Protein and Activity • not a major fuel • is needed for building muscle and lean tissue • synthesis of protein suppressed during activity • accelerates following activity • enhanced by eating carbs and protein

  29. body adaptation • remodels: tears down and builds new • prepares for next period of activity • protein as a fuel • about 10%

  30. Protein Use • diet • carbs spare proteins from being broken down for energy (glucose) • low carb = breakdown of proteins • high fat = breakdown of proteins • intensity/duration • endurance might deplete glycogen, turning to protein • anaerobic needs more protein to build muscle

  31. greater level of training uses less protein • meet energy needs with enough carbs but don’t ignore the protein needs

  32. Vitamins & Minerals in Activity • aid in release of energy from fuels • aid in the transportation of oxygen • well-nourished people get enough from nutrients

  33. exceptions • vitamin E in extreme environments • excess free radicals may be produced, vitamin E is an antioxidant • iron • female athletes

  34. Fluids & Electrolytes in Activity • need for water is imperative • loss through sweat and breathing • working muscles • heat production 15-20% greater than rest • 1 L of sweat releases 600 kcal of heat keeping body temp from rising 100C • sweat evaporation cools the body

  35. hyperthermia ; over heating • hypothermia: low body temperature • fluid replacement • hydrate before, during and after activity • cool water is best • rapidly leaves the digestive tract • cools the body from inside out • endurance athletes • carbohydrate beverages are beneficial

  36. electrolyte replacement • training improves electrolyte retention • replacement with sports drink in events lasting over 1 hour • hyponatremia • decreased sodium concentration in blood • long competitions • overhydration

  37. carbonation: poor choice • bubbles cause a full feeling • alcohol • diuretic • alters perception • generates heat

  38. Diets for Active People WATER CARBS PROTEINS NUTRIENT DENSITY

  39. Pregame Meal • lots of fluids • light and easily digested • 300-800 kcal • primarily carbs • familiar • tolerated • 3-4 hours before competition

  40. Postgame Meal • high carbs increase glycogen storage • carb-contaniing beverages are a good choice if not hungry

  41. Glucose Use • diet affects glycogen storage and use

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