1 / 8

Energy Producton during Exercise

Energy Producton during Exercise. 3 Phases 1. Anaerobic Alactic 2. Anaerobic Lactic 3. Aerobic. ATP - Adenosinetriphosphate. ATP is the molecule that muscles use to create energy for movement Anaerobic Alactic Phase 1 Anaerobic Lactic Phase 2 Aerobic Phase 3

tola
Download Presentation

Energy Producton during Exercise

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. Energy Producton during Exercise 3 Phases 1. Anaerobic Alactic 2. Anaerobic Lactic 3. Aerobic

  2. ATP - Adenosinetriphosphate ATP is the molecule that muscles use to create energy for movement Anaerobic Alactic Phase 1 Anaerobic Lactic Phase 2 Aerobic Phase 3 All 3 energy phases work to produce ATP for energy for exercise but do it in different ways and produce different amounts of ATP

  3. Anaerobic Alactic Chemistry PC = PhosphoCreatine ADP = Adenosinediphosphate Both molecules found in muscles in small amounts PC + ADP => ATP + Creatine One ATP molecule produced

  4. Anaerobic Lactic Chemistry • Glucose molecule stored in muscles as glycogen is shown as C6H12O6 • Lactic Acid molecule is shown as 2C3H6O3 C6H12O6 + 2ADP + 2P => 2C3H6O3 + 2ATP 2 ATP molecules formed (twice as much as Phase 1) but with Lactic acid waste

  5. Aerobic Chemistry • Oxygen combines with Glucose to produce ATP without Lactic acid • Carbon Dioxide molecule is shown as CO2. Given off as waste in this process. • C6H12O6+6O2+36ADP+36P => 6CO2+36ATP+6H2O 36 ATP produced with water and carbon dioxide waste. Much more energy than phase 1 or 2

  6. Energy system limitations • Phase 1 is limited to about 10 – 15 seconds as it quickly uses up its store of PC molecules • Phase 2 is limited to about 3 minutes as lactic acid waste acts to inhibit muscle contraction. It takes the oxygen in phase 3 to break down lactic acid and restore muscle ability. • Phase 1 and 2 produce instant energy for explosive/quick movement. • Phase 3 is good for long duration exercise at moderate rates. It uses oxygen to produce ATP molecules from glucose and ADP. While it produces much more energy than phase 1 or 2 it is limited by the amount of oxygen getting to the muscles, if exercise exceeds the VO2 intake, energy must be created by phase 2 leading to lactic acid build up and muscle fatigue.

  7. Energy comparisons • Phase 1 produces 1 ATP molecule • Phase 2 produces 2 ATP molecules • Phase 3 produces 36 ATP molecules Phase 3 aerobic energy produces vastly more energy than the first 2 energy systems. So long as there is enough oxygen and glucose stores one can continue to exercise

  8. Exit Pass for Energy Systems Find a definition for Maximum Volume Oxygen Uptake. Explain how increases or decreases in Max VO2 impacts the body’s ability to produce ATP energy during aerobic exercise. How is Lactic Acid a factor in the NHL when the puck is iced? If you don’t know the icing rule ask around and find out. Why do coaches sometimes use their time outs during this play? Answers should be about one paragraph and well written.

More Related