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Copyright 1998 by Allyn & Bacon Chapter 4 Principles of Exercise.

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Presentation on theme: "Copyright 1998 by Allyn & Bacon Chapter 4 Principles of Exercise."— Presentation transcript:

1 Copyright 1998 by Allyn & Bacon Chapter 4 Principles of Exercise

2 Copyright 1998 by Allyn & Bacon Ideal Exercise Program  Cardiorespiratory function  Most important health-related fitness component  Foundation  Requires 20-30 minutes of continuous, uninterrupted exercise  An aerobic exercise  Examples of aerobic exercise  Walking (4 mph or faster), jogging, running, cycling, lap swimming, aerobic dancing, and conditioning classes  Sports Approach  Racquetball squash (singles)  Tennis or handball (singles)  Soccer or Rugby  Lacrosse  Full Court Basketball

3 Ideal Exercise Program  Muscular Strength  Strength Training –Increase size and strength of muscle –Increases lean muscle mass and resting metabolic rate –Decreases BF% and Maintain BW –2 – 3 times a week can have positive effect  Strength Training in elderly –Increases quality of life and ability to perform ADLs –Muscular strength and endurance –Bone mass –Stair climbing and walking ability –Decreases risk of falling and fractures

4 Circuit Training  Interval Training in which strength exercises is combined with endurance/aerobic activity  Benefits –Can be specific –No need for expensive gym equipment –Whole body workout

5 Ideal Exercise Program  Muscular Endurance  Ability to exercise for long periods of time –Needed in sports requiring all out efforts –ADLs  Increase in flexibility –Decreases in both home and exercise injuries –Perform various activities more efficiently and effectively

6 Ideal Exercise Program  Body Composition  Aerobic exercise burns more calories and “tone” body  20 – 60 minutes or more is all that is needed  Key to fat loss through exercise is volume, not intensity – Longer = more K burned = shrinking of fat cells  Reduce caloric intake  Flexibility, Strength, and Endurance Training – Increase muscle mass – Decrease skin sagging

7 Copyright 1998 by Allyn & Bacon Fitness Concepts  Begin with a preconditioning program  Minimum 6 -8 weeks to improve aerobic fitness  Moving too quickly from one fitness level to the next stages may cause: –Muscle soreness or Delayed Onset of Muscle Soreness (DOMS) –Increased risk of soft tissue injury –Cause you to quit long before results are noticeable  First 2 – 3 weeks (preconditioning period) –Expect DOMS but shouldn’t be severe

8 Principles of Exercise  PRE Principle:  Progressive Resistance Exercise  Overload Principle:  Overload the body to increase performance  FITT Principle:  Frequency, Intensity, Time, Type  Cardio, Resistance Training, Flexibility  RPE Scale  Karvonen Method

9 Definitions  Resting Heart Rate (RHR)  Reflects heart rate (bpm) in the morning, at rest, averaged over 3 days  Maximal Heart Rate (HR max )  Heart rate in bpm at all out effort commonly estimated by 220 – age  Training or Target Heart Rate (THR)  Reflects training intensity in beats per minute (bpm)  If asked for the THR Range both the low and high training intensities in bpm will be expected.  Heart Rate Reserve (HRR)  Difference between maximum and resting heart rate  Recovery Heart Rate  The rate at which the heart recovers from exercise

10 Fitness Concepts  Progressive Resistance Principle  Gradual increase the amount of resistance to be overcome or the number of repetitions in each workout –Increase overload of muscular, circulatory and respiratory  Body will repair itself and increases in all these areas will be seen  Examine what happens to your body when you first begin an exercise program

11 PRE Principle and Cardiorespiratory  Regular exercise places stress on the heart and will increase stroke volume  A trained heart with improved cardiac output will:  Pump more blood per 1 min.  Heart beat (pulse) to slow down –Fewer beats per minute –Increased time of rest for heart between beats  Arteries will also enlarge as the heart muscle adapts to the stress of exercise

12 PRE Guidelines  Keep exercise strenuous to cause an initial decrease in fitness level  Allow for sufficient time for recovery  48 hours for strength training  18 – 24 hours for aerobic and other workouts  Failure to follow this will lead to overuse injuries and decrease in benefits from workout  Conduct next workout within 24 – 48 hours; more time will cause a decline in your conditioning level

13 Overload Principle  Used in PRE principle  Overload the muscles and cardiovascular systems to achieve improvement in fitness  Overload above the body’s natural ability to perform a certain exercise –Changed frequently to avoid plateau  Proper rest (18-48 hours) between exercise is needed for desired results

14 F.I.T. Principle  Frequency  How often?  Intensity  How hard? (Max HR or HRR)  Time  How long?  Type  What type of activity are they doing?

15 Cardiorespiratory FIT  F:  3 – 5 days per week  I:  64/70 – 94% of max heart rate (HR max )  40/50 – 85% of heart rate reserve  T:  20-60 minutes aerobic activity  T:  The “best” aerobic activity that serves the needs of the individual  Involve large muscles  Encourage compliance without undue risk of injury

16 Cardiorespiratory Progression  Initial Conditioning Phase:  F: 3x week  I: 64-70% max HR (40-50% HRR)  T: 20-30 minutes continuous or 10 min. bouts –deconditioned or post-op  Period: 4 – 6 (plus) weeks

17 Cardiorespiratory Progression  Improvement Conditioning Phase:  F: 3 – 5 x / week  I: 77-94% max HR (60-85% HRR)  T: 20 - 60 minutes  Period: small increases every 2 – 3 weeks for 4 – 5 months

18 Cardiorespiratory Progression  Maintenance Conditioning Phase  6 months or until goals are met  Review Phase  Review program  Reassess goals

19 RPE  Rate of Perceived Exertion  Based on a scale 6 – 20 –Roughly based on RHR to MHR, i.e. 60 - 200  Revised scale 1 – 10  To Help clients more accurately estimate their aerobic exercise intensity

20 RPE Scale  7 – Very Very Light  9 – Very Light  11 – Fairly Light  13 – Somewhat Light  15 – Hard  17 – Very Hard  19 – Very Very Hard  20 – Maximal effort

21 Karvonen Method  Uses Percentage of HRR rather than percentage of estimated Maximal Heart Rate  Formula  (220 – age – RHR) x %HRR + RHR = THR

22 Example  An aerobically unfit 20 year old client with a RHR of 75, with an intensity of 40% HRR: –220 – age (20) = 200 HR max –200 HR max – 75 RHR = 125 HRR –125 HRR x.40 (40% HRR) = 50 –50 + 75 RHR = 125 bpm

23 Copyright 1998 by Allyn & Bacon Fitness Concepts  Apply the principle of specificity  Alternate light & heavy workouts  Warm up properly before each workout  Formal  Informal  Passive  Overload  Cool down properly after workout

24 Copyright 1998 by Allyn & Bacon Fitness Concepts  Dress appropriately  Take special precautions when exercising outdoors  Choose soft surfaces whenever possible

25 Copyright 1998 by Allyn & Bacon Fitness Concepts  Use cross training in the aerobic component of your program  Use a maintenance approach after reaching your desired level of fitness  Monitor your progress carefully

26 Copyright 1998 by Allyn & Bacon Making the Right Exercise Choices  Choosing an aerobic program  Choosing a muscular strength program  Choosing a muscular endurance program  Selecting an appropriate flexibility training program


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