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Chapter 4 – Fitness Components and Exercise Principles Fitness through Aerobics – 6th Edition OVERVIEW – CHAPTER 4 5 Health-Related Components Cardiorespiratory Endurance Body Composition Flexibility Muscular Endurance Muscular Strength 6 Skill-Related Components SUMMARY ACSM Fitness Recommendations Frequency Intensity Type Time Principle of Overload Fitness Target Zone Threshold of Training Principle of Progression Principle of Individuality Principle of Specificity Principle of Reversibility Principle of Overuse 5 COMPONENTS OF FITNESS CARDIORESPIRATORY ENDURANCE (also referred as aerobic power or aerobic fitness) - ability of the circulatory and respiratory systems to deliver fuel to the muscles during exercise - capacity of the heart, blood vessels & lungs to deliver O2 & nutrients to working muscles/tissues during exercise & removal of metabolic waste products BODY COMPOSITION - relative amounts of lean body mass (LBM) and fat body mass in your body - increasing muscle mass can increase metabolic rate Æ burn more calories at rest LBM = includes bones, muscles, nervous tissue, skin, blood and organs Fat (adipose tissue) = subcutaneous fat (fat stored between muscles and skin) and intramuscular fat (fat stored within muscles) Essential Body Fat 3-5% men 8-12% women FLEXIBILITY - ability to move a joint or a combination of joints through a full range of motion (ROM) - ROM can be limited by muscles, tendons, ligaments and bony structures - stretching during warm-up and cool-down helps maintain and improve ROM MUSCULAR ENDURANCE - ability of a muscle, or group of muscles, to apply submaximal force repeatedly or to sustain a muscular contraction for a period of time - developed by performing a high number of repetitions (8-25) with light to medium resistance Isotonic/Dynamic Contraction - muscle fibers contract and shorten - most muscle-toning exercises utilize dynamic contractions Static or Isometric Contraction - muscle fibers contract but don’t shorten - (Isometric) strengthens a muscle in a particular position MUSCULAR STRENGTH - ability of a muscle, or a group of muscles, to exert maximal force against a resistance - 1 RM (repetition maximum) = number of pounds you can lift one time “max muscular strength” - developed by performing few number of repetitions (3-8) with relatively heavy resistance - improved by lifting relatively heavy weights a small number of repetitions - a well-designed weight training program is the best way to further increase your strength PHED 129a/131 Spring 2005 Chapter 4 Page 1 of 2 6 SKILL-RELATED COMPONENTS OF FITNESS coordination* agility* reaction time power balance* speed *may be improved by aerobic exercise AMERICAN COLLEGE OF SPORTS MEDICINE (ACSM) – FITNESS RECOMMENDATIONS (FITT) Frequency 3-5 days/week weight loss Æ 3-7 days/week (moderate intensity with longer duration and less impact) Intensity 60-90% of Maximum Heart Rate (MHR) Time 20-60 minutes of continuous aerobic exercise Type = Mode walking, running, rowing, cycling, aerobics, etc… PRINCIPLES OF EXERCISE PRINCIPLE OF OVERLOAD - adaptation to a stress as a result of repeated exposure to greater than normal stress Fitness Target Zone -optimal range of exercise for health-related physical fitness = FITT THRESHOLD OF TRAINING - minimum level of exercise performed prior to fitness improvements - doing less than “normal”/threshold will result in deconditioning PRINCIPLE OF PROGRESSION - gradual increase in overload/FITT over a period of time will improve physical fitness PRINCIPLE OF INDIVIDUALITY - no two individuals react exactly the same way to exercise (everyone’s level is unique) - fitness tests provide (norms, averages & percentiles) as guidelines but they should not be considered “gold” standards PRINCIPLE OF SPECIFICITY - specific demands on the body results in a specific adaptation PRINCIPLE OF REVERSIBILITY = USE/DISUSE PRINCIPLE - use it or lose it - within two weeks from the time you stop exercising, your body begins to adapt to the lack of inactivity PRINCIPLE OF OVERUSE - violating the principle of overload; overdoing it - may result in injuries (chronic- shinsplints, tendonitis, etc..) signs of overtraining - chronic injuries - elevated resting heart rate PHED 129a/131 Spring 2005 Chapter 4 Page 2 of 2