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Adaptations to Exercise Oxygen Delivery During Exercise • Oxygen demand by muscles during exercise is 15-25x greater than at rest • Increased delivery accomplished by: • Cardiac output • Redistribution of blood flow (inactive organs working skeletal muscle) Cardiac Output During Exercise • Cardiac output increases due to: – Increased HR • Linear increase – Increased SV • Increase, then plateau at ~40% VO2max • No plateau in highly trained people Redistribution of Blood during Exercise • Increased blood flow to working skeletal muscle – At rest 15-20% of cardiac output to muscle – Increases to 80-85% during maximal exercise • Decreased blood flow to less active organs – Liver, kidney, GI tract • Redistribution depends on metabolic rate – Exercise intensity Circulatory Response to Exercise • Changes in heart rate and blood pressure • Depend on: – Type, intensity and duration of exercise – Environmental condition – Emotional influence raise pre-exercise heart rate and blood pressure Transition from Rest to Exercise, Exercise to Recovery • At onset of exercise: – Rapid increase in HR, SV and cardiac output – Plateau in submaximal (below lactate threshold in exercise) • During recovery: – Decrease in HR, SV and cardiac ouput toward resting – Depends on: • Duration & intensity of exercise • Training state of subject Cardiovascular Adaptations to Aerobic Training • ↑ muscular endurance • ↑heart weight, volume, and chamber size – Increased left ventricle wall thickness – Increased left ventricle EDV – Increased blood plasma • ↑ Stroke Volume – from ↑ EDV and ↓ ESV • ↓ resting heart rate • ↓ submaximal heart rate • ↓ maximum heart rate of elite athletes – if your heart rate is too fast the period of ventricular filling is reduced affects SV – expends less energy by contracting less often but more forcibly • ↑cardiac output during maximal exercise • ↑ blood flow to the muscles – increased capillarization of trained muscles – greater opening of existing capillaries in trained muscles – more effective blood redistribution – increased blood volume – decreased blood viscosity & increased oxygen delivery Terminology • Tidal Volume = amount of air inhaled and exhaled with each normal breath (500mL) • Residual Volume = amount of gas remaining in the lung at the end of a maximal exhalation • • • • Slight ↑ in Total lung Capacity Slight ↓ in Residual Lung Volume ↑ Tidal Volume at maximal exercise levels ↑ respiratory rate and pulmonary ventilation at maximal exercise levels • ↑ VO2 Max • ↓ VO2 at rest and submaximal exercise • ↑pulmonary diffusion during maximal exercise. – from ↑ circulation and ↑ ventilation – from more alveoli involved during maximal exercise Cardiorespiratory Adaptations From Resistance Training • • • • Small ↑ in left ventricle size ↓resting heart rate ↓ submaximal heart rate ↓ resting blood pressure is greater than from endurance training • Resistance training has a positive effect on aerobic endurance but aerobic endurance has a negative effect on strength, speed and power – muscular strength is ↓ – reaction and movement times are ↓ – agility and neuromuscular coordination are ↓ – concentration and alertness are ↓ Long Term Benefits... ...To The Circulatory System • Cardiac muscle hypertrophies (gets bigger) – thicker, stronger walls = ↑ heart volumes = more blood pumped around the body per minute, the faster oxygen is delivered to the working muscles • # red blood cells ↑ improving transport of oxygen for aerobic energy production • Density of the capillary beds ↑ as more branches develop efficient gaseous exchange • Resting heart rate ↓(trained individuals) = efficient circulatory system • Accumulation of lactic acid is much lower during high-levels activity, due to circulatory system providing more oxygen and removing waste products faster • Arterial walls more elastic greater tolerance of changes in BP ...To The Respiratory System • Respiratory muscles (Diaphragm/intercostals) increase in strength • Larger respiratory volumes which allows more oxygen to be diffused into the blood flow (VO2 max) • ↑ in the number and diameter of capillaries surrounding the alveoli leads to ↑efficiency of gaseous exchange.