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Training Considerations for Special Populations CHAPTER OBJECTIVES • Understand that not everyone should be presented with the same exercise stimulus. • Describe the physiological differences that exist between men and women that might affect exercise prescription. • Discuss the limitations that pregnancy might place on a woman’s capacity to exercise safely. • Describe what factors must be considered when designing exercise programs for children and older adults. Introduction to Sex Differences in Sport and Exercise • For decades, culture, athletic governing bodies, and PE curricula perpetuated the myth that girls and women should not compete in sport • Last 30 to 40 years, girls and women have achieved great athletic feats – Sex differences in performance still exist – Separating biological versus other factors Body Size and Composition • Testosterone leads to – Bone formation, larger bones – Protein synthesis, larger muscles – EPO secretion, red blood cell production • Estrogen leads to – Fat deposition (lipoprotein lipase) – Faster, more brief bone growth • Shorter stature, lower total body mass – Fat mass, percent body fat Physiological Responses to Acute Exercise • Muscle strength differs between sexes – Upper body: women 40 to 60% weaker – Lower body: women 25 to 30% weaker – Due to total muscle mass difference, not difference in innate muscle mechanisms • No sex strength disparity when expressed per unit of muscle cross-sectional area Physiological Responses to Acute Exercise • Cardiovascular function differs greatly • For same absolute submaximal workload – Same cardiac output – Women: lower stroke volume, higher HR (compensatory) – Smaller hearts, lower blood volume • For same relative submaximal workload – Women: HR slightly , SV , cardiac output – Leads to O2 consumption Physiological Responses to Acute Exercise • Women compensate for hemoglobin via (a-v)O2 difference (at submaximal intensity) – (a-v)O2 difference ultimately limited, too – Lower hemoglobin, lower oxidative potential • Sex differences in respiratory function – Due to difference in lung volume, body size – Similar breathing frequency at same relative workload – Women frequency at same absolute workload Physiological Responses to Acute Exercise • Women’s VO2max < men’s VO2max • Untrained sex comparison unfair – Relatively sedentary nonathlete women – Relatively active nonathlete men • Trained sex comparison better – Similar level of condition between sexes – May reveal more true sex-specific differences Physiological Adaptations to Exercise Training • Body composition changes – Same in men and women – Total body mass, fat mass, percent body fat – FFM (more with strength vs. endurance training) • Weight-bearing exercise maintains bone mineral density • Connective tissue injury not related to sex Physiological Adaptations to Exercise Training • Strength gains in women versus men – Less hypertrophy in women versus men, though some studies show similar gains with training – Neural mechanisms more important for women • Variations in weight lifted for equivalent body weight – For given body weight, trained men have more FFM than trained women – Fewer trained women – Factors other than FFM? Physiological Adaptations to Exercise Training • Cardiorespiratory changes not sex specific • Aerobic, maximal intensity – Qmax due to SVmax ( preload, contractility) – Muscle blood flow, capillary density – Maximal ventilation • Aerobic, submaximal intensity – Q unchanged – SV, HR Physiological Adaptations to Exercise Training • VO2max changes not sex specific – ~15 to 20% increase – Qmax, muscle blood flow – Depends on training intensity, duration, frequency • Lactate threshold • Blood lactate for given work rate • Women respond to training like men do Effect of Menstruation on Performance • No reliable data indicate altered athletic performance across menstrual phases • No physiological differences in exercise responses across menstrual phases • World records set by women during every menstrual phase Female Athlete Triad • Amenorrhea • Osteoporosis • Disordered Eating Female Athlete Triad • Syndrome of interrelated conditions – Energy deficit secondary amenorrhea low bone mass – Disordered eating may (not) be involved • Three disorders can occur alone or in combination, must be addressed early • Treatment: caloric intake, activity (in some cases) Pregnancy Recommendations • Moderate exercise 3x/week – Reduces T3DM risk • • • • • • Resistance training recommended Ensure adequate caloric intake No supine exercise after first trimester Non-weight-bearing exercise preferable No risk of falling, loss of balance, etc. Decrease vigorous exercise in third trimester Children and Exercise • Historic reflections on exercise and resistance training outdated • Cardiovascular differences – ↓ heart size, ↑ HR both at rest and during ex – Limited anaerobic energy supply • ↓ blood lactate • ↓ glycolyic enzymes • Hyperthermia risk ↑ due to less efficient sweat mechanism Children and Exercise Older Adults and Exercise • ↓ in physiological capacity is inevitable • “Psychomotor Slowing” – Cardiovascular • ↓ in Q, SV, HRmax, VO2max, a-vO2 diff – Sarcopenia - Skeletal muscle loss results in ↓ isometric and dynamic muscle strength • Apoptosis – Bone mineral density ↓ Older Adults and Exercise • Baseline assessment for everyone • Aerobic prescription – 150+ minutes of moderate aerobic activity/wk • Resistance exercises on 2 or more days a week that work all the major muscles (1s, 1015r).