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Metabolism • The process in which your body gets energy from the food you eat • (How fast your body burns / stores the food you eat) Basal Metabolism • The minimum amount of energy required to maintain life processes in the body • (Least amount of food you need to survive) Calories • Energy value in food, measured in units of heat • Increased exercise = increased calories burned = loss of weight • 1 pound fat = 3,500 calories Aerobic exercise • Vigorous activity in which oxygen is continuously taken in for a period of at least 20 minutes • Oxygen is continuously being sent to the muscles while exercising Aerobic examples… • • • • Jogging Swimming Cycling Brisk walk • Strengthens heart and lungs to work more efficiently Anaerobic exercise • Intense bursts of activity in which the muscles work so hard that they produce energy without using oxygen • Your muscles are using the oxygen already stored in your body, no new oxygen being utilized Anaerobic examples… • Sprinting • Weightlifting • Strengthen muscles over time Types of resistance training 1. Isometric 2. Isotonic 1. Isokinetic Isometric • Activity that uses muscle tension to improve muscular strength with little or no body movement • Ex: Palms against each other Isotonic • Activity that combines muscle contraction with repeated movement • Ex: Push / Sit / Pull – ups Trunk twists Isokinetic • Activity that involves resistance through an entire range of motion • Increases joint flexibility • Hammer strength machines K Planning a fitness program – Before you actually exercise, make sure you are physically able to exert yourself. – What if you have… • Asthma ? • Bad knee ? • Sore back ? Begin gradually • Ease your way into your workout program • Must enjoy it, do activities / exercises that you enjoy Selecting the right activity • • • • • • Where you live Your interests Level of health Time and place Personal safety Do my activities meet the five components of fitness? Basics of a program… #1) Overload – Working the body harder than it is normally worked – Increase reps, weight, time, distance Basics cont… #2) Progression - Gradual increase in overload necessary for achieving higher levels of fitness - Gradually adding more weight, distance etc… Basics cont… #3) Specificity – Particular exercises and activities improve particular areas of health related fitness – Different activities / exercises for different goals Injuries • Eventually going to happen • You must determine the severity of your injury Injuries cont… • If your injury requires medical attention, seek it a.s.a.p. or If your injury is not getting better within a week or so What to do? • R.I.C.E. Principal • General first aid for the sprain, strain, sore muscle etc. R.I.C.E. • Rest • Rest the injured body part or your entire body. By doing so, you are probably not going to aggravate your injury more than it already is, thus promoting healing R.I.C.E. • Ice •Apply ice to your injured body part a.s.a.p. after you injure it. This will keep the swelling down. Ice frequently until injury is healed R.I.C.E. • Compression •Wrap your injury with an ace bandage to keep swelling down. This will allow new blood cells to heal your injury faster R.I.C.E. • Elevation •Elevate your injured body part higher than your heart. This will help drain the blood, keeping swelling to a minimum. This is important at night!