* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Download Physiology of Training #1
Muscle contraction wikipedia , lookup
Hemodynamics wikipedia , lookup
Circulatory system wikipedia , lookup
Homeostasis wikipedia , lookup
Common raven physiology wikipedia , lookup
Intracranial pressure wikipedia , lookup
Biofluid dynamics wikipedia , lookup
High-altitude adaptation in humans wikipedia , lookup
Citric acid cycle wikipedia , lookup
Weight training wikipedia , lookup
Haemodynamic response wikipedia , lookup
Organisms at high altitude wikipedia , lookup
Physiology of Training Homeostatic Variables Purpose of Training • Exercise disrupts homeostasis • Training reduces the disruption • Reduced disruption of homeostasis results in improved performance Principles • Overload • Specificity • Reversibility Overload and Reversibility • a system or tissue must be stressed with a workload which it is unaccustomed – can be intensity, duration or frequency • this stress results in adaptation • Reversibility is the converse – once the overload stimulus is removed, the adaptation is lost Specificity • the training effect is specific to the – tissue or system stressed (eg. Arms do not adapt to cycling stimulus) – the mode of stress imposed (eg. Strength training does not result in endurance adaptations) – eg. Run training vs. Cycle training and LT (58% & 20% vs. 39% alone) Research Designs • Cross-sectional – take samples of populations ie. Cardiac patients, normal sedentary & elite athletes – disadvantage - black box • Longitudinal – changes over time ie. VO2max improvements in cardiac patients after 1 year of endurance training – advantage - can find mechanisms for differences between groups, but expensive VO2max • ability of the cardiovascular system to deliver blood (oxygen) to a large muscle mass involved in dynamic work and the ability of the muscle mass to utilize the oxygen • how does training affect VO2max? Improvements in VO2max • training must involve – – – – large muscle groups in dynamic exercise 20 - 60 minutes in duration 3-5 times per week 50 - 85% VO2max Law of Initial Values • training programs of 3 months duration can increase VO2max ~15 % on average • values may be as low as 2-3 % or as high as 50 % • persons with low initial values will realize greatest improvements • persons with high initial values will realize smallest improvements Genetics and VO2max • genetics are thought to account for 40 -66 % of one’s VO2max • you can blame your parents for not being able to win the Olympic marathon, but you can’t blame them for not being able to run one Contributions to Improved VO2max • VO2max = HRmax x SVmax x (a-vO2 diff)max • We know that max HR cannot be changed significantly • What will be the most important contributor to improved VO2max? Insert Table 13.2 & 13.3 Factors Increasing Stroke Volume End Diastolic Volume • endurance training increases left ventricle size with no increase in wall thickness (volume overload vs. pressure overload) • plasma volume increases contribute to increased filling volume • bradychardia increases filling time • Frank-Starling says increased stretch means increased stroke volume Cardiac Contractility • strength of the cardiac muscle (ventricle) contraction • contractility does increase in response to sympathetic stimulation • not a large contributor to adaptation as sedentary individuals already have high ejection fraction Afterload • amount of resistance offered as ventricle forces blood into the aorta • if force of contraction does not change, but peripheral resistance (afterload) decreases, stroke volume will increase • trained muscles offer less resistance to blood flow than untrained during maximal work Afterload cont’d • MAP = Q x TPR • decrease in peripheral resistance balances the increase in cardiac output to maintain homeostatic blood pressure • vasoconstriction is decreased in the trained exercising muscles • this is possible due to the increased cardiac output (two legged exercise) – willy nilly vasodilation is dangerous Arteriovenous Difference • comprises 50% of improvement in VO2max during extended training programs • not due to increases in Hb content • not due to increases in PO2 saturation • must be due to decrease in mixed venous O2 content – increased O2 extraction due to capillary density Increased Capillary Density • accommodates increased muscle blood flow due to cardiac output • decreases diffusion distance to individual cells and hence mitochondria • slows rate of blood flow to allow more time for diffusion (transit time) Factors Contributing to Improved VO2max insert fig 13.4 Detraining • decreased VO2max after detraining is result of – first decreased stroke volume – second decreased oxygen extraction Time-course of changes with detraining Changes in Citrate Synthase Activity Endurance Training Effects Maintenance of Homeostasis • more rapid transition from rest to steady state • reduced reliance on limited liver and glycogen stores • cardiovascular adaptations that are more capable of maintaining homeostatic conditions Adaptations • neural – Central Command – Respiratory and Circulatory Control centers • neural-hormone - reduced catecholamines (sympathetic) response to submaximal workload • biochemical - mitochondrial enzymes (citrate synthase) • structural - contractile proteins Note: • performance improvements - the ability to sustain submaximal work is reliant more on adaptations (biochemical and structural) in skeletal muscle; as opposed to small increases in VO2max Skeletal Muscle Adaptations • increased number of mitochondria (up to 4 times in type II) • increased capillary density – increased Krebs cycle enzymes – increased ß-oxidation enzymes – increased electron transport chain (ETC) enzymes Cont’d • improved shuttle which moves NADH from glycolysis to mitochondria • change in LDH which converts lactate to pyruvate and vice versa Training/Detraining Adaptations in Mitochondial Content Biochemical Adaptations and O2 Deficit • ATP > ADP + Pi by muscle contraction (crossbridges) is stimulus for ATP producing systems – 1st - ATP-PC – 2nd - glycolysis – 3rd - Krebs oxidative • oxidative metabolism primary system during steady state • increased mitochondria due to training adaptation means…... Mitochondrial Number and Changes in [ADP] During Steady State... • O2 consumption shared between mitochondria as opposed to only 1 • it takes a smaller change in [ADP] to stimulate mitochondria to take-up O2 • oxidative metabolism will be activated earlier, reducing the O2 deficit • therefore - less PC depletion, less glycogen depletion, less lactate production Endurance Training Reduces O2 Deficit Biochemical Adaptations and Blood Glucose • increased FFA transport into muscle – at same [FFA] transport into cell is increased post-training • increased movement of FFA from cytoplasm to mitochondria – carnitine transports FFA and carnitine transferase facilitates the transport – more mitochondria results in more surface area which exposes more carnitine transferase – FFA can be transported at a greater rate across the mitochondrial membrane • increased FFA oxidation – increased mitochondrial number means increased enzymes involved in ßoxidation – results in more acetyl-coA (breakdown product of FFA) and formation of citrate (first compound in Krebs cycle) – increased citrate inhibits glycolysis Increased Mitochondrial Number, Increased FFA Utilization, Spared Gycogen Biochemical Adaptations and Blood pH • [pyruvate] + [NADH] <=LDH=> [lactate] + [NAD+] • ^ mitochondrial number lowers pyruvate formation (reduced glycolysis) • ^ likelihood pyruvate will be oxidized (^ mitochondria) • ^ shuttling of NADH into mitochondria (less for lactate production) • change in LDH (5 isoforms – change to low affinity for pyruvate (like the heart) Increased Mitochondria and Maintenance of Blood pH Biochemical Adaptations and Lactate • lactate accumulation is balance between formation and removal – lactate can rise either by increased production or decreased clearance • due to increaed a-vo2difference less blood need to go to working muscles at given workload • more blood can go to liver for Cori cycle (less sympathetic stimulation as well) • also, the LDH change results in less production