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Chapter 6 Keeping Fit. B. Lee Green Texas A&M University. Objectives. Examine the extent to which people exercise and give reasons for low levels of exercise Describe the physical health benefits of exercise Describe the effect of exercise on psychological well-being
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Chapter 6Keeping Fit B. Lee Green Texas A&M University
Objectives • Examine the extent to which people exercise and give reasons for low levels of exercise • Describe the physical health benefits of exercise • Describe the effect of exercise on psychological well-being • Explain the 3 major components of fitness: strength, flexibility, and endurance • Differentiate between isokinetic, isotonic, and isometric exercises
Objectives continued • Differentiate between aerobic and anaerobic activities • Explain the importance of intensity, duration, and frequency of exercise sessions • Determine your target heart rate for exercise as well as your maximal heart rate • Plan a personal fitness program including warm-up, conditioning, and cool-down periods • List several tactics for maintaining a fitness program
Exercise as a Part of Your Lifestyle • Most people say they don’t have time to exercise • Exercise: bodily movement undertaken to improve or maintain physical fitness • Being in shape can reduce certain health risk
The Health Benefits of Exercise • Helping the Heart • Tissue Plasminogen Activator: a natural enzyme that prevents blood clots. • Hypertension (decrease in the number and capacity of capillaries) is reduced by exercise. • High Density Lipoproteins (HDLs): called “good” cholesterol - prevents atherosclerosis. • Low Density Lipoproteins (LDLs): called “bad” cholesterol - promotes atherosclerosis
The Health Benefits of Exercise • Preventing Osteoporosis • Physical activity helps strengthen bones; especially weight-bearing exercise. • Osteoporosis: disorder in which bone density decreases and bones are more likely to break.
The Health Benefits of Exercise • Psychological Well-Being • Runner’s high: a euphoric feeling due to the production of the hormone endorphin during or following exercise. • Endorphin: a hormone produced in the brain that helps give a sense of pleasure and satisfaction.
The Fitness Triangle • Physical Fitness: a measure of how efficiently the body works. • Three major components of fitness: • Strength • Flexibility • Endurance
The Fitness Triangle • The three components dynamically interact to ensure that an individual is able to: • Meet the day-to-day demands for movement of the body. • Have a reserve available for unexpected events requiring movement. • Reduce the risk of certain chronic and degenerative diseases.
Figure 6.3 The Fitness Triangle Figure 6.3
The Fitness Triangle • Strength • Strength: the extent to which you are capable of exerting force as needed. • Absolute Strength: the total force an individual can exert in one effort when flexing muscles, measured in pounds. • Relative Strength: a measure of strength determined by dividing absolute strength by body weight.
The Fitness Triangle • Strength • Isokinetic Exercises: slow-moving contractions throughout a full range of movement against a constant resistance. • Isotonic Exercises: the contraction of muscles against a movable resistance. • Isometric Exercises: the contraction of muscles against an immovable object.
The Fitness Triangle • Flexibility • The range of movement an individual can achieve around a joint or group of joints • Flexibility reduces the chance of injury to muscles and joints. • Flexibility promotes muscle elasticity, which increases agility.
The Fitness Triangle • Endurance and Aerobic Capacity • Endurance: the ability to sustain vigorous exercise for a period of time. • Aerobic Capacity: usually expressed as maximal oxygen uptake, or VO2 max. • Aerobic: “with oxygen”; a process of energy production through which carbohydrates, fats, and proteins are used to produce energy. • Anaerobic: “without oxygen”; the process of energy production in which surges of energy are needed for a brief amount of time.
Fitness Through Exercise • Exercise Intensity: how hard you exercise - indicated by heart rate. • Exercise Duration: the length of time a person exercises. • Exercise Frequency: how often an exercise is done.
Fitness Through Exercise • Monitoring Your Exercise Intensity • Resting Heart Rate: the number of heart beats per minute in a resting state. • Training Effect: the increased heart efficiency, produced by exercising for a sufficient duration and intensity. • Maximal Heart Rate: the maximum number of heart beats per minute that should be reached during exercise. • Target Heart Rate Range: heart activity high enough to bring about a training effect and low enough to be safe.
Planning and Maintaining a Personal Fitness Program • Three Phases of Exercise: • Warm-Up Period: where the body becomes prepared for exertion. • Conditioning Period: where a training effect is reached and maintained. • Cool-Down Period: where the intensity is reduced and the body recovers partially from the conditioning period.
Planning and Maintaining a Personal Fitness Program • Raising Your Safety Consciousness • When creating an exercise program, remember the risks for the following conditions: • Degenerative Joint Disease or Osteoarthritis • Hypothermia
Figure 6.4 Planning and Maintaining a Personal Fitness Program Figure 6.4
Planning and Maintaining a Personal Fitness Program • Patience and Adherence • Establish baseline data to monitor subtle improvements. • Find an activity you will enjoy and stick with it.
Planning and Maintaining a Personal Fitness Program • Tactics for Maintaining a Fitness Program • Choose an activity that you like and in which you feel competent and safe doing. • Set a regular time and place for your exercise. • Establish realistic goals that you can achieve. • Don’t be pressured into an exercise program that you cannot afford. • Alternate the physical activity so as not to become bored.
Planning and Maintaining a Personal Fitness Program • Tactics for Maintaining a Fitness Program • Be aware of physical activities you can do as part of your day-to-day living. • Avoid injuries by not overdoing your exercise program. • Feel good about what you are doing. • Guard against giving yourself excuses for not exercising.