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AREA OF STUDY 2 – PHYSIOLOGICAL RESPONSES TO PHYSICAL ACTIVITY. Mechanisms responsible for the acute responses to exercise in the cardiovascular system. Mechanisms responsible for the acute responses to exercise in the respiratory system.
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AREA OF STUDY 2 – PHYSIOLOGICAL RESPONSES TO PHYSICAL ACTIVITY
Mechanisms responsible for the acute responses to exercise in the cardiovascular system. • Mechanisms responsible for the acute responses to exercise in the respiratory system. • Mechanisms responsible for the acute responses to exercise in the muscular system. Key knowledge 1
Participate in physical activities to collect and analyse data relating to the range of acute effects that physical activity has on the cardiovascular, respiratory and muscular system of the body. Key skills 1
Copy down the chart of page 98 • Write it big enough to fill the page, and leave space to write around it
The body’s immediate, short term responses that last only for the duration of the training or exercise session and for a short time afterwards during the recovery period. What is an acute response?
It is what has made the change occur. • For example: • What has made your heart rate increase? • What has made your respiratory rate increase? What does “mechanism” mean?
Acute responses of the respiratory system Comprehensive and detailed analysis of collected data, thorough and insightful understanding of the mechanisms responsible for acute effects of the cardiovascular, respiratory and muscular systems of the body.
Respiratory rate or respiratory frequency, also known as breathing rate • Respiratory rate = the number of breaths taken per minute • RR at rest = 12 breaths/min • RR during exercise can increase to 30-48 breaths/min Respiratory rate
What causes RR to increase? • An increase in CO2 concentration in the blood • This increases stimulates the respiratory control centre in the brain which increases RR Respiratory rate
Lets time you Respiratory Rate for 1minute • Record this number Respiratory rate
Tidal Volume (TV) is the amount of air breathed in and out in one breath • At rest TV is approx 0.5Litres • During exercise TV can reach 2.5-4L per breath Tidal Volume
Ventilation is the amount of air inspired or expired by the lungs per minute • Ventilation = respiratory rate x tidal volume • V = RR x TV • This varies between each individual depending on gender and size • At rest ventilation is approx 4-15L/min • During max exercise it can increase beyond 190L/min • It can increase to approx 25 to 35 times resting levels Ventilation
At the beginning of exercise, receptors in the working muscles stimulate ventilation by sending a message to the respiratory centre in the brain to increase the respiratory rate (RR) and tidal volume (TV) Ventilation
Do you breathe faster or bigger breathes when you exercise? • What does breathing faster mean? • What does breathing deeper mean? Question
At high intensities, tidal volume plateaus and any further increase in ventilation is due to further increases in respiratory rate • The point where ventilation is no longer increasing linearly with the increase in exercise intensity is called Ventilation threshold
The gas exchange occurring in the lungs at the alveolar-capillary interface and in the muscles at the tissue-capillary interface • Diffusion of gas always occurs from high pressure to an area of low pressure Diffusion
Oxygen is high in the lungs, so it diffuses from the alveoli into the blood stream • Carbon dioxide is high in the blood, so it diffuses from the blood stream into the alveoli Diffusion in the lungs
Oxygen is high in the blood, so it diffuses from the blood stream into the muscles • Carbon dioxide is high in the muscles, so it diffuses from the muscles into the blood stream Diffusion in the muscles
During exercise the diffusion capacity is increased (due to increase surface area of the alveoli and muscle tissue)so that greater amounts of oxygen and carbon dioxide can be exchanged at the alveoli and muscles Diffusion