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HKIN 103 Principles of Physical Activity And Exercise prescription

HKIN 103 Principles of Physical Activity And Exercise prescription

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Page 1: HKIN 103 Principles of Physical Activity And Exercise prescription

HKIN 103

Principles of Physical Activity

And

Exercise prescription

Page 2: HKIN 103 Principles of Physical Activity And Exercise prescription

GETTING STARTEDA little Exercise Physiology

Page 3: HKIN 103 Principles of Physical Activity And Exercise prescription

Muscle Architecture

Muscle body Fasciculus Muscle fibre Myofibrils

Page 4: HKIN 103 Principles of Physical Activity And Exercise prescription

Muscle Architecture

Muscle body Fasciculus Muscle fibre Myofibrils

Page 5: HKIN 103 Principles of Physical Activity And Exercise prescription

Muscle Architecture

Muscle body Fasciculus Muscle fibre Myofibrils Sarcomere

Page 6: HKIN 103 Principles of Physical Activity And Exercise prescription

Muscle Architecture-myofibrilar proteins

Myosin (large) Actin (smaller)

Page 7: HKIN 103 Principles of Physical Activity And Exercise prescription

Muscle Architecture-myofibrilar proteins

Myosin (large) Actin (smaller)

Page 8: HKIN 103 Principles of Physical Activity And Exercise prescription

Muscle Architecture-myofibrilar proteins

Myosin (large) Actin (smaller)

Page 9: HKIN 103 Principles of Physical Activity And Exercise prescription

Muscle Architecture

Sarcomere Z-Lines Myosin filament Actin filament

Page 10: HKIN 103 Principles of Physical Activity And Exercise prescription

Muscular Contraction

Sliding filament theory Calcium is released Actin slides over the myosin

(Benjamin-Cummings)

Page 11: HKIN 103 Principles of Physical Activity And Exercise prescription

Muscle Contraction

A muscle cell

Mitochondria organelles

Page 12: HKIN 103 Principles of Physical Activity And Exercise prescription

Bioenergetics: phosphorylation of ADP to ATP

CO2 + H2O+ >130 ATP

+ Oxygen

Free fatty acids

CO + HO+37 ATP

+ Oxygen

pyruvate

Carbohydratesglycogen

lactic acid+3 ATP

pyruvate

CArbohydratesglycogen

Creatine +1 ATP

Phosphocreatine+ ADP

Food Stuff

Page 13: HKIN 103 Principles of Physical Activity And Exercise prescription

Bioenergetics

Movement uses PCr to initiate. Defers to Aerobic metabolism, but… Switches to the metabolic system that will

provide ATP as required.

Therefore the bioenergetic system that predominates in the supply of ATP will be decided by the intensity of exercise.

Page 14: HKIN 103 Principles of Physical Activity And Exercise prescription

GETTING STARTEDThe PRINCIPLES of Physiologic Adaptation

Page 15: HKIN 103 Principles of Physical Activity And Exercise prescription

The Principles

# 1 The principle of ‘Overload’ Muscles must work against a load that is greater

than normal to improve. The cardiovascular system must be overloaded to

improve. # 2 The Principle of ‘Progression’

Follow a plan The plan should follow common sense: Too hard,

too fast - too bad!!

Page 16: HKIN 103 Principles of Physical Activity And Exercise prescription

The Principles

# 3 Principle of ‘Specificity’ To gain benefit, you must overload progressively

for that benefit. Strength,power,endurance, throwing, kicking,

jumping, high speed, low speed. Train for what you need!

# 4 The Principle of ‘Reversibility’ If you don’t use, you’ll lose it

Page 17: HKIN 103 Principles of Physical Activity And Exercise prescription

The Principles

# 5 The Principle of ‘Diminishing Returns’ The fitter/stronger you get, the harder it is to get

fitter/stronger. # 6 The F.I.T. Principles

Frequency Intensity Time (duration)

Page 18: HKIN 103 Principles of Physical Activity And Exercise prescription

Physical Activity Target Zone

Page 19: HKIN 103 Principles of Physical Activity And Exercise prescription

F.I.T.T. Programming

F. = Frequency: number of times per week I. = Intensity: the level of intensity one

works out at, expressed as a % of maximum. T = Time: duration of exercise bout usually

expressed as minutes/sets. T. = Type of exercise

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F.I.T.T. Programming

Threshold of training: the minimum amount of training that will produce a benefit.

Target Zone: A specific level of intensity and/or duration to derive a specific benefit.

Lactate Threshold: When the body’s metabolism switches to anaerobic methods.

OBLA: Onset of Blood Lactate Accumulation. The body can no longer clear or buffer the lactic acid produced in anaerobic metabolism.

VO2 max: Aerobic power - maximum oxygen consumption during maximal graded exercise testing.

Page 21: HKIN 103 Principles of Physical Activity And Exercise prescription

What happens during Exercise

Muscular activity requires energy That energy is delivered in the form of

Adenosine Triphospate (ATP). This energy can be supplied aerobically (in

the presence of oxygen) or anaerobically (in the absence of oxygen).

The system used for delivering energy is dependent on the INTENSITY of exercise.

Page 22: HKIN 103 Principles of Physical Activity And Exercise prescription

What happens during Exercise

The increased need for energy and oxygen causes an increase in heart and ventilation rates.

The increased cellular metabolism causes an increase in heat production, which stimulates our thermoregulatory systems.

The core heat is transferred to the exterior environment.

Energy supplies are depleted, and must be restored.

Page 23: HKIN 103 Principles of Physical Activity And Exercise prescription

What happens during Exercise

The increased need for energy and oxygen causes an increase in heart and ventilation rates.

The increased cellular metabolism causes an increase in heat production, which stimulates our thermoregulatory systems.

The core heat is transferred to the exterior environment.

Energy supplies are depleted, and must be restored.

Page 24: HKIN 103 Principles of Physical Activity And Exercise prescription

Blood Route

veins

venules

capillaries

intracellular organelles

muscle fibers

capillaries

arterioles

ateries

heart

lungs

Heart

Page 25: HKIN 103 Principles of Physical Activity And Exercise prescription

Some is Better than None!

REVISED CONCEPT OF TRAINING

OLD CONCEPT OF TRAINING

AMOUNT OF ACTIVITY

HEALTHRISK

Page 26: HKIN 103 Principles of Physical Activity And Exercise prescription

Benefits of Moderate and Vigorous Activity

Page 27: HKIN 103 Principles of Physical Activity And Exercise prescription

Preparation for an Exercise Program

Establish Medical readiness: Physical Activity Readiness Questionnaire (PAR_Q) ACSM Risk Stratification Categories and Criteria Blood pressure at rest (no exercise if systolic >140mm Hg or diastolic > 90

mm Hg)

Correct equipment and clothes. Shoes Clothing appropriate for ambient conditions Head protection from sun or cold

Page 28: HKIN 103 Principles of Physical Activity And Exercise prescription

Preparation for an Exercise Program

PAR-Q: screening document, ages 19 - 69

1. Has your doctor ever said that you have a heart condition and that you should only do physical activity recommended by a doctor?

2. Do you feel pain in your chest when you do physical activity? 3. In the past month, have you had chest pain when you were not doing physical activity? 4. Do you lose your balance because of dizziness or do you ever lose consciousness? 5. Do you have a bone or joint problem (for example, back, knee or hip) that could be made

worse by a change in your physical activity?6. Is your doctor currently prescribing drugs (for example, water pills) for your blood pressure

or heart condition? 7. Do you know of any other reason why you should not do physical activity?

Page 29: HKIN 103 Principles of Physical Activity And Exercise prescription

Preparation for an Exercise Program

70 years of age and over, physicians OK

Page 30: HKIN 103 Principles of Physical Activity And Exercise prescription

ACSM Guidelines

Because of increased risk, certain individuals should be given a graded exercise test prior to performing vigorous exercise: Older individuals (men > 40 / women > 50) Individuals with CHD risk factors

(Family history, high cholesterol, high blood pressure, sedentary lifestyle, smoker, diabetic)

Page 31: HKIN 103 Principles of Physical Activity And Exercise prescription

ACSM Risk Stratification(based primarily on risks due to CHD)

Apparently healthy (1) Asymptomatic Only 1 risk factor

Increased risk (2) Symptoms of CHD Two or more risk factors

Known disease (3) Known cardiac, pulmonary or metabolic disease

Page 32: HKIN 103 Principles of Physical Activity And Exercise prescription

GETTING STARTEDGetting Ready

Page 33: HKIN 103 Principles of Physical Activity And Exercise prescription

Preparation for an Exercise Program

Equipment: Exactly what do you need to get fit?

Cardio Strength Endurance power Balance Coordination

What do you need for different modes of exercise? Cycling, climbing

Page 34: HKIN 103 Principles of Physical Activity And Exercise prescription

Wearing Good Shoes is Important

1. Running 2. Court 3. Aerobic 4. Walking 5. Tennis 6. Cross trainers

Page 35: HKIN 103 Principles of Physical Activity And Exercise prescription

Shoe design issues

Sole lasting: straight/curved Inner lasting: board/stitched Heel counter/Achilles notch Heel counter lateral attachments

Page 36: HKIN 103 Principles of Physical Activity And Exercise prescription

Factors to Consider During Daily Physical Activity

Importance of warm-up and cool-down for reducing risk of injuries and soreness

Environmental factors

Page 37: HKIN 103 Principles of Physical Activity And Exercise prescription

Preparing for Physical Activity: Summary

General Exercise Guidelines Choose something you like Know your limitations Dress appropriately Start slowly Listen to your body

Page 38: HKIN 103 Principles of Physical Activity And Exercise prescription

Components of a Workout

Warm-up Main activity Cool-down

Page 39: HKIN 103 Principles of Physical Activity And Exercise prescription

Benefits of a Warm-up

Prepare cardiovascular system Prepare metabolic system Prepare musculoskeletal system

Page 40: HKIN 103 Principles of Physical Activity And Exercise prescription

Components of a Warm-up

Cardiovascular component Flexibility component

Static programs Ballistic programs Proprioceptive Neuromuscular facilitation(PNF) Active Assisted programs Dynamic programs

Page 41: HKIN 103 Principles of Physical Activity And Exercise prescription

Benefits of a Cool-down

Reduces blood pooling Promotes recovery Minimizes muscle soreness

Page 42: HKIN 103 Principles of Physical Activity And Exercise prescription

Components of a Cool-down

Slowly reduce intensity level to reduce cardiovascular response to stressor

Clears metabolic waste and maintains healthier muscle tissue and reduced soreness.

Stretching returns muscles to pre-exercise length, maintaining flexibility.

Page 43: HKIN 103 Principles of Physical Activity And Exercise prescription

GETTING STARTEDFitness Assessment

Page 44: HKIN 103 Principles of Physical Activity And Exercise prescription

Fitness Assessment

Cardiovascular fitness Muscular Strength Muscular endurance Flexibility Body Composition

Page 45: HKIN 103 Principles of Physical Activity And Exercise prescription

Fitness Assessment - Cardiovascular

Use maximum graded exercise tests (GXT) Or Submaximum GXT Or field tests (advantages are large numbers

can be tested easily and cheaply) 20 meter Beep test Step test

Page 46: HKIN 103 Principles of Physical Activity And Exercise prescription

Fitness assessment - cardiovascular

A submax aerobic fitness assessment yields a prediction of VO2max: measurement of oxygen utilization during maximum exhaustive exercise.

Can be compared to norms for individual assessment and exercise prescription.

Page 47: HKIN 103 Principles of Physical Activity And Exercise prescription

Fitness assessment - muscular strength

Done using: 1 maximum lift (1RM) Submaximal predictions (maximum resistance to

do 10 or fewer lifts)

Page 48: HKIN 103 Principles of Physical Activity And Exercise prescription

Fitness assessment - muscular strength

Submaximal predictions can be done from a chart (included in the lab) or by using a prediction equation.

Page 49: HKIN 103 Principles of Physical Activity And Exercise prescription

GETTING STARTEDExercise Prescription

Page 50: HKIN 103 Principles of Physical Activity And Exercise prescription

F. I. T.

Frequency

Page 51: HKIN 103 Principles of Physical Activity And Exercise prescription

Cardio - Frequency - Average

Threshold: 3 days per week for progressive improvement.

Moderate: 3 - 5 days per week High:5 - 7 days per week

Page 52: HKIN 103 Principles of Physical Activity And Exercise prescription

Local competition - 2 times per week Regional/national - 3 - 5 times per week National/international: - 6 - 12 times per week

Cardio - Frequency - Athletic

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Resistance training - frequency - Average person

Threshold:1 time per week Moderate: 3 times per week High: 5 times per week

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Resistance training - frequency - Athletic person

Threshold:2 time per week Moderate: 3 times per week High: 5 times per week All Groups……. Must have 24 - 48 hrs rest between W/O’s

on any one muscle group. (dose related) Must have 72 hrs rest after plyometric W/O

Page 55: HKIN 103 Principles of Physical Activity And Exercise prescription

F. I. T.Intensity

Page 56: HKIN 103 Principles of Physical Activity And Exercise prescription

Cardiovascular endurance:

Resting heart rate (RHR): take when waking Maximal Heart rate (MHR):age predicted

maximal heart rate Heart Rate reserve (HRR):the heart rate

range between rest and maximum (MHR-RHR)

Target Heart Rate (THR):some percentage of the HRR, plus the RHR.

Page 57: HKIN 103 Principles of Physical Activity And Exercise prescription

Cardio - Intensity - Maximum Heart Rate (MHR)

Maximal Heart rate: Old method: 220-age = MHR (bpm) New methods: Age 19 - 55 Males =203.9-(.812*age) + (0.276*RHR) - (0.084*wt (Kg)) -

(4.5*smoking factor(1 or 0) = MHR (bpm) Females =204.8 - (0.718*age) + (0.162*RHR) - (0.105*

wt(kg)) - (6.2* smoking factor) =MHR (bpm) New Method: >55 years Males: 207 - (age*0.7) = MHR bpm Females: 230 - (age*1.1) = MHR bpm

Page 58: HKIN 103 Principles of Physical Activity And Exercise prescription

Cardio - Intensity - Resting Heart Rate (RHR)

When you wake up, slowly reach out for your watch and take your radial pulse for 10 or 15 seconds and multiply by 6 or 4.

RECORD the RHR in beats* minute-1 (bpm) Leave the record by your bed for the next

morning. Do this on 4 - 5 consecutive mornings Average your recorded heart rates.

Page 59: HKIN 103 Principles of Physical Activity And Exercise prescription

Cardio - Intensity - Heart Rate Reserve (HRR)

Subtract your RHR from your MHR. (MHR - RHR) This is the HRR. It is the functional range of your

heart rate: I.e. the number of bpm your heart has to operate within, given certain circumstances.

Your heart rate at any moment in time is influenced by movement, stress, eating, relaxing, visualizing or mood.

It will not, however, exceed the limits of the HRR.

Page 60: HKIN 103 Principles of Physical Activity And Exercise prescription

1. % of MHR

2. % of VO2 max

3. % of OBLA

4. % of HRR

5. % of Functional capacity (METS)1. ! MET is energy consumption @ rest

2. 1 MET = 3.5 ml*kg-1 * min -1

3. ! MET = 1 Kcal * kg-1 * hr-1

Cardio - Intensity - Target Heart Rates (THR) - methods

Page 61: HKIN 103 Principles of Physical Activity And Exercise prescription

6. Rating of Perceived Exertion (RPE)

Borg 10 pt % HRR

Light 10 2 40 - 50

Moderate 12 4 60

Mod-hard 13 6 70

Hard 15 8 80

Very hard 17 9 90

Maximal 19-29 10 100

Cardio - Intensity - Heart Rate Reserve (HRR)

Page 62: HKIN 103 Principles of Physical Activity And Exercise prescription

1. % MHR:

Predicted MHR is highly variable (+/- 12 - 20 bpm).

2. Example: Find THR at 70% of MHR.

3. My MHR is 207-(age*0.7) = 165 bpm

4. My THR is 165 * 0.70 = 116 bpm

Cardio - Intensity - Target Heart Rate (THR)

Page 63: HKIN 103 Principles of Physical Activity And Exercise prescription

% HRR THR = [ (MHR-RHR) * %] + RHR THR = ( HRR * % ) + RHR Example:

THR = [(165 - 55) * 0.70] + 55

THR = [110 * 0.70] + 55

THR = 132 bpm

CARDIO - Intensity - THR

Page 64: HKIN 103 Principles of Physical Activity And Exercise prescription

1. % MHR:

2. My THR is 165 * 0.70 = 116 bpm

3. Predicted MHR is highly variable (+/- 12 - 20 bpm), therefore,

4. ACSM correction is THR * 1.15

5. My exercising THR = 116*1.15 = 133 bpm

6. %HRR=132, % MHR=133

Cardio - Intensity - Target Heart Rate (THR)

Page 65: HKIN 103 Principles of Physical Activity And Exercise prescription

Intensity - Endurance activities

Threshold: 40 - 60% HRR Moderate : 60 - 75% HRR High : 75 - 85% HRR

We could also represent these THR’s as: Threshold:40 -50% = aerobic capacity Moderate: 50 - 65% = aerobic power High: 65 - 85% = anaerobic capacity

Page 66: HKIN 103 Principles of Physical Activity And Exercise prescription

Intensity for Resistance training.

Usually taken as a percentage of 1 rep max (1RM) - the maximum weight one can just lift once.

Intensity varies with goals: Tone/ preparation 40 - 60% 1RM Hypertrophy 65 - 80% 1Rm Strength 85 - 100+% 1RM Power 30 - 50%/90 - 100% Precompetition Body/implement weight.

Page 67: HKIN 103 Principles of Physical Activity And Exercise prescription

F.I.T.Length of TIME (duration)

Page 68: HKIN 103 Principles of Physical Activity And Exercise prescription

Duration of exercise- endurance type

Threshold: 15 minutes of endurance exercise

Moderate: 30 - 45 minutes

High: > 45 minutes

One does not need to train at a ‘goal’ distance.One should only train one long run / week.Mix up the running pace on the other days.

Page 69: HKIN 103 Principles of Physical Activity And Exercise prescription

Duration of exercise- endurance type

How Many Times / Week??

Aerobic capacity: as many as possible - volume training, but a minimum of three (3) times / week.

Aerobic power: three times a week - quality training.

Anaerobic capacity: two times a week Anaerobic Power: two times a week; 1 day of heavy

plyo, 1 day of mod/light plyos

Page 70: HKIN 103 Principles of Physical Activity And Exercise prescription

Duration of exercise-resistance training

Depends on goals, but in general: Threshold 2 sets of 15 - 20 reps Moderate 3-4 sets of 15 - 20 reps High 5-8 sets of mixed reps

Page 71: HKIN 103 Principles of Physical Activity And Exercise prescription

F.I. T.(T.)Type

Page 72: HKIN 103 Principles of Physical Activity And Exercise prescription

The type of training

Resistance training Cardiovascular training Balance training Core training Reactive training

Page 73: HKIN 103 Principles of Physical Activity And Exercise prescription

Type of training

Resistance training Machines Free weights Therabands Dumbbells Bodyweight Inertial Others??

Page 74: HKIN 103 Principles of Physical Activity And Exercise prescription

Type of training

Cardiovascular training Cycling / Running, (real or ergometer/treadmill) Rowing (real or ergometer) Arm ergometer Walking, golf, nordic poling Rollerblade, rollerskis Swimming Lawn BOWLING?

Which do both strength & cardio??

Page 75: HKIN 103 Principles of Physical Activity And Exercise prescription

Type of training

Balance training Fitter boards Balance bladders Stability/physio balls Body weight Circe du Soleil Foam // rollers

Are any of these useful for strength and cardio as well??

Page 76: HKIN 103 Principles of Physical Activity And Exercise prescription

Type of training

Core training Yoga Pilates Stability balls dumbbells

Page 77: HKIN 103 Principles of Physical Activity And Exercise prescription

Type of training

Reactive training

Chaotic drills Using unstable surfaces

Page 78: HKIN 103 Principles of Physical Activity And Exercise prescription

Training Muscles

We can train muscles to: Get big (bodybuilders) Get strong (in order to ….) Get powerful (any sporting endeavour) Have endurance (runners, cyclists) Perform Activities of Daily Living (ADL’s) Prevent loss of strength. Others???

Page 79: HKIN 103 Principles of Physical Activity And Exercise prescription

Training Muscles - fibre type

The gains we are capable of eliciting from training depend largely on muscle fiber type.

Type I fibers (slow twitch, slow oxidative) Type IIa fibers (fast oxidative glycolytic) Type IIb fibres (Fast twitch, Fast glycolytic )

Page 80: HKIN 103 Principles of Physical Activity And Exercise prescription

Training Muscles - muscle metabolism

There are two basic type of muscle metabolism: Aerobic (that which occurs in the presence of

oxygen) Anaerobic (that which occurs in the absence of

oxygen)

Each of these metabolic pathways have two subtypes.

Page 81: HKIN 103 Principles of Physical Activity And Exercise prescription

Training Muscles - muscle metabolism

1. Aerobic -oxidation: uses FFA’s as substrate

2. Aerobic Glycolysis: uses pyruvic acid as substrate

3. Anaerobic Glycolysis: uses glycogen as substrate

4. Anaerobic Alactic:uses Phospho-creatine as substrate

Page 82: HKIN 103 Principles of Physical Activity And Exercise prescription

Training Muscles - muscle metabolism

1. Palmitrate (a fat) H2O + CO2 + 129 ATP

2. Pyruvic Acid Lactic acid + 37 ATP

3. Glycogen Pyruvate Lactic acid + 3ATP

4. CrP P-1 + Cr. + 1 ATP

Page 83: HKIN 103 Principles of Physical Activity And Exercise prescription

Training Muscles - muscle metabolism

Aerobic metabolism Glycolytic Alactic

Type I fibres Type IIa fibres Type IIb fibres

slow ATP prod. Faster fastest

Excellent endur fatigable v. fatigable

slow TTPT Faster v. fast TTPT

low demand for ATP greater greatest demand

High aerobic enzyme contentboth v. low aerobic enzyme

v. Low anaerobic enzyme both v. high anaerobic enzyme

Small x-sectional area intermediate large x-sectional area

ENDURANCE COMBO 100% INTENSITY

Page 84: HKIN 103 Principles of Physical Activity And Exercise prescription

Training Muscles - progressions

Start with endurance and move to strength and power (generally)

Start with strength and go to endurance with 1 day/week on plyos (endurance athlete)

Therefore start 15 - 20 reps, 2 - 3 sets 40 - 60% 1RM

For size, 7 - 12 reps, 3-4 sets 65 -80% 1RM For strength - 1-6 reps, 85 - 100% For power - 40 - 60%, until velocity drops.

Page 85: HKIN 103 Principles of Physical Activity And Exercise prescription

Training Cardiovascular System - progressions

Start with: aerobic capacity

Page 86: HKIN 103 Principles of Physical Activity And Exercise prescription

Training Cardiovascular System - progressions

Start with: aerobic capacity

then add aerobic power

Page 87: HKIN 103 Principles of Physical Activity And Exercise prescription

Training Cardiovascular System - progressions

Start with: DROP

then add aerobic power

then add anaerobic capacity

Page 88: HKIN 103 Principles of Physical Activity And Exercise prescription

Training Cardiovascular System - progressions

Start with:

then add aerobic power DROP

then add anaerobic powerthen add anaerobic capacity

Page 89: HKIN 103 Principles of Physical Activity And Exercise prescription

Training Cardiovascular System - progressions

Start with:

then add DROP

then add anaerobic powerthen add anaerobic capacity

Page 90: HKIN 103 Principles of Physical Activity And Exercise prescription

Training Cardiovascular System - progressions

Start with:

then add DROP

then add anaerobic power

Add 1 day per week aerobic training for aerobic base (depending on sport)

then add anaerobic capacity

Page 91: HKIN 103 Principles of Physical Activity And Exercise prescription

Training Cardiovascular System

For the athlete, progressions are necessary. For the average person, min. 15 minutes, 3

times a week is good. Cross train for variety and use of more

muscle groups. MAKE IT FUN !!!!

Page 92: HKIN 103 Principles of Physical Activity And Exercise prescription

F.I.T.T. Summary for cardiovascular health.

Recommendation for HEALTH is 30 - 60 minutes 5 - 7 days a week.

Something is better than nothing to lower risk of hypokinetic diseases.

Minimum for improvement is 15 minutes, 3 times a week.

Stress variety of training modes Target HR should be 60 - 80 % of HRR

Page 93: HKIN 103 Principles of Physical Activity And Exercise prescription

F.I.T.T. summary of strength training

Train movement rather than muscles. For the average person, using 40 - 50 % of

1RM and 15 to 20 reps gives best all-round muscle conditioning.

Use balance training in combination with strength training.

Use high speed movements every fourth week

Page 94: HKIN 103 Principles of Physical Activity And Exercise prescription

CASE STUDY

Get into groups of four Write out a list of questions you would ask

the following client. Priorize the client’s needs. Design a simple program for the client.

Page 95: HKIN 103 Principles of Physical Activity And Exercise prescription

Case study

Male, 45 years old, non-smoker. BP: 145/105 Total cholesterol : 310 mg/dl Resting HR : 70bpm Height: 1.75 m. Weight: 105 kg Submax VO2 test : 32.2 ml* kg-1*min-1

Muscle strength and endurance rated: poor