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Chapter 11 Concepts

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Title: Chapter 11 Concepts


1
Chapter 11 Concepts
  • The combination of good nutrition and regular
    exercise work together to promote fitness
  • Activity requires ATP generated from
    carbohydrate, fat, and protein in the diet and
    body stores
  • The ability of the heart and lungs to provide
    oxygen to tissues affects which nutrients can be
    used to produce ATP and how much is produced
  • Physically active individuals need extra energy
    to fuel their activity but the recommended
    proportions of carbohydrate, fat, and protein are
    the same as for the general population
  • Exercise increases the amount of water needed to
    transport nutrients, eliminate wastes, and cool
    the body
  • Appropriate food choices before, during, and
    after competition can help optimize athletic
    performance
  • Performance-enhancing (ergogenic) supplements are
    popular among athletes before they are used, the
    risks should be weighed against the benefits

Chapter 11 Nutrition, Fitness, and Physical
Activity
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As exercise intensity increases, the proportion
of energy supplied by carbohydrate also
increases. Remember that during exercise the
total amount of energy expended is greater than
at rest. (Adapted from Horton, E. S. Effects of
low-energy diets on work performance.
Chapter 11 Nutrition, Fitness, and Physical
Activity
3
The source of ATP depends on how long you have
been exercising
  • Stored ATP and creatine phosphate provide
    immediate energy
  • As the ATP in muscle is used, enzymes break down
    another high-energy compound, called creatine
    phosphate
  • Anaerobic metabolism uses glucose for fast energy
  • Aerobic metabolism uses fat to fuel your long
    runs, bikes, and swims
  • Once you have been exercising for 2 to 3 minutes
    your breathing and heart rate have increased to
    supply more oxygen to your muscles. When oxygen
    is available, ATP can be produced by aerobic
    metabolism
  • Aerobic metabolism produces ATP at a slower rate
    than anaerobic metabolism but is much more
    efficient, producing about 18 times more ATP for
    each molecule of glucose
  • Although protein is not considered a major energy
    source for the body, even at rest your body uses
    small amounts of amino acids for energy

Chapter 11 Nutrition, Fitness, and Physical
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Nutrition, Fitness, and Physical Activity
  • Exercise Improves Fitness and Health
  • Regular exercise causes changes that increase
    fitness
  • When you exercise it causes changes in your
    bodyyou breathe harder, your heart beats faster,
    and your muscles stretch and strain
  • If you exercise regularly, you adapt to the
    exercise you perform so you can continue for a
    few minutes longer, lift a heavier weight, or
    stretch a millimeter farther. This is known as
    the overload principle the more you do, the more
    you are capable of doing
  • Endurance is enhanced by regular aerobic
    exercise, the type of exercise that increases the
    heart rate and uses oxygen
  • Resistance training makes your muscles stronger
  • Stretching makes you more flexible
  • Regular exercise makes it easier to keep body fat
    at a healthy level

Chapter 11 Nutrition, Fitness, and Physical
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Exercise reduces the risk of chronic disease
  • A regular exercise program can help to prevent or
    delay the onset of cardiovascular disease,
    hypertension, diabetes, osteoporosis, and colon
    cancer
  • Exercise reduces the risk of obesity
  • Exercise reduces the risk of cardiovascular
    disease
  • Exercise helps to prevent and treat diabetes
  • Weight-bearing exercise helps strengthen bones
    and reduces arthritis
  • Exercise may reduce cancer risk
  • When you exercise you feel better
  • Physical activity increases your energy level and
    self-esteem.6 It has been shown to improve
    symptoms of depression, anxiety, and panic
    disorders. The exact mechanisms involved are not
    clear but one hypothesis has to do with the
    production of endorphins

Chapter 11 Nutrition, Fitness, and Physical
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Everyone Should Get an Hour of Exercise Daily
  • Most Americans do not exercise regularly 25 of
    American adults get no physical activity at all
    during their leisure time
  • People who exercise moderately for more than 2.5
    hours per day or more intensely for more than 1
    hour per day are categorized as very active
  • Exercise should include aerobic activities,
    stretching, and strength training
  • Do something aerobic for 30 to 60 minutes most
    days
  • An activity is aerobic if it raises your heart
    rate to 60 to 85 of its maximum
  • Maximum heart rate The fastest your heart can
    beat, estimated by subtracting your age in years
    from 220
  • Stretch at least 3 days a week
  • Lift two to 3 days a week
  • Build an activity pyramid

Chapter 11 Nutrition, Fitness, and Physical
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Exercise for All Ages
  • Children should also get an hour of
    age-appropriate exercise
  • It is never too late to start an exercise program
  • Exercise classes are taught in nursing homes.
    Heart patients, amputees, the blind, and those
    confined to wheelchairs compete in athletic
    events
  • Find activities you enjoy
  • Safety should be a concern in planning any
    exercise regimen
  • Before beginning, you should check with your
    physician to be sure that your plans are
    appropriate considering your medical history
  • The combination of exercise frequency, duration,
    and intensity that is needed to achieve a desired
    fitness level depends on your needs, goals, and
    abilities

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The Dietary Guidelines, 2000, recommends that
Americans Be physically active each day.
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Exercise Requires the Right Fuels from Food and
Body Stores
  • Just as an automobile engine runs on energy from
    gasoline, the body machine runs on energy from
    the carbohydrate, fat, and protein in food and
    body stores
  • But before they can be used to fuel activity,
    their energy must be converted into the
    high-energy compound ATP
  • ATP is the immediate source of energy for all
    body functions, including muscle contraction
  • ATP can be generated both in the presence of
    oxygen by aerobic metabolism and in the absence
    of oxygen by anaerobic metabolism

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The oxygen you breathe into your lungs is picked
up by the blood. Your heart pumps this
oxygen-rich blood throughout the body. Oxygen is
taken up by the muscles and other tissues and
used to generate ATP, producing carbon dioxide as
a waste product. Carbon dioxide is removed by
your blood and exhaled through your lungs. When
you exercise your muscles demand more oxygen. You
respond by increasing your heart rate and
breathing faster and deeper to take in and
deliver more oxygen.
Chapter 11 Nutrition, Fitness, and Physical
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When exercise begins, ATP and creatine phosphate
stored in muscles provide ATP for muscle
contraction. As creatine phosphate stores are
depleted, anaerobic metabolism, which breaks down
glucose from the blood or from muscle glycogen,
becomes the predominant source of ATP. After
about 3 minutes, aerobic metabolism, which uses
fatty acids and glucose to produce ATP, takes
over as the predominate source.
Chapter 11 Nutrition, Fitness, and Physical
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In the absence of oxygen, ATP is produced by the
anaerobic metabolism of glucose and lactic acid
is generated. When oxygen is present, ATP is
produced by the aerobic metabolism of glucose,
fatty acids, and amino acids. More ATP is
produced and no lactic acid accumulates.
Chapter 11 Nutrition, Fitness, and Physical
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Whether an activity is aerobic depends how
intense it is
  • When you exercise, ATP is produced by both
    anaerobic and aerobic metabolism
  • The contributions made by each of these systems
    overlap to ensure that your muscles get enough
    ATP to meet the demand you are placing on them
  • Anaerobic metabolism causes fatigue sooner
  • When athletes run out of glycogen, they
    experience a feeling of overwhelming fatigue that
    is sometimes referred to as hitting the wall or
    bonking.
  • Glycogen depletion is a concern for athletes
    because the amount of stored glycogen available
    to produce glucose during exercise is limited
  • You can continue lower-intensity exercise for
    longer periods because it relies on aerobic
    metabolism, which is more efficient than
    anaerobic metabolism and uses both glucose and
    fatty acids for energy

Chapter 11 Nutrition, Fitness, and Physical
Activity
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As exercise intensity increases, the proportion
of energy supplied by carbohydrate also
increases. Remember that during exercise the
total amount of energy expended is greater than
at rest. (Adapted from Horton, E. S. Effects of
low-energy diets on work performance.
Chapter 11 Nutrition, Fitness, and Physical
Activity
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Exercise training allows you to perform more
intense activity without fatigue
  • Training with repeated bouts of aerobic exercise
    causes physiological changes that increase the
    amount of oxygen that can be delivered to and
    used by the muscle cells
  • The heart becomes larger and stronger so that the
    amount of blood pumped with each beat is
    increased
  • Training also causes changes at the cellular
    level that affect the ability of cells to use
    different types of fuel to produce ATP
  • There is an increase in the ability to store
    glycogen, and there is an increase in the number
    and size of muscle-cell mitochondria

Chapter 11 Nutrition, Fitness, and Physical
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Good Nutrition is Essential for Optimal
Performance
  • Athletes have higher energy needs
  • When you expend more energy you need to eat more.
    How much more depends on how intense the activity
    is and how often and how long you exercise
  • The right mix of carbohydrate, fat, and protein
    fuels exercise
  • In general, the diets of physically active
    individuals should contain the same proportion of
    carbohydrate, fat, and protein as is recommended
    to the general publicabout 45 to 65 of total
    energy as carbohydrate, 20 to 35 of energy as
    fat, and 10 to 35 of energy as protein
  • Carbohydrate maintains blood glucose and restores
    glycogen
  • Fat intake should be low enough to allow adequate
    dietary carbohydrate
  • Protein is not a significant energy source,
    accounting for only about 5 of energy expended,
    but dietary protein is needed to maintain and
    repair lean tissues, including muscle

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Changing your activity level can have
a significant impact on your daily
energy expenditure.
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Most diets with enough energy also meet vitamin
and mineral needs
  • Adequate vitamin and mineral intake is essential
    for optimal performance
  • These nutrients are needed for energy production,
    oxygen delivery, antioxidant protection, and
    repair and maintenance of body structures
  • Some nutritional problems are more common among
    athletes
  • Weight loss diets can impair performance and
    health
  • Pressure to perform optimally can lead to eating
    disorders
  • Eating disorders and hormonal abnormalities
    combine to put bones at risk
  • Low iron causes a decline in performance

Chapter 11 Nutrition, Fitness, and Physical
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The female athlete triad includes disordered
eating, amenorrhea, and osteoporosis. Women with
these conditions typically have low body fat and
may experience multiple or recurrent stress
fractures. This syndrome is more common in women
who are perfectionists, highly competitive, and
have a low self-esteem.
Chapter 11 Nutrition, Fitness, and Physical
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Adequate Water is Essential for Health and
Performance
  • Do you drink enough when you are exercising?
  • Most people only drink enough to assuage their
    thirst. Therefore they end their exercise session
    in a state of dehydration and must restore fluid
    balance during the remainder of the day
  • Dehydration occurs when water loss is great
    enough for blood volume to decrease, thereby
    reducing the ability to deliver oxygen and
    nutrients to exercising muscles
  • A 3 reduction in body weight can significantly
    reduce the amount of blood pumped with each heart
    beat because of the lower volume of fluid
  • Dehydration increases the risk of heat-related
    illness
  • An imbalance of water and salt is as dangerous as
    too little water
  • A reduction in the level of sodium in the blood
    is referred to as hyponatremia

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As the degree of dehydration increases, the
adverse effects increase in severity. This can
occur rapidly if water losses are excessive, as
may occur with profuse sweating.
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Fluid needs depend on the length of your workout
  • To ensure hydration adequate fluids should be
    consumed before, during, and after exercise
  • For exercise lasting less than an hour, water is
    the only fluid needed
  • For exercise lasting more than an hour add
    carbohydrate and salt to your water
  • For exercise lasting more than 60 minutes,
    beverages containing a small amount of
    carbohydrate and electrolytes are recommended
  • Small amounts of minerals, including sodium and
    chloride, are lost in sweat, but sweat consists
    mostly of water, so the amounts lost during
    exercise lasting less than 3 to 4 hours are
    usually not enough to affect health or
    performance, particularly if sodium was present
    in the previous meal
  • the common belief that salt pills are necessary
    to replace the sodium lost in sweat and prevent
    dehydration is a misconception

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The Right Food and Drink Can Enhance
Performance
  • Athletes may also need to plan when they eat and
    what they eat before, during, and after
    competition
  • Food eaten at these times may give or take away
    the extra seconds that can mean victory or defeat
  • Make sure you eat before you compete
  • Ideally a pre-exercise meal should provide enough
    fluid to maintain hydration and be high in
    carbohydrate (60 to 70 of calories)
  • In addition to being high in carbohydrate, the
    pre-exercise meal should contain about 300
    Calories and be moderate in protein (10 to 20)
    and low in fat (10 to 25) and fiber to minimize
    GI distress and bloating during competition
  • Keep eating and drinking even when youre on the
    move
  • When you stop exercising your body must shift
    from the task of breaking down glycogen,
    triglycerides, and muscle proteins for fuel to
    the job of restoring muscle and liver glycogen,
    depositing lipids, and synthesizing muscle
    proteins

Chapter 11 Nutrition, Fitness, and Physical
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Do Supplements Enhance Athletic Performance?
  • Citius, altius, fortiusfaster, higher,
    strongerthe Olympic motto
  • For as long as there have been competitions,
    athletes have yearned for somethinganythingthat
    would give them the competitive edge
  • Vitamin supplements are promoted to increase
    energy and antioxidant protection
  • As long as athletes do not consume antioxidant
    supplements in amounts that exceed the Tolerable
    Upper Intake Levels (ULs), there is little risk
    associated with their use
  • However, a diet that includes plenty of fruits
    and vegetables will ensure adequate intakes of
    these nutrients as well as provide other
    antioxidants
  • Mineral supplements are marketed to improve body
    composition or endurance
  • Chromium, vanadium, selenium, zinc, and iron all
    sound tough and strong and all are marketed to
    harden muscles or enhance endurance. As with
    vitamin supplements, many of the claims made
    about these minerals are based on their
    physiological functions. And as with vitamins,
    there is little evidence that consuming more than
    the recommended amount provides any benefits

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Protein and amino acid supplements claimto
provide fuel and build muscle
  • Hundreds of protein supplements are available,
    from powders you mix in your beverage to bars you
    put in your backpack
  • Supplements of individual amino acids are also
    marketed to build muscle. In general these
    supplements are not recommended
  • Ornithine, arginine, and lysine are amino acids
    that are sold with the promise that they will
    increase the production of growth hormone and, in
    turn, enhance the growth of muscles
  • Glutamine supplements promise to increase muscle
    glycogen deposition after intense exercise, to
    enhance immune function, and to prevent the
    adverse effects of over-training such as fatigue
    and increased incidence of certain infections
  • The branched-chain amino acidsleucine,
    isoleucine, and valineare the predominant amino
    acids used for fuel during exercise

Chapter 11 Nutrition, Fitness, and Physical
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Some supplements promise to help endurance by
sparing glycogen
  • Carnitine is needed to get fatty acids into the
    mitochondria
  • Medium chain triglycerides get into the blood
    quickly
  • Much of the fat used by the muscle to generate
    ATP is delivered in the blood, so theoretically,
    higher levels in the blood increase the
    availability of fat as a fuel for exercise
  • Caffeine can wake you up and keep you going
  • Caffeine, the stimulant found in coffee, tea, and
    some soft drinks, not only wakes you up, but may
    enhance your endurance. Caffeine has been shown
    to enhance performance during prolonged
    moderate-intensity endurance exercise and
    short-term intense exercise
  • Athletes who are unaccustomed to caffeine respond
    better than those who routinely consume it
  • In some athletes caffeine may impair performance
    by increasing water loss in the urine or by
    causing gastrointestinal upset
  • Regardless of its effectiveness, athletes should
    know that consuming excess caffeine before a
    competition is illegal

Chapter 11 Nutrition, Fitness, and Physical
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Creatine and bicarbonate can help for short-term
intense exercise
  • Creatine supplements increase muscle creatine
    phosphate
  • Creatine phosphate gives you instant energy. More
    of it should therefore increase the amount of
    short-term intense exercise that can be performed
  • A number of studies have suggested that creatine
    supplements are safe, but controlled toxicology
    studies have not been done and the safety and
    efficacy of the long-term use of high-dose
    supplements is unknown
  • Bicarbonate boosts buffering capacity
  • Intense anaerobic exercise produces lactic acid
  • If too much accumulates in the muscles it impairs
    muscle function and causes pain and fatigue

Chapter 11 Nutrition, Fitness, and Physical
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40
Healthy eating helps performance more thanherbs
or hoaxes
  • The foundation of good athletic performance is a
    healthy diet, talent, and hard work
  • A healthy diet is one that provides the right
    number of calories to keep your weight in the
    desirable range the proper balance of
    carbohydrate, protein, and fat to fuel your
    activity and maintain your tissues plenty of
    water and sufficient but not excessive amounts
    of essential vitamins and minerals
  • It is rich in whole grains, fruits, and
    vegetables, high in fiber, moderate in fat and
    sodium, and low in saturated fat, cholesterol,
    trans fat, and added sugars
  • Your performance can be further improved by using
    appropriate foods and fluids to help you refuel
    and rehydrate during workouts and events

Chapter 11 Nutrition, Fitness, and Physical
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41
This pyramid illustrates the relative value of
various nutrition strategies for exercise
performance. The most significant benefit is
achieved by eating a healthy overall diet. Foods
and beverages used to supply energy and ensure
hydration during an event can provide additional
benefits but ergogenic aids provide little or no
performance boost. (Adapted from Burke, L.
Supplements in sport-nutritional ergogenic aids.
Chapter 11 Nutrition, Fitness, and Physical
Activity
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