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Energy for Muscle Contractions

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Energy for Muscle Contractions Anatomy & Physiology Chapter 6 Energy for Muscle Contractions Your muscles have various ways of providing the energy necessary to ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Energy for Muscle Contractions


1
Energy for Muscle Contractions
  • Anatomy Physiology
  • Chapter 6

2
Energy for Muscle Contractions
  • Your muscles have various ways of providing the
    energy necessary to perform a muscle contraction.
  • 4 possible ways to meet the energy needs of a
    muscle follow

3
Plan A
  • Immediate and direct source is on-site ATP
    molecules.
  • Fibers contain enough ATP to sustain contractions
    for 5-6 seconds
  • Chemical equation
  • ATP ? ADP phosphate energy

4
Plan A On-site ATP
  • Involves breakdown of stored glycogen to glucose
    into pyruvate, which is then converted to lactic
    acid.
  • However, if lactic acid accumulates, fatigue
    results

5
Plan B
  • Creatine Phosphate
  • This is a high energy compound used to produce
    ATP
  • Provides for about 15 seconds of maximal
    contraction
  • Chemical equation
  • Creatine phosphate ? creatine phosphate
    energy
  • The energy created here is used to convert
  • ADP phosphate ? ATP

6
Plan C
  • Glycogen
  • On-site ATP and creatine phosphates have been
    exhausted.
  • Stored glycogen ? ATP (thru glycolysis)
  • Anaerobic process good for another 30-40 seconds
    of maximum muscular contractions
  • Can go to aerobic respiration if enough oxygen is
    available (provides for even longer period of
    contractions)

7
Plan C Glycogen Cellular Resp.
  • Pyruvate turned into acetyl CoA, which then
    enters Krebs cycle. complete breakdown of the
    glucose molecule.
  • Provides 20x more ATP than anaerobic respiration
  • Useful during endurance exercise
  • BUT
  • Anaerobic is 2.5x faster than aerobic
  • Note Activities requiring sudden surges of
    power (tennis, soccer) use aerobic anaerobic

8
Plan D
  • Alternate Metabolic Pathways
  • As exercise intensity increases, and glycogen
    stores are depleted, alternate sources are
    converted to glucose (gluconeogenesis)
  • Must be enough oxygen available to switch to
    these sources (aerobic)
  • Start to metabolize lipids
  • Start to metabolize proteins

9
Aerobic vs. Anaerobic
  • Aerobic means "with oxygen."
  • Aerobic exercise is any large muscle activity
    that you can sustain for two to three minutes or
    longer, because exercising for prolonged periods
    requires a source of oxygen and its delivery to
    the muscles.
  • Because aerobic exercise requires oxygen from the
    air to get to your muscles, the exercise can
    continue only when a source of oxygen is
    available.
  • Your heart and lungs work together to supply
    oxygen to tissues in your body.

10
Aerobic vs. Anaerobic
  • The term "anaerobic" means "without air" or
    "without oxygen."
  • Anaerobic exercise uses muscles at high intensity
    and a high rate of work for a short period of
    time.
  • Anaerobic exercise helps us increase our muscle
    strength and stay ready for quick bursts of
    speed.

11
Homeostasis of Muscle Tissues
  • How do your muscle maintain homeostasis?

12
Oxygen Debt
  • Occurs when muscular exertion is so great that
    the cardiovasular system can not meet the muscle
    fibers oxygen needs.
  • Anaerobic glycolysis produces the ATP
  • Lactic acid is then produced when not enough O2
    is available

13
Oxygen Debt
  • Example
  • You run the 100 meter dash in 12 seconds.
  • This exercise requires 6 liters of oxygen for
    total aerobic respiration.
  • Actual oxygen that can be delivered to muscles is
    only 1.2 liters.
  • You now have an oxygen debt of 4.8 liters.

14
Paying back the Debt
  • Involves
  • Converting lactic acid back into pyruvic acid
    (80 of this occurs in the liver causing an
    increase in blood pH)
  • Replenishing ATP in muscle fiber
  • Replenishing creatine phosphate
  • Payback of oxygen borrowed from
  • Hemoglobin
  • Myoglobin
  • Oxygen in lungs and other body fluids

15
Maximal Oxygen Uptake
  • The maximum capacity for oxygen consumption by
    the body during maximum exertion.
  • OR
  • How much oxygen your body can take in during
    exercise lasting over 1 minute.
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