Title: Developing Flexibility and Muscular Fitness
1Developing Flexibility and Muscular Fitness
2- At one time physical fitness programs consisted
almost entirely of strength and flexibility
exercises. - Today, as the emphasis on balanced fitness grows,
muscular strength, muscular endurance, and
flexibility are assuming new importance. - They can enhance the ability to perform daily
tasks and athletic performance. - Muscular fitness makes it easier to perform
routine activities such as carrying groceries
upstairs, lifting a child, and moving the couch.
It is perhaps the most important fitness
component for older adults because muscular
fitness is essential for carrying out activities
of daily living that help maintain functional
independence. - Flexibility enables us to reach, bend, twist, and
perform movements without excessive tightness or
stiffness. - Enhanced muscular fitness allows us to perform
vigorous activities with less risk of straining
muscles or connective tissue, and so it is
important in the prevention and rehabilitation of
injuries.
3FLEXIBILITY
- The ability to move the joints through their full
range is an asset that can be maintained
throughout life. - As children, we are naturally flexible, but as we
age, flexibility tends to decrease. - Disuse, injury, excessive body fat, and muscle
imbalances are common factors in this loss of
range of motion. - You can maintain youthful flexibility by
incorporating stretching into your regular
workouts. - The flexibility exercises in this section are
grouped as follows a basic fitness flexibility
program with exercises for joggers, walkers,
aerobic dancers, cyclists, swimmers, and water
exercisers and examples of PNF partner-assisted
stretches.
4Benefits and Cautions
- Six main benefits can be gained from flexibility
development - may decrease the risk of injury. When tight
muscles restrict the natural range of motion of a
joint, the slightest unusual twist can cause a
strain or pull, such as a strained hamstring.
Inflexibility also is a precipitating factor in
overuse injuries such as tendinitis, because
inelastic muscles transfer excessive stress to
even less pliable connective tissue. - counteracts age-related declines in
flexibility. - It decreases aches and pains. Tight, inflexible
muscles pull unevenly across joints, causing
skeletal misalignment, poor posture, unnecessary
fatigue, and muscle and joint pain. Stretching
can alleviate these problems. - It increases the ability to move freely and
easily and to perform activities such as bending
down to tie your shoes, scratching your back, and
turning to look back as you are driving. - It enhances athletic performance. In
racquetball, golf, tennis, volleyball, and
swimming, greater range of motion and ability to
apply force through that range of motion can
confer a winning edge. - It feels good. Stretching reduces muscular
tension, promoting relaxation.
5Types of Flexibility
- There are two basic types of flexibility static
and dynamic. - Static flexibility refers to the range of motion
that can be achieved through a slow, controlled
stretch. Static stretching techniques are those
in which you slowly stretch a muscle to the point
of tension and hold, such as in holding a sitting
hamstring stretch. The stretching force is
provided by gravity or the force of one limb
pulling on another. When a muscle is stretched
and held at a constant length, after a period of
time there is a gradual loss of tension and
muscle lengthening - Dynamic flexibility is the range of motion
achieved by quickly moving a limb to its limits.
Dynamic stretching programs employ swinging or
ballistic moves such as a high forward kick. - While both types of stretching can increase
flexibility, static stretching is preferred in
health-related fitness programs because it is
highly effective and carries little risk of
muscle or joint strain.
6Principles of Flexibility Development
- Both types of flexibility are specific to the
joint that is, flexibility in one leg does not
guarantee identical flexibility in the other leg,
and flexibility in the shoulders does not ensure
flexibility in the lower back. - An individual's flexibility range for a
particular joint is not only specific but also
partially genetically determined. - Flexibility is determined by joint structure and
elasticity of muscle and connective tissue. - While you may not be able to change your
genetics, you can improve your flexibility within
your genetically determined range of motion. - Flexibility exercises are only part of a balanced
fitness program. The goal is to develop and
maintain an adequate range of joint motion for
ease of movement in your daily activities.
7- Flexibility gains are proportional to the
overload applied to the frequency, intensity,
and time (duration) of stretching. - Frequency Stretch at least 2 to 3 days a week,
daily if possible. Greater flexibility is
produced by more frequent stretching. - Intensity Low-intensity stretching is best.
Progress at your speed. - Stretching is not competitive.
- Flexibility changes from day to day, and on some
days you might not be able to stretch as far as
you did the day before. - Stretch slightly beyond the normal range of
motion, to the point of tension, and hold. Do not
force a stretch.
8- Time The ACSM recommends a 10- to 30-second
stretch, though holding up to 60 seconds in a
cool-down stretch can increase flexibility
retention. - Repetitions At least four 10- to 30-second
sustained stretches for each muscle group are
recommended.
9Guidelines for Flexibility Development
- Everyone can benefit from flexibility. To
maximize the results from the time invested,
implement the following guidelines in your next
stretching session - Warm up before stretching.
- After warm-up, use stretching as preparation
for activity. - While some feel that stretching during warm-up
decreases the risk of injury in the activity that
follows, there is no evidence that this is true. - Warm-up stretching is different from a planned
program of stretching for general flexibility.
Warm-up stretching can be limited to what is
essential, avoiding overstretching. Stretch the
muscle groups used in the activity, hold at the
point of tension for 10 seconds, and do not push
for flexibility increases. Any gains will be
minimal due to the tightening effect of the
workout that follows.
10Guidelines for Flexibility Development
- Stretch for flexibility during cool-down.
Muscles are warmest and most elastic at this
point. Stretching is easier. More permanent
changes in musclelengthening occur with
low-force, long-duration stretching if muscles
are allowed to cool in a stretched position.
Cooling muscles before releasing tension
apparently causes muscle collagen (connective
tissue), like stretched taffy, to stabilize
toward its new stretched length. - Stop at the point of tension, not pain.
Stretching to the point of pain, or until muscles
quiver, can risk overstretching injury. - Stretch slowly and evenly, hold 10 to 30
seconds and release slowly. - Don't bounce. A slow sustained stretch is more
effective. - Incorporate 8 to 12 stretches into your
program.
11Guidelines for Flexibility Development
- Pay particular attention to body areas that are
least flexible and stretch them more often. - Strive for muscle balance. When stretching
muscle on one side of a joint, stretch those on
the other side as well for example, if you
stretch hamstrings, stretch quadriceps too.
12Flexibility exercises
13Other Programs for Enhancing Flexibility
- Tai chi and yoga are very old yet newly popular
activities that can enhance flexibility and
balance as well as reduce stress.
14Resistance Training Benefits and Cautions
- Resistance training can offer additional benefits
whether your goal is health-related fitness or
improved athletic performance - Muscle is active, high-metabolic tissue, while
fat is storage tissue. Resistance training
increases muscle mass, which increases the rate
at which you burn calories 24 hours a day, not
just during the workout. This makes weight
control easier
15Injury Prevention
- Aerobic exercises such as jogging and aerobic
dance have the potential to cause injury through
repetitive, forceful impact against unyielding
surfaces - Strong, flexible muscles and connective tissue
can better withstand the stress of many forceful
landings during a workout. When ligaments,
tendons, muscle, and bone are strengthened
through muscular exercise, the risk of injury is
decreased.
16Psychological Benefits
- While many people begin an exercise program to
improve appearance, many other less visible but
equally important effects may result. Benefits in
the emotional dimension of wellness from regular
exercise include feeling better, decreased
stress, decreased depression, and enhanced
self-esteem and self-confidence.
17Social Benefits
- In addition to offering physical and
psychological benefits, lifting with a partner or
friend offers social benefits. - There are many more opportunities for
conversation and interaction when you work out
with someone than when you watch a movie. - Benefits at Any Age Regardless of your age, you
can benefit from resistance training. It is
untrue that loss of strength is inevitable with
age or that older people cannot gain strength. - While the typical sedentary individual can lose
up to 30 percent of his or her muscle mass
between the ages of 20 and 70, this loss is more
from atrophy due to disuse rather than from aging
alone. - Adequate levels of muscular strength are
particularly important to older adults to
maintain their functional independence and
quality of life. - Several studies including people in their 70s,
80s, and 90s participating in resistance training
have shown that they increased muscle mass, more
than doubled their strength, and improved their
functional mobility and ability to perform daily
living activities.
18Disadvantages and Cautions
- Although resistance training has many benefits,
it does have disadvantages. - Resistance training is not a complete exercise
program because it does not develop
cardiorespiratory endurance. - As in any physical activity, injury is possible
if you are careless or ignore safety procedures.
You may have trouble accessing equipment. - Also, you can expect some mild muscle soreness
during the first week of the program.
19Muscle Function
- Muscles are made of individual muscle fibers
bound together and sheathed in connective tissue.
They end in a tendon that connects the muscle to
a bone. - Resistance training increases the size and
strength of both fiber types as well as their
ability to exert force. Muscles cannot expand and
push. - Movement is produced as muscle contracts,
shortens, and pulls on bones across a joint. - As a muscle on one side of a bone contracts,
muscles on the other side must relax to allow
movement to occur. The contracting muscle that
initiates movement is called the agonist. -
- Biceps curl demonstrating muscle function.
20Muscle Fiber Recruitment
- When a muscle contracts, only the number of
muscle fibers required for that momentary effort
will shorten. - Individual muscle fibers cannot contract
partially. They are working as hard as possible
or not at all. This is called the all-or-nothing
principle. - On each subsequent contraction, more fibers must
be recruited to continue to lift the same weight.
After several muscle contractions, enough fibers
are fatigued that the muscle temporarily can no
longer generate the same effort in what is called
temporary muscular failure. - Muscle fibers increase strength only if they are
stimulated by intensity of effort. - If your goal is to develop maximal muscular
strength, try to recruit, or activate, as many
muscle fibers as possible by working a muscle to
a state of temporary muscular failure. - If you are working for health-related fitness
levels, a less intense effort is adequate.
21Muscle Atrophy and Hypertrophy
- Muscles adapt to the load placed on them. When
the load increases over time, muscular strength
and endurance improve. When muscles are not used,
they grow weaker, stiffen, and atrophy, or shrink
in size. - A dramatic example of muscle atrophy occurs when
a person has an injured limb in a cast for
several weeks. When the cast is removed, the
muscles of the affected limb are noticeably
smaller. Increasing amounts of exercise over time
are necessary to rebuild muscle strength, size,
and flexibility. - When muscles are stimulated by an increased
workload, they grow stronger and muscle fibers
experience hypertrophy, or increase in size. - This increase occurs in both men and women and is
proportional to muscle mass. The average man has
about twice the muscle mass of the average woman,
and so hypertrophy in men is more pronounced.
22Gender Differences
- Some women worry that they will develop big
shoulders or massive, masculine musculature
because of weight training. - This myth is reinforced by televised images of
women's body-building competitions. - Be assured that shoulder width, like hip width,
is influenced by genetics and that significant
muscle gains require hours of strenuous weight
lifting for many months. - Men have a greater potential for muscle
hypertrophy than women do because men have higher
levels of sex hormones such as androgen and
testosterone, which promote muscle growth. - Some of the strongest women athletes are
gymnasts, who have very feminine physiques. - Weight training is also popular with TV and
movie stars who exercise to maintain a fit, toned
appearance and help control weight. Be assured
that massive muscles don't occur by accident or
with a 20- to 30-minute muscle-toning workout
twice a week.
23Types of Resistance Training Programs
- Two basic types of muscular exercise are static
(isometric) and dynamic (isotonic). Different
resistance programs have been developed for each
type.
24Static (Isometric) Exercise
- Static (isometric) exercise is exercise in which
the muscle contracts but does not change length
and little or no movement occurs - However, these exercises are not widely used
because resistance is applied at only one point
in your range of motion, and thus strength
development is limited. - Also, it is difficult to know how much force is
being exerted, and so strength gains are not as
easy to observe as they are when equipment is
being used. - However, static exercises can be useful in
strengthening muscles after an injury, when
dynamic movement would be painful or even
increase injury.
25Dynamic (Isotonic) Exercise
- Dynamic (isotonic) exercise is exercise in which
the muscle contracts and shortens and movement
occurs. - Most daily activities, such as pushing, pulling,
and lifting, are dynamic. - Dynamic exercise programs can be done with free
weights, exercise machines, elastic resistance,
or calisthenics such as crunches and push-ups.
Advantages of dynamic exercise are that it
strengthens through a full range of motion, the
load is measurable, and a variety of isotonic
programs are available.
26Dynamic exercise involves two types of muscle
contractions concentric and eccentric
- In a concentric contraction, a muscle shortens as
it overcomes resistance. For example, a weight is
lifted as the biceps contract during the lifting
phase of a biceps curl. - Eccentric contraction occurs when a muscle
lengthens and contracts at the same time,
gradually allowing a force to overcome muscular
resistance for example, the biceps contract
eccentrically during the lowering phase of a
biceps curl. - Eccentric contraction is a beneficial component
of strength development because it makes up half
of the muscular effort. - The same muscles are involved in eccentric and
concentric contractions, and so lowering should
be done in a smooth, controlled manner for
maximal benefit and to prevent potential injury
from dropping the weight
27Principles of Resistance Training
- Strength gains are proportional to the load
applied and the frequency and intensity of
effort. Basic principles of resistance training
include progressive overload, specificity, and
recovery.
28Progressive Overload
- Progressive overload is the most important
principle of resistance training. - To stimulate a muscle to increase strength or
endurance, it must gradually be overloaded or
forced to work at a higher than normal effort. - Either the number of lifts (repetitions)
performed or the amount of weight (load or
resistance) must gradually be increased or
recovery time between exercises must be
decreased. Increasing the number of repetitions
or decreasing rest increases muscular endurance.
Increasing the weight lifted increases strength. - General programs increase load and repetitions
until a desired maintenance goal is reached. You
must exercise two to three times a week to
improve muscular fitness. Significant strength
gains require at least 8 consecutive weeks of
training. - To maintain strength, one intense workout is
adequate for health fitness. Athletes will need
to train at least twice a week to maintain
fitness in the off-season.
29Specificity
- The speed of contraction, range of motion, amount
and type of resistance, and number and type of
exercise are a few of the variables that
determine the results of strength training. - If you desire a specific result, such as an
increase in muscle mass, your program must be
designed and executed to produce that result.
30Recovery
- Exercise stimulates a muscle to take in more
protein and nutrients and undergo changes that
increase its ability to contract forcefully. - After a workout, you will be weaker, not
stronger, due to fatigue. Improvement occurs
during recovery, which gives the muscle fibers
time to repair and grow. - This requires more recovery time than for the
cardiorespiratory system. Strength workouts are
best done with 2 to 3 days of rest between
sessions to allow recovery and improvement to
occur. - Lifting may be done more frequently, using a
split routine with the upper body one day and the
lower body the next
31Guidelines for Resistance Training Programs
32Safety Guidelines for Resistance Training
33Major muscles of the body.
34Basic Resistance Training Programs
There are many types of resistance-training
programs. The type of program you select will
depend on your goals and the type of equipment
(if any) you plan to use
35Free weight exercises
36- There are many ways to develop muscular strength
and endurance. While weight training is an
excellent program, it is not always convenient. - The abdominal and core strengthening, hip and
thigh, and upper-body programs require no special
equipment. Partner exercises add a social
dimension to a workout. - Elastic resistance produces results without bulky
equipment and is easy to take with you for
exercise on a trip. - While weights add intensity to a workout, they
are not always necessary when the goal is to
shape and tone. - Muscles develop firmness by working against a
resistance, and that resistance can be your body
weight. - These programs emphasize muscular endurance
rather than strength by increasing time in
contraction or reps. .
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39Elastic resistance exercises.