This type of muscle tissue is attached to the skeleton and is under voluntary control.
What is Skeletal Muscle?
This system provides immediate energy for explosive movements lasting under 30 seconds.
What is the ATP-CP system?
This term refers to an increase in muscle size and fiber thickness due to resistance training.
What is Hypertrophy?
When the Biceps contract at the elbow, this muscle acts as the antagonist and relaxes.
What is the Triceps?
Cardiovascular training makes this organ a bigger and more efficient pump.
What is the Heart?
This is the name for the attachment of a muscle to the immovable bone in a joint.
What is the Origin?
This energy system relies on oxygen to create fuel from fats and glucose for long-term exercise.
What is the Oxidative (Aerobic) system?
This is the term for the loss of muscle mass due to inactivity.
What is Atrophy?
This is the name for the muscle in a pair that is actually producing the movement.
What is the Prime Mover?
This type of contraction occurs when the muscle does not change length, like in a plank.
What is an Isometric contraction?
These are the three distinct types of muscle tissue found in the human body.
What are Skeletal, Cardiac, and Smooth muscle?
The body can store roughly this many calories worth of glycogen for vigorous activity.
What is 1,800 to 2,000 calories?
These slow-twitch muscle fibers are fatigue-resistant and best for marathons.
What are Type I fibers?
This muscle is the antagonist to the Quadriceps at the knee.
What are the Hamstrings?
At low to moderate intensities, cardio training preferentially burns this fuel source over glycogen.
What is Fat?
This muscle helps the "prime mover" by stabilizing the joint during a movement.
What is a Synergist (or Fixator)?
This system converts glycogen into ATP for high-intensity efforts lasting 30 seconds to 3 minutes.
What is the Glycolytic (Anaerobic) system?
These muscle fibers contract rapidly and forcefully but fatigue very quickly.
What are Type II (Fast-Twitch) fibers?
This muscle pair controls movement at the front and back of the lower leg (shin and calf).
What are the Tibialis Anterior and the Gastrocnemius (Calves)?
Cardio training increases this within the muscles to improve oxygen transport.
What is vascularization (or capillaries)?
Smooth muscle is found here and is categorized as this type of control.
What are internal organs/blood vessels and Involuntary control?
Energy systems don't work like an on/off switch; they work like this instead.
What is a "dial"?
This is why muscle is considered "expensive" tissue for the body.
What is because it increases the body's caloric needs to sustain itself (metabolic impact)?
These two muscles are an antagonistic pair found in the upper torso/back.
What are the Pectoralis Major and the Latissimus Dorsi?
In concurrent training, this specific energy system should always be trained last.
What is the Glycolytic (Anaerobic) system?