Physiological Response To Exercise
Components of Fitness and Training Principles
Energy Systems
Muscular Skeletal System
Miscellaneous
100

Immediate Effects of Exercise

What is Acute Effects?

100

The two fitness components related to endurance

What is Cardiovascular and Muscular

100

The chamber of the heart that pushes blood out to the body

What is the Left Ventricle

100

Proteins that build the Sarcomere

What is Actin and Myosin

100

EPOC

What is Excessive Post-Exercise Oxygen Consumption

200

Long term adaptations to exercise

What are Chronic Effects

200

The 3 components of Fitness related to Muscles

What is Endurance, Strength, Power

200

Two Anaerobic Respiration Systems

What is Glycolysis (ATP-PC) and Lactate Acid System

200

The 4 muscles that are commonly referred to as the Quadriceps

What are the Rectus Femoris, Vastus Lateralis, Medialis, Intermedius

200

The point where Muscle and Blood Lactate Increase Rapidly

What is Lactate Threshold

300

What are 3 Acute Responses to exercise

What is 

  1. Increased Heart Rate

  2. Increased Respiration Rate

  3. Increased Stroke Volume (blood per beat)

  4. Increased Cardiac Output (blood per minute)

  5. Increased VO2 (amount of O2 uptake)

  6. Increased Tidal Volume (lung capacity)

  7. Increased Systolic Blood Pressure (blood pressure each beat)

  8. Increased Blood to working muscles 

300

The 9 Effective Training Principles

What is 

Overload Principle 

Adaptation Principle

Principle of Specificity 

Stress - Rest Principle 

Contraction-Control Principle 

The Principle of Symmetry 

Ceiling Principle 

Maintenance Principle 

Principle of Reversibility 

300

The molecule that binds with Hydrogen to form Lactate Acid

What is Pyruvate

300

Calcium Storage site in the Muscle Fibre

What is Sarcoplasmic Reticulum

300

The Lactate Threshold Represents...

What is the maximal intensity at which steady-state exercise can be maintained.

400

What are 3 Chronic Adaptations to exercise

What is 

Increased O2 carrying capacity of blood

2. Increased blood supply as increased capillaries

3. Increased number of blood vessels

4. Lungs can take in and distribute more O2

5. Increased heart size (Cardiac hypertrophy)

6. Decreased resting heart rate

7. Increased Stroke volume at rest

8. More glycogen stored in muscle

9. Increased muscle size and strength

400

The definition of SAID Specificity

What is 

Specific, Adaptation, Imposed, Demands

400

The 3 Aerobic Respiration systems

What is 

Glycolysis

Kreb’s Cycle

Electron Transfer Chain (ETC)

400

The 4 stages of Muscle Contraction (Innervation)

What is Twitch, Summation, Unfused Tetanus, Tetanus

400

Force that can be measured when the foot hits the ground

What is Ground Reaction Force

500

Name 5 Components of Fitness

What is 

1. Increased O2 carrying capacity of blood

2. Increased blood supply as increased capillaries

3. Increased number of blood vessels

4. Lungs can take in and distribute more O2

5. Increased heart size (Cardiac hypertrophy)

6. Decreased resting heart rate

7. Increased Stroke volume at rest

8. More glycogen stored in muscle

9. Increased muscle size and strength

500

FITT protocol for Muscular Endurance

What is 


500

Respiration system that creates the most Adenosine Tri-phosphate and how many

What is ETC - 34

500

The two Minerals deficiency can contribute to Cramp

What is Magnesium and Calcium

500

Subject taught by the best teachers in the school

What is Math

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