Exercise Health / Psych. Well-Being
Bone Health
Obesity / Diabetes
Cardio Disease
Hypokinetic
100

Define the term Mood

a temporary state of mind or feeling.

100

What is the relationship between physical activity and bone health?

What is more physical activity = better bone health?

100

What is a major health consequence of obesity?

It increases the risk of contracting type 2 diabetes.

100

What can obesity, high blood pressure, and insulin resistance lead to?

What is type 2 diabetes?

100

Define the term hypokinetic disease

A disease associated w/ a sedentary (inactive) lifestyle

200

Outline the effects of exercise on changing mood states

boosting "feel-good" chemicals, reducing stress and anxiety, improving sleep, and boosting self-esteem

200

What are long-term consequences of osteoporotic fractures?

What is disability, loss of independence, and impairment of quality of life?

200

How is obesity determined?

What is a Body Mass Index (BMI) of 30 or higher?

200

How does a lifestyle of physical inactivity increase the risk of cardiovascular disease?

It contributes to obesity, high blood pressure, and insulin resistance.

200

Discuss the relationship between major societal changes and hypokinetic disease

Urbanization, altered employment patterns and differences in transportation

300

Discuss the potential barriers to the physical activity

Physical barriers for example, perceptions of being too old or too fat

300

How does bone density change throughout life?

Bone mineral density peaks between ages 35 – 45 and gradually decreases after that.

300

What are the major risk factors for type 2 diabetes?

What is obesity and a family history of type 2 diabetes?

300

What are 3 of the major risk factors for cardiovascular disease?

What is high blood pressure, high cholesterol, smoking, diabetes, obesity, and a lack of physical activity?

300

Distinguish between the term’s physical activity, exercise, and physical fitness

Physical activity: any bodily movement produced by contraction of skeletal muscle that substantially increases energy expenditure 

Exercise: subcategory of leisure-time physical activity in which planned, structure, and repetitive bodily movements are performed to improve or maintain one or more components of physical fitness” 

Physical fitness: health-related fitness (CV fitness, muscular strength & endurance, flexibility, body composition) vs. skill-related fitness (agility, balance, coordination, speed, power, reaction time) 

400

Discuss potential personal and environmental barriers to physical activity

Lack of time, motivation, energy, skills, or confidence, while environmental barriers encompass factors like unsafe or inaccessible locations, lack of facilities, and unfavorable weather.   

400

What are the traits of people who are more prone to getting osteoporosis?

Who are females, people over 60, and people w/ a family history of it?

400

What are the major differences between type 1 and type 2 diabetes?

Type 1 is when the body doesn’t produce insulin and often appears in childhood/adolescence.

Type 2 is when the body is insensitive to insulin, primarily due to poor diet and an inactive lifestyle. Most often appears in adulthood.

400

What is atherosclerosis?

What is hardening of the arteries due to accumulation of fat, cholesterol, and other substances in the walls of the arteries?

400

Discuss how studies of different populations provide evidence of the link between physical activity and hypokinetic disease

Jerry Morris examined prevalence of heart disease in bus drivers and bus conductors on double-decker buses in London, discovered bus conductors experienced half the number of heart attacks and sudden death due to heart attack than the drivers because bus conductors exercised more.

500

Describe the aims of exercise in individuals with a hypokinetic disease 

Reduce risk factors, improve overall health, and enhance quality of life by building muscle, strengthening the heart, promoting blood flow, and burning fat.   

500

What are the major risk factors for osteoporosis?

What is low BMI, low calcium, cigarette smoking, experiencing early menopause, and physical inactivity?

500

What are three health risks of diabetes?

Possible answers: 

- Cerebrovascular disease (stroke)

- Retinopathy (common cause of blindness)

- Coronary heart disease

- Nephropathy (kidney damage)

- Peripheral vascular disease

- Neuropathy (nerve damage)

- Diabetic foot (results in ulceration and amputation)

500

When substances harden in arterial walls (atherosclerosis), what is produced?

What is plaque?

500

Outline the following hypokinetic diseases; coronary heart disease, stroke, hypertension, obesity, type 2 diabetes and osteoporosis

CHD & stroke: often caused by atherosclerosis (hardening of arteries due to cholesterol and fat accumulation in arterial walls, creating plaque), leads to narrowing of arteries, blood clots, and even heart attack 

Hypertension: high blood pressure 

Obesity: excess of body fat that endangers health, calculated in BMI, increases risk of type 2 diabetes 

Type 2 diabetes: insensitive to insulin, AKA hyperglycemia, often have high insulin values (hyperinsulinemia) and high glucose values, often adult onset due to poor diet and lack of physical activity 

Osteoporosis: low bone mineral density (BMD), osteoporotic fractures can lead to disability, female, people over 60, and those w/ a family history of it are most prone to osteoporosis, but can also be triggered by low BMI, low calcium, cigarette smoking, early menopause, and physical inactivity 

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