General Ex Phys
History of Ex Phys
Math Math Math
Basic Bioenergetics
Cell Energy Systems
100

Define Exercise Physiology

Ex Phys: Study of function of tissues, organs, and organ systems during exercise

100

During what period of time did PE resemble pre-military training and why?

World War 1- World War 2. This is because many draftees failed induction exams due to poor physical fitness during the first world war

100

What is the magic number for this class?

5

Examples: 5 liters of blood, 5 kcal/LO2

100

Define bioenergetics and metabolism

Bioenergetics: Converting the energy in food into energy that cells can use

Metabolism: Sum of all chemical reactions that occur in the body

100

What are the three sources of energy in muscle cells?

Immediate (anaerobic): ATP and CP 

Glycolytic (anaerobic): Glycogen and Glucose

Oxidative (aerobic): TCA cycle

200

What is the CDC's recommendation for daily exercise?

30 minutes of moderate intensity physical activity a day

200

What caused the paradigm shift in the 1950's and what was that shift?

Autopsies of young soldiers from Korean War and Vietnam Conflict showed significant coronary artery disease had already developed. PE focus shifted from fitness to health from here on out

200

How many kcal/gram for fats and carbohydrates

4 kcal/gram for glucose/carb

9 kcal/gram for fats

200

Define anabolic and catabolic reactions and give an example of each

Anabolic= synthesis of molecules. Ex. gluconeogenesis, protein synthesis

Catabolic= breakdown of molecules. Ex. hydrolysis, glycolysis, breakdown of proteins into amino acids

200

What are the two processes that give Acetyl CoA and what fuel is used?

Glycolysis- glucose/glycogen

Beta Oxidation- fatty acids

300

Which type of exercise is required for health and which is required for fitness?

Physical Activity -> Health

Intense Exercise-> Fitness

300

Which Scientist came up with the control of breathing?

J.S. Haldane

300

How do you calculate work?

Calculate Dr. A's work when he is 59 kg and moved 2m vertically

Work = force x distance

Force in Newtons: 59 kg x 9.8 m/s^2 = 578.2 N

Work = 578.2 x 2 = 1156.4 Nm

Newton Meters (Nm) is the measure of work

300

Define a coupled reaction

The energy given off by the exergonic reaction powers the endergonic reaction

Exergonic: release energy. Endergonic: require energy

300

When does GLUT4 arise to the surface of the cell, what happens to glucose immediately after it enters the cell, and why does that happen?

GLUT4 raises to the surface of the muscle cell during exercise and after a meal

Glucose is phosphorylated into Glucose 6 Phosphate

This is to keep the glucose flux moving into the cell and to prevent Glucose 6 Phosphate from leaving the cell

400

What are the Five Health Related Components of Fitness?

Cardiorespiratory Endurance

Muscular Strength

Muscular Endurance

Flexibility

Body Composition

400

Which scientist's brainchild is the lactate shuttle?

George A. Brooks

400

A person has a VO2max of 3.0 L/min. The person is exercising at 67% of their VO2max. How long can they exercise using blood glucose and blood palmitate without becoming hypoglycemic?

Calculate total glucose. 1 g/L x 5 L = 5 grams of glucose

Calculate how long. 5 g glucose x 4 kcal/ g glucose x LO2/ 5 kcal x min / 2 LO2 = 2 minutes. Only use half, so 1 minute

Calculate total blood palmitate. 1g/L x 5 L = 5 grams of palmitate

Calculate how long. 5 g palmitate x 9 kcal/g x LO2/5 kcal x min/2 LO2 = 4.5 minutes. 4.5 + 1 = 5.5 minutes

400

Define mean vs ATP demand and identify the energy source for each

Peak ATP demand is where your body can not keep up the ATP supply to match the demand, so creatine phosphate is used as a buffer

Mean ATP demand is where your body can keep up the ATP supply to match the demand over time, so ATP is directly used

400

What is the difference between temporal and spatial energetic buffering?

Temporal Energetic Buffering: creatine phosphate is used to keep ATP stores up during the immediate phase of exercise before glycolysis kicks in

Spatial Energetic Buffering: creatine phosphate is made at the mitochondria to carry the phosphate from the mitochondria to the sarcomere because it has an easier time diffusing than ATP and through using creatine phosphate as the phosphate carrier, ATP stores are kept up

500

What is GAS and what are the principles?

GAS= General Adaptation Syndrome

Specificity, Progressive Overload (Frequency, Intensity, Time, Type), Reversibility, Individual Differences

500

Which president created the President's Council on Youth Fitness and which 3 presidents have their own iterations of that committee?


Eisenhower created it, but Kennedy, Nixon, and Obama have their own iterations

500

Calculate VeSTPD, VO2, and VO2 in ml/kg min

Weight: 66.39 kg VeATPS: 29.3 kSTPD = 0.895  FeO2: 0.1823 FeCOS: 0.0232

VeSTPD: 26.2

VO2: 0.81

VO2 ml/kg min: 11.0

500

What is the universal energy donor and describe how it is the universal energy donor using exergonic and endergonic reactions?

ATP is the universal energy donor

Food is turned into carbon dioxide and water in an exergonic reaction and the energy is used in the endergonic reaction of making ATP. That ATP is broken down into ADP and a phosphate in an exergonic reaction that fuels the endergonic reactions that are energy requiring processes in cells.

500
Describe the process of the Electron Transport Chain

NADH donates its H+ to complex 1

Complex 1 donates an electron pair to CoQ which donates that electron pair to complex 3

NADH donates its H+ to complex 3 and the electron pair is donated to cytochrome C which donates the electron pair to complex 4

NADH donates its H+ to complex 4 and the electron pair is donated to oxygen to make water

H+ ions move down the concentration gradient through ATP Synthase to make ATP