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Copyright © 2013. F.A. Davis Company Part II: Applied Science of Exercise and Techniques Chapter 7 Principles of Aerobic Exercise
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Copyright © 2013. F.A. Davis Company Key Terms and Concepts Physical Activity Exercise Physical Fitness Maximum Oxygen Consumption Endurance Aerobic Exercise Training (Conditioning) Adaptation Myocardial Oxygen Consumption Deconditioning
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Copyright © 2013. F.A. Davis Company Energy Systems – Phosphagen, or ATP-PC system – Anaerobic glycolytic system – Aerobic system – Recruitment of motor units – Functional implications Energy Systems, Energy Expenditure, and Efficiency
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Copyright © 2013. F.A. Davis Company Energy Expenditure – Quantification of energy expenditure – Classification of activities Efficiency Energy Systems, Energy Expenditure, and Efficiency (cont'd)
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Copyright © 2013. F.A. Davis Company Cardiovascular Response to Exercise – Exercise pressor response – Cardiac effects – Peripheral effects Net reduction in total peripheral resistance Increased cardiac output Increase in systolic blood pressure Physiological Response to Aerobic Exercise
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Copyright © 2013. F.A. Davis Company Respiratory Response to Exercise Responses Providing Additional Oxygen to Muscle – Increased blood flow – Increased oxygen extraction – Oxygen consumption Physiological Response to Aerobic Exercise (cont'd)
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Copyright © 2013. F.A. Davis Company Signs & Symptoms of Excessive Effort Persistent dyspnea Dizziness/confusion Pain Severe leg claudication Excessive fatigue Pallor, cold sweat Ataxia Pulmonary rales Lack of SBP increase Hypertensive BP > 200/110 Progressive fall in SBP by 10-15mmHg Change in rhythm Delayed Responses: Prolonged fatigue Insomnia Sudden weight gain due to fluid
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Copyright © 2013. F.A. Davis Company Fitness Testing of Healthy Subjects Stress Testing for Convalescing Individuals and Individuals at Risk – Principles of stress testing – Purpose of stress testing – Preparation for stress testing – Termination of stress testing Multistage Testing Testing as a Basis for Exercise Programs
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Copyright © 2013. F.A. Davis Company Frequency Intensity – Overload principle – Individuals at risk – Variables – Specificity principle Time (Duration) Type (Mode) – Reversibility principle Determinants of an Exercise Program
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Copyright © 2013. F.A. Davis Company ACSM, AHA, CDC, Surgeon General – Children: Age 6–17 – Adults: Age 18–65 – Older adults: Age 65 or older – Adults age 50–65 with chronic health conditions General Recommendations for Aerobic Physical Activity
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Copyright © 2013. F.A. Davis Company Warm-Up Period Aerobic Exercise Period – Continuous training – Interval training – Circuit training – Circuit-interval training Cool-Down Period Application Exercise Program
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Copyright © 2013. F.A. Davis Company Cardiovascular Respiratory Metabolic Other Systems Physiological Changes That Occur With Training
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Copyright © 2013. F.A. Davis Company For the Patient With Coronary Disease – Inpatient phase (Phase I) – Outpatient phase (Phase II) – Outpatient program (Phase III) – Special considerations – Adaptive changes Application of Principles of an Aerobic Conditioning Program
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Copyright © 2013. F.A. Davis Company For the Deconditioned Individual and the Patient With Chronic Illness – Deconditioning – Reversal of deconditioning – Adaptations for participation restrictions (disabilities), activity restrictions (functional limitations), and deconditioning – Impairments, goals, and plan of care Applications of Aerobic Training
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Copyright © 2013. F.A. Davis Company Age Differences Children Young Adults Older Adults Heart Rate Stroke Volume Cardiac Output Arteriovenous Oxygen Difference Maximum Oxygen Uptake Blood Pressure Respiration Muscle Mass and Strength Anaerobic Ability
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Copyright © 2013. F.A. Davis Company Hypertension Prehypertensive Stage I Stage II SBP 120-130; DBP 80-89 SBP 130-140; DBP 90- 100 SBP 140-160; DBP 100- 110 SBP > 160; DBP >110
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Copyright © 2013. F.A. Davis Company General Goals of PT intervention – Increase aerobic capacity – Increase ability to perform physical tasks related to self care, home management, community & work integration & leisure activities – Improve physiological response to increased O2 demand – Increased strength, power & endurance – Decreased symptoms associated with increased O2 demand PT Intervention for Pts with CAD
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Copyright © 2013. F.A. Davis Company Increase ability to recognize recurrence & intervention is sought sooner Reduce risk of recurrence Acquire behaviors that foster healthy habits, wellness, & prevention Enhance decision making regarding health, use of health care resources by pt, family, caregivers, etc. PT Intervention - continued
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Copyright © 2013. F.A. Davis Company Unstable Angina Symptomatic heart failure Uncontrolled arrythmias Moderate to severe aortic stenosis Uncontrolled diabetes Acute systemic illness/fever Uncontrolled tachycarida (HR >100 bpm) Resting SBP > 200 mmHG; DBP >110 mmHg Thromophlebitis Contraindications to Aerobic Exercise
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Copyright © 2013. F.A. Davis Company Chest pressure Dyspnea Fatigue Syncope Palpitations Edema – pulmonary/Peripheral – CHF Fluid weight gain – CHF S3 Heart Sound – CHF Renal dysfunction - CHF Clinical Signs & Symptoms CAD/CHF
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Copyright © 2013. F.A. Davis Company Improve physiological reponse to increased O2 demand Improvement of self management of symptoms Increased ability to perform physical tasks Acquire behaviors that foster healthy habits, wellness & prevention Reduction of disability associated with acute or chronic illness Reduction of secondary impairments Improved awareness & use of community resources Increased performance of & independence with ADL’s PT Intervention for CHF - Goals
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Copyright © 2013. F.A. Davis Company Activity Guidelines Self Monitoring – pulse; RPE Symptom recognition & response Nutrition Medications – prescription & OTC Lifestyle issues Psychological/Social Issues Other Pt Education for Pts with CHD
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