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Rehabilitation Exercise. Components of Fitness Lecture 1 FDSc FISM year 1 Janis Leach
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Components of fitness Objectives Discuss the assessment requirements for this module Identify components of physical and motor fitness Apply these to activities Practical session to assess coordination and reaction times
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Assessments - ICA ICA (30%)- 1,500 word report on Physical and Motor fitness tests in week 15. You will compile a short research-based and justified report relating to the application protocols involved for one fitness test chosen from each sub-category of physical fitness (cardio-respiratory fitness, muscular strength, endurance, speed, flexibility, body composition) and motor fitness (agility, balance, coordination, power, reaction time)
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Assessments - ECA ECA (70%) - Practical rehabilitation session with recommendation plan in week 21 and 22. You will plan and demonstrate a 30 minute rehabilitative session for a physical activity injury and produce a treatment plan based on the client’s performance during the practical with justification of recommendations based on scientific underpinnings (1500 words).
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Assessments Formative assessment Week 7 – practice session to put on a NWB session to groups of 4.
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Components of Physical Fitness Strength Speed Flexibility Endurance Body Composition
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Strength Muscle contraction against resistance Concentric contraction Eccentric contraction Isometric contraction Isotonic contraction Exercises?
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Muscle contractions
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Speed Speed is the distance travelled per unit of time without changing direction Speed = Distance / Time Exercises? What can affect speed?
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Flexibility The ability to increase ROM at a joint Different types of flexibility training Dynamic Static Ballistic PNF
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Dynamic stretching Thought to be more beneficial for sports specific movements Think of some examples for Football Tennis
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Static stretching Effective at increasing ROM Research questions the effectiveness of static stretching before exercise Thought to be more beneficial post exercise Examples?
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Ballistic stretching Active muscular movement Momentum to force the limb beyond the normal ROM Not recommended as it doesn’t give the muscle chance to respond to stretch relexes
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PNF stretching Proprioceptive neuromuscular facilitation Isometric agonist contraction/relaxation Example – passive hamstring stretch- agonist pathway Hip flexors contract (agonist movement) Stretch reflex fires in muscle spindles (hamstrings- antagonist) Resistance is applied which fires the golgi tendon organ Golgi tendon organ fires to allow the muscle to relax Therefore the muscle stretches further
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Endurance Aerobic With O 2 – The ability to perform prolonged activity without fatigue Anerobic Without O 2 – Short high intense activity Strength To develop and maintain muscle force Speed High repetitions Exercises?
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Body compostion BMI Height/weight charts Skin fold Measurement of body fat % Somatotype Classification of body types
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Components of Motor Fitness Agility Balance Coordination Power Reaction time
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Agility The ability to change direction Requires a combination of; Speed Strength Balance Coordination Exercises?
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Balance The ability to remain in a stable position Dependent on certain factors Vestibular Visual Auditory Proprioception
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Coordination The ability to control movements Necessary for all activities Hand eye coordination Exercises?
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Power The maximum amount of muscular contraction exerted in an explosive force of movement FORCE x DISTANCE = POWER TIME
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Reaction time The ability to perform a succession of movements which involves muscle contraction, joint movement and the senses Necessary for most activities Exercises?
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Practical Practical session to assess reaction time between 2 groups Practical session to assess hand-eye coordination in pairs.
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