What Is Cardiovascular Fitness
What Is Cardiovascular Fitness
What Is Cardiovascular Fitness
Using the same large muscle group, rhythmically, for a period of 15 to 20 minutes
or longer while maintaining 60-80% of your maximum heart rate.
Think of aerobic activity as being long in duration yet low in intensity. Aerobic
activities include: walking, biking, jogging, swimming, aerobic classes and cross-
country skiing. Anaerobic activity is short in duration and high in intensity.
Anaerobic activities include: racquetball, downhill skiing, weight lifting, sprinting,
softball, soccer and football.
Aerobic means with air or oxygen. You should be able to carry on a short
conversation while doing aerobic exercise. If you are gasping for air while talking,
you are probably working anaerobically. When you work anaerobically, you will tire
faster and are more likely to experience sore muscles after exercise is over.
Aerobic exercise conditions the heart and lungs by increasing the oxygen available
to the body and by enabling the heart to use oxygen more efficiently. Exercise
alone cannot prevent or cure heart disease. It is only one factor in a total program
of risk reduction; examples of other factors are high blood pressure, cigarette
smoking and high cholesterol level.
Psychological benefits
Heart Size
Stroke Volume
Heart Rate
Cardiac Output
Blood Flow
The existing capillaries in trained muscles can open up more, which increases
blood flow through the capillaries and into the muscles
Blood Pressure
Following endurance training, arterial blood pressure change very little during
standardized submaximal exercise or at maximal work rates.
Blood Volume
Hematocrit is the ratio of red blood cells to total blood volume decreases.
Acute Responses
1. There is only an increase in sheart rate during exercise because the heart needs
to pump more blood to the different muscles. This increase is directly proportional
to the increase of intensity of exercise.
- Average heart rate is 60-70 beats per minute, and during exercise it increases to
165-190 beats per minute
8. Blood volume
-fatigues
- Chest pains
- dizziness, fainting, nausea, cold sweat, lightheadedness
- palpitating, fluttering and missed heart beats- irregular heart beats
- sudden burst and slowing of rapid pulse.
Chronic Responses
1. Heart Structure
- Heart hypertrophy
- Heart weight, volume, ventricle's wall thickness, chamber size
2. Heart Rate
- Resting heart rate, maximal heart rate, steady heart rate are substantially
lowered
- More efficient heart because it can pump needed amount of blood at lower rate
7. Blood pressure
- Resting blood pressure lowers for trained individuals because stroke volume is
greater for slower heart rate
10. Respiratory rate is lowered because of a decrease in the amount of energy used
to move air into and out of the lungs.
11. Pulmonary diffusion increases during maximal exercise
12. Cells have greater ability to utilize oxygen thus the use of anaerobic system is
lowered
13. The body can exercise longer without feeling fatigue because heart is stronger
1. Heredity
Hypertension is one of the diseases that can be inherited. Due to the prolonged
constriction or plaque formations (arteriosclerosis) of the arterioles, there is an
increased resistance to the flow of blood and this in turn causes hypertension. In
order to adapt to this situation, the heart has to beat harder in order to pump the
blood. The heart's walls thicken in time due to the hypertension. And if this persists
for a long time, the heart, being a pump starts to fail leading to what is called heart
failure.
Thus hereditary traits really could affect the cardiovascular fitness of a person.
2. Age
Due to the weakening of the body as it ages, a person could suffer from different
heart ailments. hypertension is one of the heart ailments that could trouble old
people.
3. Sex
A person's gender can also influence their cardiovascular fitness. The variations
between the male and female genetic make-up bring about differences in the
cardiovascular fitness of people. Basically, males have more muscles thatn females
so it can be said that they are physically stronger than their female counterparts.
Thus it can also be concluded that they would be able to perform more vigorous
activities. However, scientific studies have proven that male human beings are
more prone to heart disease than females.
D. FITT Principles
The FITT Principle of Exercise is an easy way to remember the key components of
exercise prescription for body fat loss.
Frequency
The experts say that cardiovascular endurance exercise (such as: WALKAEROBICS)
should be done at a frequency of 3 to 6 days a week. Beginners should start with 3
times a week, skipping at least a day in between. This is generally agreed upon by
experts, but our Walkaerobics study has shown that even less exercise will be
effective for a deconditioned, "couch potato." Even if you start out exercising only
twice a week, you can reap benefits. In fact, exercising too much can cause more
problems than too little, due to problems of fatigue and the increased chances of an
overuse injury. As you get adapted to the exercise you can add additional days, if
you wish. But don't overdo it. Rest one whole day for every three or four days of
exercise. Once injured, we don't return to exercise for a long time, if ever.
Intensity
Most enlightened exercise specialists now agree with the ACSM that the optimal
heart rates during exercise should reach an intensity of 60% or less.
Time
The time or duration of the aerobic portion of the exercise session should be
between 12 minutes and 60 minutes.The less fit you are, the shorter the duration
and the more often you should exercise. As you become leaner and fitter, you will
need to exercise for a longer duration, more intensely, and less often.
When you start your exercise program you may decide to walk around your local
high school track. You might be able to do it for only 5 minutes before feeling tired.
You might find walking takes a tremendous effort and you can't go very fast. Your
heart rate may reach your 60% or may not. Your extra fat may hamper you from
walking fast to raise your heart rate very much. On the other hand, if you have a
strong, healthy heart, your legs, feet, ankles, or lungs , may tire before your heart
has to work at all. Your heart may only get up to its 40% or 50%, but you are still
burning calories (one mile consumes approximately 300 kcals).
Or the opposite might happen. Your extra fat pounds and couch potato life-style
may make walking even a short distance stress your cardiovascular system and
heart, raising your heart rate higher than 60%, and possibly as high as 70% or
80%.
In both cases you should try to achieve a comfortable, moderate pace and if you
return to the track 3 to 5 times a week, you will find that in a period of time you
can walk longer and more briskly. When you can walk for 30 minutes without
stopping and you can sustain a heart rate of 50% to .60%, then 3 times per week
is enough.
Type
Any exercise induced net calorie deficit can result in fat loss.Weight lifting,
however, may lead to a gain in lean body weight and therefore a discouraging gain
in overall weight.Whereas aerobic exercise, such as walking and Walkaerobics,
usually results in a maintenance of lean body weight. Both types can contribute to a
loss of body fat.