Health Chapter 13
cross-training
Participating in two or more activities to develp a variety of fitness components.
Skill-related fitness
Physical abilities that contribute to performance in a sport or activity, including speed, power, agility, balance, coordination and reaction time.
Health-related fitness
Physical capabilities that contribute to health, including cardiorespiratory endurance, muscular strength, muscular endurance, flexibility and body composition.
Exercise
Planned, structured, repetitive movement of the body intended to improve or maintain physical fitness.
Anabolic steroids
Synthetic male hormones used to increase muscle size and strength.
Muscular endurance
The ability of a muscle or group of muscles to remain contracted or to contract repeatedly for long period of time.
Cardiorespiratory endurance
The ability of the body to perfom prolonged, large-muscle, dynamic exercise at moderate to high levels of intensity.
Muscular Strength
The amount of force a muscle can produce with a single maximum effort.
Isotonic (dynamic) exercise
The application of force with movement.
Isometric (static) exercise
The application of force without movement.
Physical Fitness
The body's ability to respond or adapt to the demands and stress of physical effort.
Maximal Oxygen Consumption
The body's maximum ability to transport and use oxygen.
Flexibility
The joints ability to move through their full range of motion.
Fat-free-mass
The nonfat components of the human body, consisting of skeletal muscle, bone and water.
Body composition
The proportion of fat and fat-free mass (muscle, bone and water) in the body.
Kettlebell
A large iron bell with a handle attached varying in weight from about 5 pounds to more than 100 pounds; usually used to perform high-speed resistance exercises.
Electrocardiogram (ECG or EKG)
A recording of the changes in electrical activity of the heart.
Target Heart Rate Range
The range of heart rates that should be reached and maintained during cardiorespiratory endurance exercise to obtain benefits.
Physical Activity
Any body movement carried out by the skeletal muscles that requires energy.
Reversibility
The training principle that fitness improvements are lost when demands on the body are lowered.
Progressive Overload
The training principle that placing increasing amounts of stress (in the form of exercise) on the body causes adaptations that improve fitness.
Specificity
The training principle that the body adapts to the particular type and amount of stress placed on it.
Cardiorespiratory endurance training
Exercise intended to improve cardiorespiratory endurance.
Resistance Exercise
Exercise that forces muscles to contract against increased resistance also called strength training.