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Exercise Prescription

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Exercise Prescription Principles - Fitness Fun-damentals

  • Core framework: FITT-VP guides exercise prescription.
    • Frequency: How often (e.g., aerobic 3-5 days/week; resistance 2-3 days/week).
    • Intensity: How hard (exertion level).
      • Methods: % Heart Rate Reserve (HRR), %HRmax, Rating of Perceived Exertion (RPE 6-20 scale), METs.
      • Moderate: 40-59% HRR; RPE 12-13; 3-<6 METs.
      • Vigorous: ≥60% HRR; RPE ≥14; ≥6 METs.
    • Time (Duration): Length of session (e.g., 20-60 min for aerobic).
    • Type (Mode): Aerobic, muscle-strengthening, flexibility, neuromotor.
    • Volume (Quantity): Total amount (e.g., MET-min/week; target ≥500-1000 MET-min/week).
    • Progression: Gradual increase in F, I, T, or V. FITT Principle and AHA Exercise Recommendations

⭐ General recommendation: 150-300 minutes/week of moderate-intensity OR 75-150 minutes/week of vigorous-intensity aerobic activity, or an equivalent combination for adults for substantial health benefits.

Types of Exercise - Movement Menu

  • Range of Motion (ROM): Maintains/improves joint mobility.
    • Passive (PROM): External force moves joint.
    • Active-Assisted (AAROM): Patient + external aid.
    • Active (AROM): Patient moves joint independently.
  • Strengthening: Increases muscle power.
    • Isometric: Muscle contracts, no joint movement (plank).
    • Isotonic: Constant tension, joint movement.
      • Concentric: Muscle shortens.
      • Eccentric: Muscle lengthens under load.
    • Isokinetic: Constant speed, variable resistance (machine-based). Muscle Contraction Types
  • Endurance (Aerobic): Improves cardiorespiratory fitness.
    • E.g., brisk walking, cycling. Target: 60-80% MHR.
  • Flexibility (Stretching): Increases tissue extensibility.
    • Types: Static, Dynamic, PNF.
  • Balance & Coordination: Enhances stability, proprioception.
    • E.g., single-leg stance, wobble board.
  • Functional: Task-specific, mimics ADLs.

⭐ Eccentric exercises are highly effective for muscle hypertrophy and are crucial in tendinopathy rehabilitation.

Prescription Pointers - Patient Power-Plans

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Screening & Safety - Gains & Groans

  • Screening: PAR-Q+ (Physical Activity Readiness Questionnaire for Everyone); ACSM algorithm. Identify red flags (e.g., chest pain during exertion, syncope, dyspnea at rest).
  • Safety First: Essential warm-up & cool-down. Gradual FITT (Frequency, Intensity, Time, Type) progression. Monitor for adverse symptoms.

    ⭐ The most common adverse event associated with exercise is musculoskeletal injury (MSI).

  • Gains (Benefits): Improved cardiovascular health (↓BP, ↑HDL), ↑muscle strength & bone density, enhanced mood & cognitive function.
  • **Groans (Risks & Contraindications):
    • Absolute: Acute MI (<2 days), unstable angina, uncontrolled symptomatic arrhythmias, symptomatic severe aortic stenosis, acute pulmonary embolism.
    • Relative: Severe arterial hypertension (systolic BP ≥200 mmHg or diastolic BP ≥110 mmHg at rest), significant electrolyte abnormalities.

ACSM Pre-participation Screening Algorithm

High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways

  • FITT principle (Frequency, Intensity, Time, Type) is fundamental for exercise prescription.
  • Monitor intensity via Target Heart Rate (Karvonen) or Borg RPE scale (6-20).
  • Aerobic exercise (e.g., walking) for cardio fitness; aim 150 mins/week moderate.
  • PRE (e.g., DeLorme, Oxford) builds muscle strength; DeLorme uses increasing weight.
  • Stretching improves Range of Motion (ROM); balance exercises prevent falls.
  • Key contraindications: acute MI, unstable angina, acute systemic illness.

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