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Cover image for Exercise physiology : a thematic approach
Title:
Exercise physiology : a thematic approach
Personal Author:
Series:
Wiley SportTexts Series
Publication Information:
Chichester, NJ : John Wiley & Sons, 2003
ISBN:
9780470846827

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30000010074066 QP301 H34 2003 Open Access Book Book
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Summary

Summary

Exercise Physiology: A Thematic Approach introduces students with little or no background in human biology to the fundamentals of the physiological processes involved in sports performance. Its central theme is the physiological explanation of maximal oxygen uptake, one of the key concepts in sport and exercise physiology courses. It also includes material on anaerobic metabolism, carbon dioxide excretion and some special cases such as oxygen uptake at altitude and in a variety of extreme climates. Clearly written to provides a logical, linear development of the key concepts. Maximises the use of student's practical laboratory experiences. Includes numerous sporting examples to which students can relate. Excellent pedagogy including learning objectives, problems, objective tests and a glossary of terms and symbols.

This is the first title in an exciting new series of Sports Science textbooks - Wiley SportTexts . It aims to provide textbooks covering the key disciplines within the academic study of sport. The series adopts a student-centred, interactive, problem-solving approach with the students' immediate practical experience as the starting point.


Author Notes

Professor Tudor Hale , University College, Chichester, UK.


Table of Contents

Series Prefacep. xiii
Acknowledgementsp. xv
Prologuep. 1
1 The Maximal Oxygen Uptake Testp. 9
2 Oxygen from Atmosphere to Bloodp. 37
3 Oxygen Content of the Bloodp. 79
4 Oxygen Delivery and the Heartp. 101
5 Oxygen Distribution and the Circulationp. 125
6 Oxygen Consumption-the Structure and Contraction of Skeletal Musclep. 147
7 Oxygen Consumption in the Muscle Cellp. 173
8 The Interplay between Aerobic and Anaerobic Metabolismp. 207
9 Venous Blood, Carbon Dioxide and Acid-Base Balancep. 229
10 Epilogue-the Factors Limiting Maximal Oxygen Uptakep. 251
11 Postscript-Exercise, Fitness and Healthp. 275
Appendix 1 References and Further Readingp. 297
Appendix 2 Glossaryp. 307
Appendix 3 Origins of Some Termsp. 325
Appendix 4 Answer Key to the Objective Testsp. 327
Indexp. 329
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