NASA Logo

NTRS

NTRS - NASA Technical Reports Server

Back to Results
Exercise detraining: Applicability to microgravityPhysical training exposes the various systems of the body to potent physiologic stimuli. These stimuli induce specific adaptations that enhance an individual's tolerance for the type of exercise encountered in training. The level of adaptation and the magnitude of improvement in exercise tolerance is proportional to the potency of the physical training stimuli. Likewise, our bodies are stimulated by gravity, which promotes adaptations of both the cardiovascular and skeletal muscles. Exposure to microgravity removes normal stimuli to these systems, and the body adapts to these reduced demands. In many respects the cessation of physical training in athletes and the transition from normal gravity to microgravity represent similar paradigms. Inherent to these situations is the concept of the reversibility of the adaptations induced by training or by exposure to normal gravity. The reversibility concept holds that when physical training is stopped (i.e., detraining) or reduced, or a person goes from normal gravity to microgravity, the bodily systems readjust in accordance with the diminished physiologic stimuli. The focus of this chapter is on the time course of loss of the adaptations to endurance training as well as on the possibility that certain adaptations persist, to some extent, when training is stopped. Because endurance exercise training generally improves cardiovascular function and promotes metabolic adaptations within the exercising skeletal musculature, the reversibility of these specific adaptations is considered. These observations have some applicability to the transition from normal to microgravity.
Document ID
19940023861
Acquisition Source
Legacy CDMS
Document Type
Conference Paper
Authors
Coyle, Edward F.
(Texas Univ. Austin, TX, United States)
Date Acquired
September 6, 2013
Publication Date
February 1, 1994
Publication Information
Publication: NASA. Johnson Space Center, Workshop on Countering Space Adaptation with Exercise: Current Issues
Subject Category
Aerospace Medicine
Accession Number
94N28364
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Work of the US Gov. Public Use Permitted.
No Preview Available