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The following lists terms that are commonly used in discussions of exercise
and physical activity. Calorie
A measure of energy from food. (3,500 kilocalories of food energy = 1 pound
of body weight). Also the amount of heat required to raise the temperature
of 1 gram of water 1° C (1000 calories = 1 kilocalorie). An interesting
fact: When we see "Calories" on a food label it is actually measuring
kilocalories
Cardiorespiratory fitness (also
called aerobic endurance or aerobic fitness)
Cardiorespiratory endurance is the ability of the body's circulatory and
respiratory systems to supply fuel and oxygen during sustained physical
activity.
Exercise
Exercise is physical activity that is planned or structured. It involves
repetitive bodily movement done to improve or maintain one or more of the
components of physical fitness—cardiorespiratory endurance (aerobic
fitness), muscular strength, muscular endurance, flexibility, and body
composition.
Household physical activity
Household physical activity includes (but is not limited to) activities such
as sweeping floors, scrubbing, washing windows, and raking the lawn.
Inactivity
Inactivity is not engaging in any regular pattern of physical activity
beyond daily functioning.
Kilocalorie
The amount of heat required to raise the temperature of 1 kg of water 1° C.
Kilocalorie is the ordinary calorie discussed in food or exercise
energy-expenditure tables and food labels.
Leisure-time physical activity
Leisure-time physical activity is exercise, sports, recreation, or hobbies
that are not associated with activities as part of one's regular job duties,
household, or transportation.
MET
The standard metabolic equivalent, or MET, level. This unit is used to
estimate the amount of oxygen used by the body during physical activity.
1 MET = the energy (oxygen) used by the body as you sit quietly,
perhaps while talking on the phone or reading a book.
The harder your body works during the activity, the higher the MET.
- Any activity that burns 3 to 6 METs is considered moderate-intensity
physical activity.
- Any activity that burns > 6 METs is considered
vigorous-intensity physical activity.
Moderate-intensity physical activity
Moderate-intensity physical activity refers to a level of effort in which a
person should experience:
- Some increase in breathing or heart rate
- a "perceived exertion" of 11 to 14 on the Borg scale
- the effort a healthy individual might expend while walking briskly,
mowing the lawn, dancing, swimming, or bicycling on level terrain, for
example.
- 3 to 6 metabolic equivalents (METs); or
- any activity that burns 3.5 to 7 Calories per minute (kcal/min)
Occupational physical activity
Occupational physical activity is completed regularly as part of one's job.
It includes activities such as walking, hauling, lifting, pushing,
carpentry, shoveling, and packing boxes.
Physical activity
Physical activity is any bodily movement produced by skeletal muscles that
result in an expenditure of energy.
Physical fitness
Physical fitness is a set of attributes a person has in regards to a
person's ability to perform physical activities that require aerobic
fitness, endurance, strength, or flexibility and is determined by a
combination of regular activity and genetically inherited ability.
Regular physical activity
A pattern of physical activity is regular if activities are performed:
- most days of the week, preferably daily;
- 5 or more days of the week if moderate-intensity activities (in bouts
of at least 10 minutes for a total of at least 30 minutes per day); or
- 3 or more days of the week if vigorous-intensity activities (for at
least 20-60 minutes per session).
Note: These are minimum recommendations, greater health outcomes can be
achieved by doing additional types activities and/or increasing time spent
doing activities.
Transportation physical activity
Transportation physical activity is walking, biking or wheeling (for
wheelchair users), or similar activities to and from places such as: work,
school, place of worship, and stores.
Vigorous-intensity physical activity
Vigorous-intensity physical activity may be intense enough to represent a
substantial challenge to an individual and refers to a level of effort in
which a person should experience:
- large increase in breathing or heart rate (conversation is difficult
or “broken”)
- a "perceived exertion" of 15 or greater on the Borg scale;
- the effort a healthy individual might expend while jogging, mowing
the lawn with a nonmotorized pushmower, participating in high-impact
aerobic dancing, swimming continuous laps, or bicycling uphill, carrying
more than 25 lbs up a flight of stairs, standing or walking with more
than 50 lbs for example.
- greater than 6 metabolic equivalents (METs); or
- any activity that burns more than 7 kcal/ min
Weight-bearing physical activity
Any physical activity that imparts a load or impact (such as jumping or
skipping) on the skeleton.
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