• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar

StrengthMinded

Where Strength Meets I.Q.

  • Strength Training
    • The Routines
  • Fitness
  • BS Vaccine Podcast
  • Recommended Products
  • Privacy
    • About
You are here: Home / Fitness / Difference Between Aerobic and Anaerobic Exercise

Difference Between Aerobic and Anaerobic Exercise

February 13, 2019 By strengthminded_erict

What is Aerobic Exercise?

Aerobic Exercise is prolonged moderate intensity exercise that uses up oxygen at a rate at or below the level that the cardio-respiratory system can replenish it. Examples are running, walking, cycling, and swimming. This type of exercise relies primarily on slow-twitch muscle fibers which have high numbers of mitochondria meaning they can produce ATP through aerobic respiration, in which ATP is formed through oxidative phosphorylation. This type of respiration can be sustained for very long periods of time, depending on the intensity of the activity and so is sometimes called endurance exercise or continuous exercise. The term aerobic means with oxygen.

For muscle building and body-building, aerobic training, sometimes called ‘cardio,’ develops cardio-respiratory fitness and is used to burn fat to achieve maximum definition, but can be highly catabolic if done in excess.

What is ATP? Adenosine Triphosphate (ATP) is an organic molecule that stores and releases energy for use in cellular processes. It is the chief source of energy in skeletal muscle and fuels all human movement. ATP can be thought of as the “energy currency” of cells. No cell uses the energy from glucose breakdown directly, the energy is harnessed in ATP. A molecule of ATP consist of adenine, which contains nitrogen; and a five-carbon sugar ribose. These together are called adenosine. Attached to the ribose end is a string of three phosphate groups. The bonds of this molecule are very unstable since all three phosphates are negatively charged, thus repelling one another. Many different enzymes can strip off the outer phosphate group very easily. When one phosphate group is removed by hydrolysis, a more stable molecule, adenosine diphosphate (ADP). Like all such changes from unstable to stable configurations, this results in the release of energy. The stripping of a phosphate group from ATP releases plenty of energy that can be used to do cellular work like breaking apart other molecules, transporting things to and from cells, and, of course, triggering muscle contractions. Once a molecule of ATP has been “used” by having one phosphate stripped off, the resulting ADP is ready to be recycled. When glucose and fat are broken down, some of their energy is used to add a phosphate to the ADP, which is called phosphorylation.

Aerobic and anaerobic exercise

What is Anaerobic Exercise?

Anaerobic Exercise is higher intensity exercise than aerobic exercise and uses up oxygen more quickly than it can be replenished in the muscles. Resistance training such as strength training and bodybuilding is anaerobic exercise, which primarily relies on fast-twitch muscle fibers. These muscle fibers do not possess many mitochondria and so must create energy without oxygen. The primary means of producing this energy is the process of glycolysis which, although it produces only about 5 percent as ATP per glucose molecule as aerobic respiration, is much more rapid.

What is AdP? Adenosine Diphosphate (ADP) is a product of Adenosine Triphosphate (ATP) metabolism. When a terminal phosphate group is cleaved from a molecule to produce energy to fuel cells, one ADP molecule and one phosphate ion are formed. These molecules can be reconstituted, through cellular respiration, to form ATP again. Cellular respiration takes place through aerobic or anaerobic pathways.

Anaerobic training, in the strictest sense, is training that relies primarily on the phosphagen system and glycolysis, which are energy transfer processes that operate in the absence of oxygen, thus the term AN-aerobic wherein the AN means not or without.

Anaerobic metabolism operates during activities which require an immediate and rapid supply of energy to the working muscles. Any all-out activity, within the first two minutes or so, would use anaerobic energy.

Muscles cells also have a small amount of stored ATP, estimated to be able to fuel a 2 to 5-second burst of muscle contraction, upon which time stored creatine phosphate can be used to rapidly regenerate ATP for up to 15 seconds.

Aerobic and Anaerobic Metabolism are Not Mutually Exclusive

Many people have been lead to believe that aerobic metabolism switches off when anaerobic metabolism takes over, or vice versa. In reality these metabolic pathwyas are not mutually exclusive and during most exercise, they do work concurrently together to provide energy to working muscles. When we discuss ‘aerobic exercise’ or ‘anaerobic exercise’ we are usually discussing which energy system is dominant.

 

Primary Sidebar

Top Posts & Pages

  • Discrete Skills, Closed Skills, Continuous, and More In Motor Learning
  • Muscle Roles: Synergist, Agonist, Antagonist, Stabilizer & Fixator
  • Tension, Compression, Shear and Torsion
  • Is the Wrist Roller the Best Forearm Exercise?
  • Are Muscle Rubs Useful For Pre-Workout?
  • Where Should You Feel Deadlifts?
  • Oldtime Strongmen: Were They Really Stronger Than Modern Strength Athletes?
  • Open vs. Close Chain Exercise: The Kinetic Chain in Biomechanics

Recent Posts

  • Gym Intimidation and the Ideal Female Body
  • Anecdotal Evidence and Lack of Representativeness – BS Vaccine For Fitness
  • What Can the Wolverine Tell Us About Strength Training? The BS Vaccine
  • Are Cleansing and Detox Diets Just Fancy Anorexia?
  • Why Use Citrulline Malate as a Pre-Workout Ingredient?

We are a participant in the Amazon Services LLC Associates Program, an affiliate advertising program designed to provide a means for us to earn fees by linking to Amazon.com and affiliated sites.

Contact

All content © 2019 by Eric Troy and StrengthMinded. All Rights Reserved.