Please bear with me as physiology's certainly not my strong point..
Heart rate is a good measure of physical exertion as it correlates with blood volume flow rate, which is proportional to oxygen supply to the muscles. As I understand it max heart rate is broadly fixed for an individual based on physical factors and age.
I also understand that as strength improves through exercise your muscles grow, allowing them to exert more force, hence burn more energy /and equre more oxygen.
So, as you become fitter / stronger you're able to produce more power throughout the same heart rate range. Assuming that the heart always provides an appropriate amount of blood to the muscles, what cardio-vascular changes occur as fitness improves to cater for the increased oxygen demand from the muscles, since the heart is still beating at the same rate?
I'm thinking maybe:
- Increase in blood oxygen concentration
- Enlarged arteries and veins
- Enlarged heart?
- More efficient heart function?
- Enlarged lungs?
- More efficient lung function?
I'm guessing that organ growth can only account for a small amount of improvement (if at all) since they can't grow proportionally to the strength that can be gained through training (twice the strengh doesn't mean twice the lung volume).
Would be interested to learn more if anyone knows or has any good links, ta
Heart rate is a good measure of physical exertion as it correlates with blood volume flow rate, which is proportional to oxygen supply to the muscles. As I understand it max heart rate is broadly fixed for an individual based on physical factors and age.
I also understand that as strength improves through exercise your muscles grow, allowing them to exert more force, hence burn more energy /and equre more oxygen.
So, as you become fitter / stronger you're able to produce more power throughout the same heart rate range. Assuming that the heart always provides an appropriate amount of blood to the muscles, what cardio-vascular changes occur as fitness improves to cater for the increased oxygen demand from the muscles, since the heart is still beating at the same rate?
I'm thinking maybe:
- Increase in blood oxygen concentration
- Enlarged arteries and veins
- Enlarged heart?
- More efficient heart function?
- Enlarged lungs?
- More efficient lung function?
I'm guessing that organ growth can only account for a small amount of improvement (if at all) since they can't grow proportionally to the strength that can be gained through training (twice the strengh doesn't mean twice the lung volume).
Would be interested to learn more if anyone knows or has any good links, ta

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