All organisms respire in order to release energy to fuel their living processes. The respiration can be aerobic, which uses glucose and oxygen, or anaerobic which uses only glucose.
Muscles need energy to contract. While exercising, the muscles need additional energy as:
the breathing rate and volume of each breath increases to bring more oxygen into the body and remove the carbon dioxide produced
the heart rate increases, to supply the muscles with extra oxygen and remove the carbon dioxide produced
If insufficient oxygen is available to the muscles, for instance the exercise is vigorous and/or prolonged, the heart and lungs are unable to supply sufficient oxygen. Muscles begin to respire anaerobically. Lactic acid is produced from glucose, instead of carbon dioxide and water. Muscles continue to contract, but less efficiently.
During long periods of vigorous activity:
lactic acid levels build up
glycogenAnimals store glucose as glycogen in their liver and muscle tissues. reserves in the muscles become low as more glucose is used for respiration, and additional glucose is transported from the liver.
This build-up of lactic acid produces an oxygen debtThe amount of extra oxygen required by the body for recovery after vigorous exercise..
As body stores of glycogen become low, the person suffers from muscle fatigue.