Aerobic vs Anaerobic Respiration: Key Differences, Energy Yield & When Cells Switch
Aerobic respiration uses oxygen to convert glucose into 36–38 ATP; anaerobic respiration skips oxygen, making only 2 ATP and producing lactic acid or ethanol.
People confuse them because both “burn sugar,” but one leaves you gasping after a sprint while the other keeps you alive during a marathon—context decides which engine your cells fire up.
Key Differences
Oxygen requirement, ATP yield, and waste products: aerobic needs O₂, yields ~38 ATP, releases CO₂ + H₂O; anaerobic works without O₂, gives 2 ATP, spills lactic acid or ethanol.
Which One Should You Choose?
You don’t choose—your muscles do. Sprinting triggers anaerobic; steady jogging flips to aerobic. Train both systems for speed and endurance.
Can cells switch mid-workout?
Yes, the shift happens within seconds when oxygen delivery lags behind demand.
Why does lactic acid hurt?
It lowers pH, irritating nerve endings and causing that muscle burn.