Archive for the ‘Getting Fit Fast: Inactive People Can change Health-Fitness Gains-Jr.of Physiology 2013’ Category

Getting Fit Fast: Inactive People Can change Health-Fitness Gains-Jr.of Physiology 2013

February 5, 2013

Posted by:  Kevin G. Parker, D.C.

Written by:  Sciencedaily.com

Journal Reference:  The Journal of Physiology, 591, 641-656. February 1, 2013 

Getting Fit Fast: Inactive People Can Achieve Major Health and Fitness Gains in a Fraction of the Time
Feb. 1, 2013 — With many of us struggling to get enough exercise, sport and exercise scientists at Liverpool John Moores University (LJMU) and the University of Birmingham, under the lead of Professor Anton Wagenmakers, have been working on a time-saving solution.

Instead of long stints in the gym and miles of running in the cold, the same results could be achieved in less than a third of the time, according to new research published February 1 in The Journal of Physiology.
The current recommendation of the World Health Organisation (WHO) and UK Department of Health is that people of all ages should do three to five hours of endurance training per week to increase health and fitness and prevent chronic diseases and premature mortality.

However, most people find it difficult to set aside this much time in their busy lives.
This study has taken existing research to a new level to prove that replacing endurance training with two types of interval training,

High intensity Interval Training (HIT) and

Sprint Interval Training (SIT), can make a massive difference to our health and aerobic fitness.

In two articles in the 1 February issue of The Journal of Physiology, the researchers describe their recent discoveries that three sessions of SIT, taking just 90 min per week, are as effective as five sessions of traditional endurance exercise, taking five hours per week, in increasing whole body insulin sensitivity via two independent mechanisms.
LJMU researcher Matthew Cocks explains: ‘One mechanism involves improved delivery of insulin and glucose to the skeletal muscle and the other involves improved burning of the fat stored in skeletal muscle fibres. Additionally, we found a reduced stiffness of large arteries which is important in reducing the risk of vascular disease.’
On the basis of these novel and earlier findings from other laboratories, Professor Wagenmakers expects that HIT and SIT will turn out to be unique alternative exercise modes suitable to prevent blood vessel disease, hypertension, diabetes and most of the other ageing and obesity related chronic diseases.
LJMU researcher Sam Shepherd describes: ‘SIT involves four to six repeated 30 second ‘all out’ sprints on special laboratory bikes interspersed with 4.5 minutes of very low intensity cycling.

Due to the very high workload of the sprints, this method is more suitable for young and healthy individuals.

However, anyone of any age or level of fitness can follow one of the alternative HIT programmes which involve 15-60 second bursts of high intensity cycling interspersed with 2-4 minute intervals of low intensity cycling.

HIT can be delivered on simple spinning bikes that are present in commercial gyms and are affordable for use at home or in the workplace.’
Lack of time is the number one reason that the majority of the adult population do not meet the current physical activity recommendations.

SIT and HIT could solve this problem.
Sam Shepherd comments: ‘A pilot study currently ongoing in the Sports Centre at the University of Birmingham has also shown that previously sedentary individuals in the age-range of 25-60 also find HIT on spinning bikes much more enjoyable and attractive than endurance training and it has a more positive effect on mood and feelings of well-being.

This could imply that HIT is more suitable to achieve sustainable changes in exercise behaviour.’
HIT, therefore, seems to provide the ideal alternative to outdoor running, dangerous cycling trips and long boring endurance cycling sessions in health and fitness gyms.

That is why the researchers believe that there will be a great future for HIT for obese and elderly individuals and potentially also for patients with hypertension, diabetes and cardiovascular disease.

M. Cocks, C. S. Shaw, S. O. Shepherd, J. P. Fisher, A. M. Ranasinghe, T. A. Barker, K. D. Tipton, A. J. M. Wagenmakers. Sprint interval and endurance training are equally effective in increasing muscle microvascular density and eNOS content in sedentary males.

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Aerobic or Anaerobic Training Best For Getting Rid of Belly Fat

Blood Sugar Control Improved by Weight Training

Exercise May Slow Some Effects Of Aging-Journal of Sports Medicine and Physical Fitness 2000;40:1-10

Exercise and Chiropractic-Part of the Anti-aging Puzzle

Exercise and the brain: something to chew on-Henriette van Praag
Trends in Neurosciences Vol.32 No.5-Neuroplasticity and Behavior Unit, Laboratory of Neurosciences, Intramural Research Program, National Institute on Aging, National Institutes of Health, Baltimore, MD 21224, USA
Fitness and Fat myth: “All I need to do for exercise and fat loss is Aerobics”

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Mechanobiology and diseases of mechanotransduction-Annals of Medicine 2003;35(8):564-77. 2003:
Donald E. Ingber, M.D., Ph.D

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