Interval training: More benefit, less
fatigue
New federal guidelines announced in January 2005 advise adults to exercise moderately
to vigorously for about an hour most days just to prevent gaining weight as they
age. Those who’ve lost weight need even more activity, up to 90 minutes
of moderate exercise, to keep the pounds off. Only the relatively few who have
no trouble controlling their weight can meet their exercise quota in as little
as a half-hour, the guidelines indicate. (For people seeking to lose weight, the
report merely recommended increased physical activity and reduced caloric intake.)
There are several ways to make those new recommendations less daunting. Start
slowly and gradually work up to longer sessions. And try squeezing small chunks
of exercise into your daily routine. (See Did You Know?, below.) A particularly
effective method is called interval training, where you alternate bursts of more-intense
activity with stretches of easier exercise.
The interval method--applicable to virtually any aerobic activity, and an option
on most exercise machines--avoids long periods of strenuous exercise. That helps
prevent lactic acid, a waste product of muscle activity, from reaching levels
that can make exercise painful and exhausting. So you can reap greater benefits
without feeling significantly more tired.
For example, suppose you usually walk at a moderate 3.5 miles per hour. Picking
up the pace to 4.5 mph during several short segments that add up to half of your
next walk would let you burn about 30 percent more calories. Similar benefits
accrue when more-fit exercisers switch between, say, brisk walking and jogging.
Those differences, multiplied over weeks and months, can lead to far more pounds
lost as well as other health improvements.
Moreover, the interval method lets you satisfy the new requirements without actually
exercising longer, since you can ratchet up your workouts just by increasing their
intensity. For example, that 30 percent increase in calories burned using the
interval method is roughly the equivalent of exercising 30 percent longer at the
original pace. So if your usual walks took 45 minutes, you can meet the one-hour
requirement just by adding peppier intervals, without lengthening your sessions.
Another benefit of interval training: It can help you surmount an exercise plateau,
rather than trying to intensify your entire workout.
For most people, the best way to choose the appropriate intensity of each interval
is to rate your exertion on a scale of 0 (no activity) to 10 (almost maximum effort).
Beginners should generally alternate between either 3 (moderate effort) or 4 (somewhat
strong), and 5 (strong) or 6 (between strong and very strong). Experienced exercisers
can increase the intensity slightly. Note: See your physician first if you’ve
been physically inactive or have a chronic disease or elevated disease risk.
Thank you from Consumer Reports Magazine
www.consumerreports.com