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Maximizing
Your Aerobic Workout
Excerpt
By Daniel L. Millrood, MSPT, Brooklyn Hospital Center
Healthology, Special to
ABCNEWS.com
Regular
aerobic exercise may aid in fighting off all kinds of potentially
life- threatening illnesses. But are you doing your best to get
the best from your workout?
It seems ironic
that in a day and age when fitness enthusiasts debate which high-tech
exercise equipment provides them with the best workout, I'm still
training effectively on an old stationary bike I saved from the
trash collectors. A good workout does not depend on bells and
whistles from the gym, and below I will provide my easy recipe
for obtaining the training results we all strive to achieve.
Typical
training goals of aerobic exercise programs
Why do you
choose to perform aerobic exercise? If your answer is to increase
caloric expenditure to achieve weight loss, aerobic exercise is
an excellent choice. Aerobic exercise burns more calories over
a longer period of time. Other responses might be to improve overall
health, fitness, and cardiopulmonary function. During aerobic
energy expenditure, your heart and lungs work harder and the systemic
effects of increased blood circulation are significant. Regular
aerobic exercise may aid in the prevention of obesity, heart disease,
stroke, diabetes, and depression. Some of you may also want to
perform regular aerobic exercise to increase performance in activities
that require endurance. The training effects of an aerobic exercise
program are many. However, in order to achieve your desired goals,
you must understand the importance of the components or determinants
of any aerobic exercise program.
Determinants
of your aerobic exercise program
Your aerobic
exercise program must be tailored to meet your specific training
goals in consideration of your baseline fitness level. Aerobic
exercise is achieved by performing an activity with enough intensity
and duration to increase energy demand in your muscles to the
level that requires energy production by using oxygen. Frequency,
duration, and intensity determine how much energy your muscles
will use during aerobic exercise. How many times per week are
you working out? For what period of time? At what level of intensity?
These determinants will establish the overall effectiveness of
your exercise program. By your assessment of exercise intensity,
duration, and frequency, you can determine your approximate caloric
expenditure and your performance level or work capacity.
Let me give
you a few examples. If you are a sedentary individual and you
want to initiate an aerobic exercise program, you should start
with a low-intensity program. Starting out slowly allows your
heart and lungs to become conditioned. Then, you can gradually
increase the frequency and length of exercise sessions. If you
are exercising frequently (five to seven days a week), but you
are having trouble achieving your training goals, you may want
to increase your training intensity while maintaining the duration,
and decrease the frequency to avoid the effects of over-training.
If you are a fit individual who is having difficulty finding five
days a week to exercise, cut your program back to three days and
increase intensity and duration. You may be surprised how quickly
you will achieve your training goals.
The Importance
of heart-rate monitoring
Performing
exercise without monitoring your heart rate is like lifting weights
without knowing how much weight you're lifting. In order to determine
your baseline exercise tolerance and create a program that is
based on progressive, weekly, short-term goals that will lead
you toward your ultimate training goal, you must monitor your
heart rate. Guessing how much energy you're using is very inaccurate,
since many factors can increase your perception of exhaustion
without your having reached true physiological fatigue. When you
first start heart rate monitoring, you will be surprised at the
workload and intensity you thought you were achieving during exercise
versus what the heart rate monitor actually tells you.
Baseline
aerobic exercise capacity
In order to
determine your baseline aerobic exercise capacity, subtract your
age from 220. If you have never monitored your heart rate you
should start at 55 to 65 percent of that number during your prolonged
exercise session. For example, if you are 20 years old, your maximum
heart rate is 200 (220 - 20), so you would exercise for 20 to
30 minutes with your heart rate between 110 and 120 beats per
minute. You would then establish your progressive, short-term
training goals based on how you felt exercising at this level.
Proper
nutritional support
The duration
of your exercise session is influenced by your work intensity
and the amount of fuel that is available in your aerobic engine's
tank. If you have not replenished your fuel stores from workout
to workout, or if you used up your fuel stores during exercise,
your training intensity will be limited, and your body may start
breaking down muscle tissue for energy. This will lead to decreased
performance and difficulty in achieving exercise goals. It also
may lead to injury in your joints, connective tissue, or muscles
due to fatigue.
You may be
dieting while participating in an aerobic exercise routine to
achieve your weight-loss goals faster. But you need to be careful
to gradually and slowly decrease caloric intake while increasing
your frequency, duration, and intensity of exercise. I recommend
eating a well-balanced, nutritious diet that includes food sources
containing carbohydrates, fats, and protein, as well as vitamins,
minerals, and fiber. If you eat well, you will be able to increase
your training frequency, intensity, and duration while reducing
the risk of over-training or injury. If you are able to exercise
with greater frequency, duration, and intensity, you will achieve
your training goals more easily. Undernourishment will limit what
you're able to achieve in training.
The importance
of fluid intake during your workout cannot be overemphasized,
either. Your body uses fluids to cool and maintain core temperature
during exercise. If you run out of fluids you can become dehydrated,
overheat, and limit the duration and intensity of your workout.
Rest and
recuperation
More is not
always better. Listen to your body. I believe you can achieve
excellent results from the three-day-a-week aerobic and two-day-a-week
resistance-training routine. I also believe that occasionally
your body will tell you to cut your routine back to two-day-a-week
aerobic and one-day-a-week resistance training-especially if you
consistently increase your aerobic and resistance-training intensity
levels without increasing your nutritional support. Over-training
can limit your ability to work out with increased intensity, thereby
limiting your potential to achieve your goals. You can't train
very well if you're injured or burned out.
Summary
Train smart,
train hard, eat well and sleep well, and you will reach your goals
sooner than you think.
Good luck,
and may the treadmill rise to meet you, and may the breeze of
your wind trainer be always at your back.
Reference
Source 104
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