PROGRESSIVE HIGH-INTENSITY INTERVAL TRAINING
Improper exercise
is not only a waste of your valuable time but can cause significant harm to
your body, possibly even shortening your lifespan. I have been preaching for
years to my patients that aerobic exercise on a prolonged basis is harmful. Now
Al Sears, MD, an internationally known expert in the field of fitness and
exercise has written a book advocating an entirely new way to exercise that not
only is free of the dangers of the aerobics fad, but strengthens muscles,
including the heart, increases endurance, and adds lean muscle mass to your body
while reducing body fat; all in a fraction of the time most people think is
required to accomplish these goals; while not causing the significant harm that
protracted aerobic exercise causes. If you’re interested in weight loss,
finding a long term exercise program is crucial.
The remainder of this
article is not original work, but rather a synopsis of Dr Al Sears most recent
book “PACE- The 12 Minute Fitness Revolution”. (PACE stands for “Progressively
Accelerating Cardio-Pulmonary Exertion”). If you are currently spending hours
each week at the gym, you would be doing yourself a huge favour by reading the
complete book. This is important for those looking to lose
weight too.
Until recent times, human
exercise has consisted of running as fast as one can to either catch food or to
escape being food. Weight lifting was limited to the actual performance of a
task at hand. Since the Industrial Revolution, we have become progressively more
sedentary, especially since the advent of television and computers. Sixty-six
per cent of Americans are overweight and out of shape. Previously, people
enjoyed “Native Fitness” which was a natural consequence of survival of
Darwinian Evolution- survival of the fittest. Current exercise programs are
attempts to substitute for this native fitness with unnatural methods. Until
recently- no human jogged or performed aerobic exercise for hours on end.
Native exercise caused the body to increase lung volume, improve heart
capacity, keep excess fat off, increase metabolic rate, improve muscle mass,
and bone strength. The trigger for this was NOT long-term AEROBIC exercise;
rather it was short bursts of INTENSE exercise, which is ANAEROBIC. Beginning
this exercise program slowly and progressively increasing various exercise
parameters recreates challenges we used to face in our historical environment.
Aerobic exercise does not
significantly increase your lung volume. Anaerobic exercise rapidly increases
lung volume. Does this matter? YES! The chances of dying from any and all
causes increase with decreasing lung volume. This is worth reiterating- YOUR
LUNGS ARE THE NUMBER ONE PREDICTOR OF DEATH! The Farmington Heart Study
followed over 5,000 people over 18 years. They showed that congestive heart
failure increases up to 1000% as lung volume decreases, even in people with no
history of heart disease. Lung capacity decreases 9–27% each decade over 30
years old. Studies show that even MODERATELY impaired lung capacity increases
the risk of death. Every doctor should perform a pulmonary function test. Has
yours? How is your exercise helping you in both weight loss and life
expectancy?
Here are some other
studies showing the link between decreased lung capacity and disease:
1) Higher levels of
C-Reactive Protein, a marker of inflammation and cardiovascular risk factor
2) Obesity restricts lung
capacity 20–30%
3) Lower lung capacity
increases hostility in older men
4) Even a moderate loss of
lung capacity doubles the risk of dying from cardiovascular disease in a 7-year
study of over 7,000 people.
What is the difference between aerobic and anaerobic exercise?
Aerobic means that you are using oxygen
to help create energy. As long as stores of glycogen last (which is how the
body stores carbohydrate or sugar), and assuming that you aren’t exercising
harder than your body can use oxygen, you are exercising in an aerobic zone
where sugar is converted completely to water and carbon dioxide with the help
of oxygen. If the amount of energy you produce exceeds your ability to take in
and circulate oxygen, you will be exercising anaerobically, sugar can’t convert
to CO2 and gets stored as lactic acid. With aerobic exercise, you can continue
for a prolonged period of time as long as you are in the “Aerobic zone” where
O2 intake equal usage. Anaerobic exercise, on the other hand, can only be
performed in brief bursts of very high intensity before the oxygen debt exceeds
your ability to continue accumulating lactic acid. It is this oxygen debt that
triggers the expansion of your lungs, cardiovascular system and skeletal
muscles. If you don’t believe it, just compare the picture of the sprinter on
the left and long-distance runner on the right and ask yourself “Who looks
healthier?” In the process of weight loss, what is your
goal?
It is the stimulus of the
oxygen debt that signals the body to create an “Adaptive Response”, causing the
increases in lung volume, maximum stroke volume of the heart and growth of
skeletal muscle- which does not occur in people who perform endurance or
aerobic conditioning. Strength and endurance are two separate things induced by
two different types of exercise. Aerobic exercise, in fact, creates a condition
that mimics the effects of long term stress, creating a cortisol response,
causing you to be in “Fight or Flight” mode for too long. For a myriad of
reasons beyond the scope of this article, it is highly undesirable to have
excess cortisol. One of the negative effects of too much cortisol is clearly
visible in the photo above of the endurance runner- the loss of muscle mass. A
prolonged stress response causes a reduction of the body’s
ability to handle other stressful situations should they arise. Thus your
ability to ward off disease and degenerative conditions is decreased by
excessive aerobic exercise. On the other hand, anaerobic exercise increases your
ability to deal with stressful situations.
Where is the proof of
this, you may ask? Two Harvard studies in 1995 and 2003 including over 24,000
men clearly showed a decrease in the death rate among those who performed
vigorous exercise versus aerobic. Here is the logical reason why: Endurance
exercise trains your
lungs and heart to become SMALLER in order to conserve energy and increase
efficiency at low intensity. This is the body’s Adaptive Response to low
intensity, aerobic conditioning. Again, current research bears this out and
it’s important to remember this if your goal is to lose weight. Multiple
studies in the past 10 years have shown that endurance training causes:
1) An increase in
pro-inflammatory blood markers, including C-Reactive protein, vWF, D-Dimer,
fibrinolysis, BUN and increased blood coagulation.
2) The rate of heart
artery calcification (arteriosclerosis) is significantly higher in marathon
runners than age-matched controls.
3) Post- marathon runners
show huge increases of a blood marker that people have just had a heart attack
exhibit and also have abnormal echocardiograms.
4) More than 4 days
post-race, marathon runners have elevated levels of the “Bad Cholesterol” LDL.
Not only is LDL higher but even worse- it is in the dangerous oxidized form.
5) An inverse relationship
between bone mass and running exists, so long-distance running may contribute
to osteoporosis.
6) 7,037 men whose average
age was 66 were followed for 5 years, during which time 482 developed heart
disease. Aerobic exercise was not superior to vigorous exercise in conferring
protection.
7) Increased intensity
exercise in a large study group was significantly associated with: lower blood
pressure, lower body fat, higher HDL cholesterol and smaller waist.
8) Leg muscle mass was
compared by biopsy after 13 weeks of marathon training, which resulted in a decrease in
both slow and fast-twitch fibres (i.e.- less muscle).
9) Levels of the
beneficial Growth Hormone are higher after anaerobic vs. aerobic exercise
(which is one reason anaerobic exercise causes a gain in lean muscle mass).
10) In a study of
exercise-related fat loss, participants were assigned to either an aerobic or
an anaerobic exercise group. The anaerobic exercisers lost nine times (that’s
900%) more subcutaneous fat than did the aerobic group (and
took much less time doing it)
11) People with Metabolic
Syndrome (The precursor to diabetes), were assigned to either a low or a
high-intensity exercise program. The anaerobic (high intensity) program caused
significantly greater improvements in endothelial (blood vessel) function,
insulin sensitivity, skeletal muscle mass increase, reduced blood sugar and fat
storage.
12) Aerobic exercise can
only increase endurance while anaerobic exercise increases both endurance and
strength.
Hopefully, you are now
convinced that spending hours on end walking or jogging on a treadmill,
elliptical, stair-climber or bike is not only a huge waste of time but,
continued long enough, is detrimental to your health. Would you rather spend
hours each week on boring, low-intensity exercise that causes increased
oxidative and free- radical damage, reduces muscle mass, causes a chronic
stress response, decreases immune function and increases risk of chronic
inflammatory disease; or would you rather spend minutes a day doing the
following:
1) Sprint interval
training increases Krebs Cycle activity (your ability to produce energy),
glycogen (energy) storage and endurance (yes-aerobic) capacity.
2) High-intensity interval
training increases peak oxygen consumption, lowers heart rate, increases
burning of fat compared to sugar and increases enzymes related to energy
production.
3) Obese, diabetic males
on interval training showed: increased muscle mass and maximum workload,
decreased blood pressure, blood sugar, ketones and need for insulin.
4) Improves times even in
highly conditioned aerobic bicyclists.
5) Increases heart stroke
volume and total lung forced expiratory volume (lung capacity).
Article Source: https://medium.com/@napacachiropractor/progressive-high-intensity-interval-training-5552ead6ed93
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