Tag Archive for: HIIT

Exercise Your Heart, Part 2

Did you ever have to hurry to catch a connecting flight? Walk fast or maybe even jog? Were you able to do it?

How about carrying a child who weighs 45 pounds for a quarter mile because she’s hurt her foot? Could you do it?

That’s where your heart reserve comes in: facing challenges that put your heart to the test. Everyday training helps, but getting fitter is also important for those occasions when you need more. If your physician says you can do it, interval training is the solution to building a reserve.

Intervals have been around for decades, and they became a fad with something called High Intensity Interval Training (HIIT). They’re the same thing except that HIIT is supposed to replace all other aerobic exercise to save time. I’m sorry, but it’s just not enough. Doing well on a fitness test isn’t the same as living.

The idea is to exercise as fast as you’re able for 30 to 60 seconds, then rest for one or two minutes, sometimes even more. Repeat the cycle eight to twelve times and you’re done. For some people, walking faster for 30 seconds is enough; for others turning up the intensity on a bike to the highest level for 60 seconds would be the intensity. It doesn’t matter your level when you begin; it will help you build a reserve for challenges. That’s something we all need. Again, you have to check with your physician before exercising to build a baseline or a reserve. It’s one of the keys to living every day.

Think we’re done with exercise? Nope. We’ll turn to those other muscles next week.

What are you prepared to do today?

        Dr. Chet

Can We Prevent Sarcopenia?

Based on the research presented in Thursday’s Memo, the earlier we address the possibility that sarcopenia will affect us, the more likely we’ll succeed (1). I use fudgy words such as “likely” because we don’t know for sure, but based on the current status of research, here’s what we can do to prevent sarcopenia.

Use It or Lose It

In the study I talked about Thursday, the men who exercised regularly had a lower rate of decline in muscle function. The researchers speculate that chronic exercise helps preserve the motor units, thus preserving the ability of the nerve cells to send out nerve fibers to attach to muscle fibers.

That’s all well and good, but how can we make sure that we preserve the potential and perhaps increase our motor unit activity if we’ve lost some? Research shows that weight training will help. In several studies, resistance training increased muscle strength in the elderly; strength will improve balance and quality of life.

What kind of exercise will work best? It seems to be high intensity exercise. In a study on elderly mice, high intensity interval training (HIIT) increased the muscle mass, muscle fibers, and the number of mitochondria (2). This was a small study and it was on rodents, so the application to humans isn’t assured. To me, it means use your muscles as you mean to keep using them. The harder you exercise within your physical limitations, the better.

Focus on Protein

Retaining muscle mass is not only about exercise. For some reason, as we get older, we decrease our protein intake, but research shows that increasing protein intake can help retain muscle mass. If you don’t have protein in muscle cells, retaining or adding connections to those cells won’t matter much.

How much protein should people try to get? The current recommendation is 0.8 grams per kilogram body weight per day or a third of a gram per pound body weight; someone who weighs 200 pounds would need about 66 grams of protein per day. But research shows that bumping that up to 1.1 grams per kilogram body weight or a half gram per pound may be better as we get older. That’s 100 grams for a 200-pound person (3). That’s easy for even those who are math-challenged: whatever your goal weight, divide by 2, and that’s your daily goal for grams of protein.

It also seems better to stretch protein intake out throughout the day rather than a big slug at one time. Balanced intake will produce a sustained level of amino acids available for muscle repair throughout the day.

The research is far from complete in this area but it seems that as we age, our protein needs revert to when we were younger: we need more of it.

The Bottom Line

Sarcopenia can result in loss of strength and mass, but more important is the loss of quality of life. We don’t think balance while standing or moving is important until we fall; we don’t think brute strength is important until we need to move something and can’t. This week’s Memos give you an idea of how to prevent and perhaps improve nerve and muscle function.

Don’t think this is for only retirees; once you hit 40, it’s a downward trend. Starting early may help minimize the decline. One thing is clear: if you expect to be mobile when you get older, you need to work on it earlier rather than later.

What are you prepared to do today?

Dr. Chet

 

References:
1. J Physiol. 2018 Mar 11. doi: 10.1113/JP275520.
2. J Gerontol A Biol Sci Med Sci. 2018 Mar 14;73(4):429-437.
3. Nutrients 2018, 10, 360; doi:10.3390/nu10030360.

 

SIT to Get Fit?

The researchers from Canada are at it again. The same group that brought you H.I.I.T now tries to go one step further with SIT. Too many acronyms? HIIT stand for high-intensity interval training; SIT stands for sprint interval training. What’s the difference?

HIIT uses intervals that last from one minute to four minutes in duration with an equivalent amount of rest between intervals; the intensity is adjusted to be able to last the interval time. In prior studies, this research group found that four 1-minute intervals with three minutes rest had positive effects on . . .

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How to Exercise in the Heat

When the temperature rises, with or without humidity, and you have to get that workout done outdoors, the solution is high-intensity interval training, but only if you’ve been cleared by your physician and cardiologist for intense exercise. Walking, running, swimming, or biking, intervals can help you get an intense workout in a short time. That’s the approach I used in Austin, and you can, too.

The location where I stayed in Austin was on a very hilly road—more mountain than hill. I have nothing like that kind of hill anywhere near my neighborhood. The approach was . . .

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