Burn more
calories in less time with interval training
Originally featured in:
Muscle & Fitness Hers April/May, 2001
Want to burn fat, build muscle and improve your
cardiovascular system, all in the shortest time possible?
Talk about getting the biggest bang for your exercise buck!
Not only does interval training satisfy all these
requirements, but you can bank on it being fun, too. You
don’t need to spend long, boring hours running or biking
to get the body you want — use intervals to get in super
shape in less time than you thought!
What is interval training?
Interval training involves
alternating between high and low intensities
for specific lengths of time during a workout. The general
format of
an interval workout is determined by the exercise-to-rest
ratios or work-to-recovery ratios. Because the
high-intensity (work) portions
of the intervals are so intense, they can be performed for
only a short period and need to be followed by a
lower-intensity (recovery) phase before the next
high-intensity phase begins.
Beginners should start their
high-intensity intervals at 10–15 seconds and can progress
up to 30–90-second intervals, but shouldn’t exceed more
than 120 seconds per interval. If you can go that long, you
probably aren’t exercising hard enough! Instead, boost the
value of
your exercise investment by moving quickly and intensely
during the workout. One benefit of interval training is that
you’ll cut your exercise time almost in half — but it
will seem like you’re doing even more work because of the
speed and intensity of the workout.
Check out the research
We used to think that
exercising at a low intensity for a long period would burn
the most fat; most women probably still believe that
45–50 minutes of stair-stepping at a moderate pace is
ideal. Time to step into the 21st century, ladies, and read
the research on the wall. Many studies indicate that as
exercise intensity increases, so does total energy
expenditure.
And get this: With
higher-intensity exercise comes a stimulation of
fat stores. Other studies show that while an
endurance-training program (which requires a longer duration
of work) may burn more calories, a high-intensity interval
training program burns more fat. In fact, the
interval-training group in these studies lost fat at a rate
nine times that of the endurance group! The interval group
also gained lean muscle while losing fat in less time per
exercise session (30 minutes compared to 45) and in fewer
weeks (15 compared to 20 weeks).
With the increase in lean
muscle and the extra postexercise oxygen consumption needed
from the additional energy expenditure, your metabolic rate
will remain elevated after exercise. Think of it as quality
vs. quantity: You can spend 45 minutes on the stair-stepper
at Level
4 and burn some calories at the gym, or you can invest 20
minutes doing stair intervals at Levels 4 and 7 and burn
some calories during the activity, then keep burning
calories at a higher rate the rest of the day!
But the real goal in
exercising to lose bodyfat should concentrate
on increasing your metabolic rate, not just the number of
calories burned, right? So why do we consider all the long,
slow cardio
exercise we do to be fat-burning, when it’s actually just
calorie-burning? As Conrad Earnest, PhD, CSCS, exercise
physiologist at the Cooper Institute in Dallas, explains:
“Long, slow distance exercise is often recommended because
it’s simple and
safe, and the proportion of fat used to fuel the exercise is
greater
than during high-intensity exercise. But don’t let that
fool you. Assuming all safety-related issues as a given, it
isn’t the proportion
of fat burned that’s important for weight loss, it’s the
quantity of fat.”
Unfortunately, long, slow
endurance exercise can also cost you muscle. Why work hard
lifting weights to build muscle just to eat it
up during a long, slow cardiovascular session? And when you
lose muscle, you decrease your body’s resting metabolic
rate, meaning that you must decrease your calories even more
to maintain or lose weight. That’s what’s known as a
no-win situation!
Training Wisely
The key to changing your
cardiovascular-endurance workout into an interval session
relies on the intensity of the work and the work-to-recovery
ratios (WRR). We provide the basics on a couple
of programs here, but it’s always a good idea to consult a
physician before beginning any new exercise routine,
especially one as intense as interval training.
Earnest notes that using any
interval training program more than
three days a week will likely lead to overtraining and
injury. To avoid this, remember the motto quality, not
quantity, which also applies to the length of each interval
session. A five-minute warm-up, five-minute cool-down and
20–30 minutes of intervals is really all you need to
burn fat and increase your level of fitness.
The fun of interval training
comes in designing your program. With no hard and fast
rules, you can vary the WRRs to accommodate your current
level of fitness as well as your own personal preferences.
You can easily incorporate variety and eliminate boredom
when you speed up and slow down at different time intervals.
For instance, you can choose a WRR of 1:1 so you exercise at
a high intensity for a certain amount of seconds (let’s
say 30) and recover for the same amount of time. If the WRR
you choose is 1:2, you’d exercise intensely for 30 seconds
and recover for 60 seconds.
The longer your work interval
is and/or the more intensely you perform it, the longer your
recovery needs to be. So, at first, if your work interval is
up to two minutes, you may need a recovery interval of 10
minutes. That’s a WRR of 1:5. Decrease your recovery
intervals when your fitness level increases. It helps to
have a good aerobics base before you begin interval
training, but resistance training may actually be even more
valuable to prepare the muscles for the high power
production necessary.
Let’s get interval
Ready for what may be the
toughest, most efficient workout you’ve
ever had? You’ll not only decrease your time in the gym
but get even better results from your fat-burning efforts.
In terms of fat loss, slower isn’t better. Kick it up a
notch and get intense with interval training.
As Earnest says, “All you have to lose is a little extra
fat!”
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