Use Effective Workout Routines
Workout routines that don’t deliver what you
expect may be a waste of energy.
Most workout routines designed to improve your
aerobic fitness involve exercising for 20 minutes or
longer at a percentage of your maximum heart rate —
known as your training zone.
Quite apart from the fact that the formula
traditionally used to calculate your maximum heart
rate is extremely inaccurate, some workout routines
can elevate your heart rate without having any
effect on your cardiovascular fitness. In other
words, it's possible to raise your heart rate, keep
it there for 20 minutes or more several times each
week, and it won't improve your fitness in the
slightest.
Workout routines
Most aerobic workout routines are based on the
relative stress they impose on your body. For
example, the general rule for establishing a
suitable training intensity is to measure your
VO2max. To improve your aerobic fitness, you then
follow a training program that corresponds to a
percentage of this maximum.
However, most people don't have access to the
equipment needed to measure their VO2max. Instead,
they use their heart rate to establish a suitable
training intensity.
This is because during some forms of exercise,
there's a link between oxygen consumption and heart
rate. During aerobic exercise, such as running or
walking for example, oxygen consumption and heart
rate tend to rise together. Yet the relationship
doesn't hold true for all forms of activity.
Nautilus exercise
Some evidence for this comes from a study carried
in Medicine and Science in Sports and Exercise.
Researchers from Washington University measured the
effect of four months of strength training using
Nautilus exercise machines.
A group of 13 untrained males aged 40-55 took
part in the study. During each workout, which was
carried out 3-4 times per week, test subjects
performed one set of each of 14 exercises.
- There was no change in body fat levels.
- Upper-body strength increased by an average
of 50%.
- Lower-body strength increased by 33%.
- During Nautilus exercise, the heart was
working at 155 beats per minute, which was
approximately 80% of its maximum. However,
despite training in this way for up to four
times each week, there was no significant change
in aerobic fitness.
This is because the large rise in heart rate was
partly caused by an increase in the production of
hormones known as catecholamine (pronounced
cat-a-coal-a-meen). Adrenaline, for example, was
roughly 4.5 times higher during Nautilus exercise
than treadmill walking at a similar oxygen
consumption.
This doesn't mean that training with weights
isn't a suitable way to improve your aerobic
fitness. After all, compound exercises such as the
squat and the dead lift place a large stress on your
cardiovascular system. What it does mean is that
measuring your heart rate isn't always the best way
to gauge the effectiveness of your workout routines.
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