HRMs cannot count calories during strength training
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Since I eat my exercise calories is it safe to eat what my HRM shows assuming that I've actually burned more or would I be overdoing it?0
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Here is the article from Men's Health. The workout they reference is a high-intensity cardio/lifting program, so not classic weightlifting - I'm going to try it once I finish my P90X in 6 weeks.
Alan
The Great Aerobic Hoax
For decades, we’ve been told that the best activity for burning calories and fat is aerobic exercise. In fact, you can practically pinpoint the year this idea started to take hold: 1977. That’s when Jim Fixx’s The Complete Book of Running was published. This bestseller popu- larized the notion of running to improve health and lose weight, and it’s widely credited with kicking off the jogging boom of the 1980s. Hundreds of studies since then have reported that aerobic exercise offers many benefits, from improving markers of heart-disease risk to coping with mental stress to enhancing cog- nitive function. That’s all good. But if you’re looking to shed fat, the newest weight-loss research will tell you to look elsewhere for your exercise routine. “It’s sort of like a self-fulfilling prophecy,” says Jeff Volek, Ph.D., R.D., an exercise and nutrition scientist at the University of Con- necticut. “Any type of exercise burns calories. So if you’re told that running is ideal and you start dropping pounds once you take it up, then you have no reason to believe otherwise.”
But Volek’s research gives him good reason to doubt the conventional wisdom about the superiority of aerobic exercise for fat loss. In one study, Volek and his team put overweight people on a reduced-calorie diet and divided them into three groups. One group didn’t exer- cise, another performed aerobic exercise 3 days a week, and a third did both aerobic exercise and weight training 3 days a week.
The results: Each group lost nearly the same amount of weight—about 21 pounds per per- son in 12 weeks. But the lifters shed 5 more pounds of fat than those who didn’t pump iron. The weight they lost was almost pure fat, while the other two groups shed 15 pounds of lard, but also gave up 5-plus pounds of muscle. “Think about that,” says Volek. “For the same amount of exercise time, with diets being equal, the participants who lifted lost almost 40 percent more fat.”
This isn’t a one-time finding, either. Research on low-calorie dieters who don’t lift shows that, on average, 75 percent of their weight loss is from fat and 25 percent of it is muscle. That 25 percent may reduce your scale weight, but it doesn’t do a lot for your reflec- tion in the mirror. (Can you say “skinny-fat”?) However, if you weight-train as you diet, you protect your hard-earned muscle and burn extra fat instead.
Picture it in terms of liposuction: The whole point is simply to remove unattractive flab, right? That’s exactly what you should demand from your workouts.
The New Science of Calorie Burning
There’s one argument for aerobic exercise that’s always been rock solid. It’s well documented that an activity like moderate jogging burns more calories than weight training, an activity that’s highly anaerobic. In fact, if you go by the numbers you find that even golfing beats out a light circuit workout. But recent research shows a new perspective. When Christopher Scott, Ph.D., an exercise physiologist at the University of Southern Maine, began using an advanced method to estimate energy expenditure during exercise, his data indicated that weight training burns more calories than originally thought—up to 71 percent more. Based on these findings, it’s estimated that performing just one circuit of eight exercises—which takes about 8 minutes— can expend 159 to 231 calories. That’s about the same as running at a 6-minute-mile pace for the same duration.
“Exercise physiologists often use the tech- niques for estimating the energy expenditure of walking and jogging and apply them to weightlifting,” says Scott. “But clearly, aerobic and anaerobic activities differ, and so too should the way we estimate their energy expenditures.” Scott’s revelation is most cer- tainly a relief to gym rats everywhere, who no doubt wondered why an intense, energy- sapping weight workout supposedly burned so few calories.
Real-world Results
The unfortunate reality is that science is slow. “If we waited around for studies to tell us what works best for fat loss, we’d go out of busi- ness,” says Rachel Cosgrove, C.S.C.S., who co- owns Results Fitness in Santa Clarita, California, with her husband, Alwyn. Over the past 10 years, the Cosgroves have risen to the top of the fitness industry because of their cli- ents’ successes. From the beginning, their programs were scientifically based. “Starting out, we knew that weight training was neces- sary to avoid muscle loss, and that it appears to boost your metabolism for hours after you work out,” Cosgrove says. “We also knew that according to studies, higher-intensity exer- cises such as interval training and weight training resulted in greater fat loss than lower-intensity exercise did.”
But from there, the Cosgroves started their own experiments. “As time went by, we began to drop aerobic exercise from our fat-loss pro- grams altogether. And guess what? Our clients achieved even faster results,” says Cosgrove. Keep in mind that the Cosgroves’ clients aren’t like Biggest Loser contestants. In other words, they don’t have 4 to 6 hours a day to work out. “Our average client has to be in and out of the gym in 45 to 60 minutes and has only 2 to 4 days a week to exercise,” she says. “We design workouts to optimize that time.” That’s why the Cosgroves rely on what they call “metabolic circuits.” These are fast-paced weight-training routines in which you alternate between upper- and lower-body exercises. You might compare this type of activity to running repeated bouts of 30- to 60-second sprints. While sprinting has been shown to burn calories at a high rate, it can’t be sustained for long because the muscles in your lower body become fatigued—and that’s even if you’re resting between sprints. “But with metabolic circuits, you’re emphasizing different muscles in each exercise,” says Cosgrove. “So you can maintain a high- intensity effort for a much longer duration, and with almost no rest.” The result: the muscle-saving, calorie-burning benefits of intense resistance training and sprints, com- bined with the nonstop movement of long, steady-state aerobic exercise.
It could be the greatest fat-loss workout known to man.
Of course, if you try to find evidence of this workout’s effectiveness in the scientific journals, you’ll be disappointed: No one has studied it yet. But researchers like Volek and Scott are beginning to put the pieces together. Just as important, trainers like the Cosgroves are already using this kind of rou- tine to help their real-world clients achieve faster results than ever. And not surpris- ingly, Andy Whitfield uses this approach, too. If you were Whitfield, wouldn’t you? Let your own results inform your answer: Click here to the Spartacus Workout. It’s a cutting-edge fat-loss routine designed by Rachel Cosgrove and inspired by the new Starz television series.0 -
Thanks, Alan--that was great. I had actually read the Volek study.
Instead of commenting on this in detail now--I think my earlier predictions were pretty close---I think this should actually be in a new thread, since it is a little off-topic for this one, I don't want it to get lost.
I am going to reread the article and put some thoughts together today or tomorrow.
Thanks again.0 -
Thanks, Alan--that was great. I had actually read the Volek study.
Instead of commenting on this in detail now--I think my earlier predictions were pretty close---I think this should actually be in a new thread, since it is a little off-topic for this one, I don't want it to get lost.
I am going to reread the article and put some thoughts together today or tomorrow.
Thanks again.
Sounds good, I'll look forward to your thoughts. As a reference point, the estimated calorie burn for the workout is 596-866 calories over the 41 minute duration. Not bad if it is true :-)
Alan0 -
Great thread here, I've worn my Polar HRM when I am boxing but wasn't sure how accurate it would be. I assumed the Polar was for only cardio type exercises.0
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Thank you so much!0
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Azdak, thanks for taking the time and effort to write this. Great information, especially for a newbie like myself.0
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