question about weight training
diaryoffatdad
Posts: 175 Member
so i just did a weight workout this morning, my weight work outs are going to be pretty intense, i get my heart pumping, i sweat, this one was pretty tame but i still worked hard, when I plug it into MFP it does not account for calories burned? why is that.....and how can I get a decent estimate of the calories i burn during my weight routine
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Replies
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there is 'strength training' under the cardio section that will give you calories burnt.0
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There are too many factors involved that are different for everyone for MFP to estimate calories burned during strength training.
You can, however get an estimated input by entering it under "Strength Training" in Cardio.0 -
The general consensus is to wear a heart rate monitor......I've been eyeing a few Polar models0
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Wow. I do weight training 3 days a week and I assure you, it gets my heart rate up! I didn't know you could put it under strength training in cardio either! Rock on!!0
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The general consensus is to wear a heart rate monitor......I've been eyeing a few Polar models
Unfortunately a HRM won't give you an accurate idea of how many calories you burn during strength training, because the relationship between heart rate and calorie expenditure is not the same during strength training as during cardio exercise, which is what the HRM's estimate is based on. Unless your weight training is very vigorous circuit training, the heart rate monitor will be overestimating your calorie burn by a fair amount.
The problem is a technical one. Calorie burning isn't determined by heart rate, it's determined by the number of muscle cells that are activated to perform a given activity. It's the working cells that actually use the energy (calories) and consume oxygen. When working muscle cells need more energy and oxygen, your heart rate goes up to deliver these things to the cells via the blood stream.
Any muscle that performs a high intensity or maximum effort (strength training) will trigger an increase in heart rate and blood flow. But if only a single muscle group is on the receiving end to utilize that extra oxygen (doing a strength exercise that isolates your biceps, for example), only a relatively small amount of oxygen (and calories) will actually be consumed.
So while a series of strength training exercises may elevate your heart rate like aerobic exercise does, you're not actually using as much oxygen and burning as many calories as you would be if you were steadily using several large muscles all at once, as when walking, running, swimming, or doing aerobics for example.
The heart rate monitor doesn’t know whether your increase in heart rate is due to several large muscle groups working (cardio), an isolated muscle group lifting a weight (strength training), or even if adrenaline or excitement is increasing your heart rate. It just knows your heart rate, and the formulas it uses to estimate calories are based on studies of aerobic exercise, not other activities. So, it's going to overestimate your calorie expenditure when the rise in heart rate is stimulated by using isolated muscles at maximum intensity, which is what occurs during strength training.0 -
thanks for the explanation, so the weorkouts i will be starting on monday are using large muscle groups and multiple joints (cleans, squats, pull ups, rows and a press) and I don't like to stay stationary in the gym so i usually skip inbetween sets or do supersets with various push-ups and abs so i do get quite the cardio aspect of it. I'm not one for isolating small muscle groups, i never do bicep curls or silly esthetic exercises like that, I'm more of a functional strenght kind of guy.0
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