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shorter workout...burn more fat???

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shorter workout...burn more fat???
Old September 14th, 2007, 04:21 AM   #1 (permalink)
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By Amy Norton

NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - Moderate exercise like walking may be as good as or better than intense workouts when it comes to certain heart health measures, new research suggests.

In a study of 240 overweight, middle-aged adults, researchers found that moderate exercise, but not vigorous activity, improved participants' levels of blood fats called triglycerides.

Meanwhile, improvements in "good" HDL cholesterol seemed to depend on how much study participants exercised, and not how intensely. What's more, researchers found, both benefits were sustained when exercisers took a vacation from working out.

All of this is good news for sedentary people who would find it hard to leap from the couch to a daily run, according to the study authors.

On the other hand, there's bad news for sedentary people who would prefer to stay that way. In this study, participants who remained inactive saw their "bad" LDL cholesterol levels climb over just six months.

The negative effects don't stop there. Previous work with the same study group found that inactive participants continued to gain weight and inches around the waistline, lead study author Dr. Cris A. Slentz told Reuters Health.

"In overweight or mildly obese sedentary individuals, continuing to be inactive is worse than previously thought," said Slentz, an exercise physiologist at Duke University Medical Center in Durham, North Carolina.

He and his colleagues report the findings in the Journal of Applied Physiology.

The study included 240 overweight, sedentary men and women who were randomly assigned to one of four groups. In two groups, participants worked out intensely on treadmills or other gym equipment, but the amount of exercise varied; one group got the equivalent of 20 miles of jogging per week, while the other logged the equivalent of 12 miles.

A third group exercised at a moderate intensity for a moderate amount of time -- the equivalent of 12 miles of walking per week. The fourth group remained inactive.

The researchers then looked at the effects each regimen had on participants' cholesterol and triglyceride levels over six months -- and whether any improvements were sustained after the exercisers took two weeks off.

On average, they found, only the moderate exercisers showed lasting improvements in their triglycerides. Lasting improvements in HDL levels were seen only in exercisers who worked out intensely for a greater amount of time.

The same HDL advantage was not seen among people who exercised vigorously for a lesser amount of time per week. So, Slentz explained, he and his colleagues attribute the benefit to the amount of exercise, and not the intensity.

The bottom line, according to Slentz, is that "most all of the benefits" of exercise are related to the amount, rather than the intensity. An exception is that vigorous exercise, like jogging, is more effective at boosting cardiovascular fitness -- which, Slentz noted, may or may not be important in heart disease risk.

So a person's choice of exercise should depend on his or her goals, according to the researchers. For many people, that will mean moderate activity.

The "wonderful thing" about such exercise, Slentz said, is that people need only find a couple of 15-minute blocks of time each day to take a walk.

SOURCE: Journal of Applied Physiology, August 2007
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Old September 16th, 2007, 04:21 AM   #2 (permalink)
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What do they say in the bowflex commercials "20 minutes, 3 times a week". But they don't mention cardio, which is truly the key to weight management.
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Old September 16th, 2007, 12:07 PM   #3 (permalink)
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Not to mention improvement in lower joint health suffered by some obese.
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Old September 16th, 2007, 06:13 PM   #4 (permalink)
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i'll still stick to my running. it has worked at removing excess baggage more effectively then walking, or jogging. my recent blood work for my medical procedure done showed im very healthy. and theres no way a slower paced jog or walk can keep me in the kind of conditioning im used to being in.
i realize diet is a key factor to my health and i dont fit the category of those in the study but ive been there, meening after breaking my neck and gaining unwanted weight and not being able to train for a period of time. took me 9 weeks of intense training to get me back to were i am today, and i feel i couldnt of done it without the high intensity running, and lifting.
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Old September 16th, 2007, 11:55 PM   #5 (permalink)
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agreed ^

this was just something i read and thought it was interesting..makes you wonder about some stuff...but no doubt..diet is number 1 ...props on gettin your weight down bro..thats somethin to be proud of...but yea...diff strokes for diff folks!
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