Forget
about burning fat and start burning calories
It's about calories and fitness.
Period! Forget about the fat burning zone.
Let’s set this straight once and
for all. In my opinion the fat burning zone and the Atkins diet
are in the same category: designed for the lazy and a gross
distortion of the facts. Do you really think that moving at a
“walk through the park” pace is the best use of your “fitness”
time? The Fat Burning Zone is another one of those health club
propagated myths. The fat burning zone is
fiction.
The reality is that it's about
the number of calories burned, not the number of those calories
that come from fat as a source. The "fat burning zone"
describes a level of physical exertion that results in a larger
number of the burned calories being derived from fat. True, but
by picking up the pace you will burn more overall calories
including more from fat and increase your heart and lung work
rate thus improving your cardio fitness. The fat burning zone
actually describes what percentage of calories burned are
derived from fat as an energy source. If you want to utilize
burning the highest percentage of fat then take a reclining
position on the couch and do nothing. The highest percentage of
fat utilization is at rest. The more intense the exercise
becomes, the more carbohydrate is used as a source, not to
mention your cardio output and muscle fiber recruitment
Utilizing interval training or circuit training is far superior
for loosing fat that exercising in the “fat burning zone”. In
other words the more intense the output of exercise the more
fat is going to be burned. The best approach to loosing fat
is to exercise at high intensity.
A study from the University of
South Wales released in January 2007 supports this
approach.
The study involved a group of
45 overweight women who cycled three times a week over a
15-week period. “The group which did around eight seconds of
sprinting on a bike, followed by 12 seconds of exercising
lightly for twenty minutes, lost three times as much fat as
other women, who exercised at a continuous, regular pace for 40
minutes,” said the team leader, Associate Professor Steve
Boutcher, Head of the Health and Exercise Science program, in
the School of Medical Sciences at UNSW.
“We think the reason that it
works is because it produces a unique metabolic response,” said
Professor Boutcher. “Intermittent sprinting produces high
levels of chemical compounds called catecholamines, which allow
more fat to be burned from under the skin and within the
exercising muscles. The resulting increase in fat oxidation
drives the greater weight loss.”
The women lost most weight
off the legs and buttocks. “This maybe unique to this type of
exercise,” said Professor Boutcher. “We know it is very
difficult to ‘spot reduce’ troublesome fat areas. When you do
regular exercise, you tend to lose fat everywhere and you tend
to look emaciated. Our results are unusual but were consistent
across the women who performed the sprinting
exercise.”
Greg Alario
www.OptimalPerformanceFitness.com
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