If You Want to Reduce
Body Fat, Stop Exercising Like a Hamster
by
Dr. Al Sears for Early to Rise
Here's a flash that will knock most "health gurus"
right off their treadmills: Long-duration exercise is a waste of your time.
When you exercise for long periods of time, you
can't build stamina. Your body responds by making your heart, lungs, and muscles smaller and more efficient -- able to go
longer by expending less energy. But while smaller may be more efficient, it also reduces an organ's reserve capacity.
Reserve capacity is the ability of an organ to
adapt to the sudden onset of any high demand it may encounter. For your heart, in particular, that's extremely important.
Inadvertently reducing the reserve capacity of your heart by making it smaller through regular, prolonged aerobic activity
could be very dangerous.
Remember Jim Fixx? He was a marathon runner who
became a famous health guru. He preached long-duration cardiovascular endurance training as a method of achieving peak performance.
He insisted this would protect against heart disease ... up until the moment he suddenly, in the prime of his life, dropped
dead of a heart attack.
If the image of pounding away on a treadmill,
sweating and gasping for an hour at a time, only to die of a heart attack anyway, doesn't leave you thrilled about exercise,
I have good news for you. In spite of the government's recent step in the wrong direction, evidence is mounting for a different
approach: Shorter is better.
No matter how much they exercise, most people
can't seem to keep the fat off. In fact, they often actually signal their bodies to make more fat.
Fat is the only source of energy that can fuel
activity for more than 15 minutes. So the more often you engage in long aerobic sessions, the more adept your body becomes
at preserving fat -- even if it has to sacrifice energy-expensive tissues like your muscles to fuel your heart and lungs.
In addition to that, some of the most important
changes from exercise occur after, not during, the session. After any exercise, your body seeks to better prepare for the
next time you call upon it to repeat that activity. So, by utilizing fat during long-duration exercise, you are, in effect,
telling your body that it needed that fat -- and that signals it to make more fat at the next opportunity.
In a recent study, Colorado
State University researchers
measured how long fat continues to be burned after brief periods of exercise. Participants exercised for two minutes and then
rested for one minute. They continued that cycle for 20 minutes. The researchers found that participants continued to burn
fat at a high rate 16 hours after the exercise. At rest, their fat oxidation was up by 62%.
This is because during exercise you "key in program
changes" that affect your metabolism over the next several days. And that explains my observation that long-distance runners
are thin but not very lean. In fact, endurance athletes typically have body-fat percentages ranging from 10% to 20%, which
is higher than the fat percentages of most other athletes. Body builders, for instance, who do very short bursts of intense
exercise, are quite lean -- with 4% to 8 % body-fat.
I was surprised when I first observed these measurements
in my clinic, but it has now come to make perfect sense.
If you want to lose fat and maintain the capacity
of your heart, lungs, and muscles, exercise in short bursts. When you do that, your body mainly uses energy from carbohydrates
stored in muscle rather than fat. Carbs are capable of burning energy at a much higher rate. As a result, you will then burn
much more fat for energy during the recovery period as you replenish the carbs.
By doing this repeatedly, you teach your body
that, for fast access, it needs to store more energy in muscle. At the same time, you teach it that storing energy as fat
is inefficient because you never exercise long enough to make good use of it.
(Ed. Note: Dr. Al Sears is the editor of Health
Confidential for Men, a publication devoted to men's health.