I'm sharing this week's blog from bodybuilding.com, Shannon Clark has written an excellent article on the benefits of HIIT training (high intensity interval training). This style of cardiovascular training has exploded in popularity all over the fitness industry. It's not hard to figure out why as this form of fitness training can impact your fitness levels in a really positive way. Please enjoy this article and I hope you find it informative.
HIIT TRAINING
by Shannon
Clark May 08, 2015
Cardio may be boring, but at least
you'll burn far more calories when you follow these 5 rules for making HIIT
workouts vastly more effective.
Cardio ranks right up there with
dinner at your in-laws' and a trip to the dentist. Like there's not a million
other ways you'd rather spend your time! But you want to be fit and you want to
be lean, so you do it.
So why the heck aren't you choosing
cardio that delivers twice the bang for its buck? We're talking about high-intensity interval training (commonly
called HIIT). It gets you leaner and fitter faster without spending one single
minute more in the gym.
HIIT is about how you
do your cardio. Rather than choosing an aerobic activity that you maintain at a
steady pace for the duration of your workout—say 30 minutes—you alternate fast
periods in which you work all-out with slower recovery intervals.
This cycling of intensity gobbles up
way more calories, both during the actual time you're exercising and for 24
hours afterward. That's important because the "afterburn"—called
excess post-exercise oxygen consumption, or EPOC—is just as valuable in the
overall equation of weight loss as the actual number of calories you burn
during a given activity. Increasingly, studies have shown this type of workout
trumps steady-state cardio in which you maintain a constant heart rate
throughout the activity.
But you can't just jump right into
this workout protocol, even if you're already doing some cardio. Since HIIT is
so intense, you risk injury if you're not careful. You may also experience
burnout or over training.
If you are looking to include HIIT
cardio training, be mindful of these five keys so you can maximize your results
while reducing your risk of injury.
1
EASE IN GRADUALLY
HIIT
GETS YOU LEANER AND FITTER FASTER WITHOUT SPENDING ONE SINGLE MINUTE MORE IN
THE GYM.
You want to have a baseline level of
aerobic fitness before you start adding intervals. Anyone who has done at least
a month of cardio work for at least 20 minutes three times per week has a
minimum level of cardio fitness. At that point, you may gradually include a few
intervals into your workout; over time. increase the frequency.
To start, you probably can't do a
full HIIT session. Do your regular steady-state cardio workout and simply add
2-3 intervals of about 30 seconds each into the mix.
As you get more comfortable and your
fitness conditioning improves, add more intervals until your session includes
intervals from beginning—after warming up—to end.
You can do intervals over the entire
course of your workout, but for a shorter time or lower intensity level.
Spreading out the intervals does not constitute a full-blown HIIT workout, but
it's a great way to build up your stamina, allow your body to adapt to this
form of training, and practice changing speeds in your cardio.
As your conditioning improves, you'll
be able to go for longer intervals and a higher intensity.
2
CHOOSE AN EXERCISE MODE YOU ENJOY
If you hate running, then running
intervals may not be your best choice. If you dislike a particular mode of
training, chances are you won't stick with it for long. Choose a HIIT mode you
can enjoy, and one that fits the training protocol.
Choose a HIIT exercise in which:
1.
You use the larger muscle groups,
like your legs, so you can get your heart rate up demonstrably.
2.
You're able to accelerate to top
speed quickly, and decelerate just as fast.
You can also perform non-traditional
exercise modes. You can perform 30-60 seconds of burpees and then walk for 60
seconds before going again. As long as you work hard and fast, you can mix all
sorts of interval exercises. Get creative and see what you come up with!
3
BE MINDFUL OF LEG WORKOUTS
Structure your HIIT sessions so they
don't interfere with your leg workouts in the gym, and vice-versa. If you do a
heavy leg session in the gym, don't expect to perform HIIT the next day—at
least not to your full ability.
This over training diminishes your
progress, and it'll also hamper your recuperation efforts.
Depending on how sore you are from
your leg workouts, you may want to separate leg days from HIIT sessions by at
least 24 hours or more. HIIT can deplete muscle glycogen—the stored form of
carbohydrates in muscle which powers your workouts—so HIIT shouldn't be done 24
hours before your battle with the weights on leg day. Before and after leg day,
steady-state cardio might still fit the bill.
For hard-core pre-contest bodybuilders,
a HIIT session after a leg workout is a sure way to tap into body-fat stores,
but that highly demanding training etiquette is reserved for advanced athletes.
4
FUEL UP PROPERLY
In your efforts to burn body fat,
it's easy to neglect to fuel up before a HIIT workout, but that's a mistake!
This isn't some run-of-the-mill cardio workout where you can hit the gym on an
empty stomach and expect results.
THE
CLOSER YOU ARE TO YOUR TRAINING TIME, THE MORE YOU WANT TO OPT FOR
FAST-DIGESTING PROTEINS AND CARBOHYDRATES.
You need to treat your HIIT sessions the
same way you'd treat a weightlifting workout. You wouldn't train chest
without a good meal in you first, right? You know well that pre-workout
nutrition is the key to optimal performance.
The closer you are to your training
time, the more you want to opt for fast-digesting proteins and carbohydrates.
This fuels your muscles and provides amino acids for rebuilding and energy. You
likely won't need as many carbs as you do for weightlifting, especially if fat
burning is your goal, but at least 10-20 grams can power you through this
highly intense style of training.
Like your other pre-workout meals,
keep fats at a minimum since they slow down digestion. Don't forget the role of pre-workout supplements like caffeine, beta-alanine, and BCAAs.
Have a water bottle on hand to ensure you stay adequately hydrated.
SAMPLE HIIT CARDIO WORKOUTS
1.
Add more high-intensity intervals.
2.
Lengthen the time you do each
high-intensity interval.
3.
Lengthen your workout so that it
includes more intervals. Intervals should be all-out intensity, but beginners
don't have to push themselves quite that hard.
5
LISTEN TO YOUR BODY
Don't push it if you have a HIIT day
scheduled but your body is fatigued and feels like it's in super-slow motion.
If you're that tired, you are in need of a rest day.
Perhaps you could follow an easier
low-intensity steady-state workout for such days. Do not overdo it and you'll
be able to come back stronger tomorrow.
Beginners should start with just one
HIIT session per week, following a few short-duration high-intensity intervals.
As with resistance training, your
body adapts to the stress of HIIT and you become more efficient; you can add
more and longer intervals as you progress.
If you're also doing weights, be
mindful of your recovery so you're not over training.
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