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1 Minute of Intense Exercise Has Same Benefits of 45 Minutes Average Exercise

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  • 1 Minute of Intense Exercise Has Same Benefits of 45 Minutes Average Exercise

    LOL I can see a bunch of fat asses now doing 1 minute workouts in the gym. Walk in walk out done! lmao

    Just a tip for anyone about to read this. There are no shortcuts. To look different from the norm you have to be willing to do things that normal people aren't willing to do both in the gym and in the kitchen..
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    1 Minute of Intense Exercise Has Same Benefits of 45 Minutes Average Exercise

    For many of us, the most pressing question about exercise is: How little can I get away with? The answer, according to a sophisticated new study of interval training, may be very, very little. In this new experiment, in fact, 60 seconds of strenuous exertion proved to be as successful at improving health and fitness as three-quarters of an hour of moderate exercise.

    Let me repeat that finding: One minute of arduous exercise was comparable in its physiological effects to 45 minutes of gentler sweating.

    I have been writing for some time about the potential benefits of high-intensity interval training, a type of workout that consists of an extremely draining but brief burst of exercise — essentially, a sprint — followed by light exercise such as jogging or resting, then another sprint, more rest, and so on.

    Athletes rely on intervals to improve their speed and power, but generally as part of a broader, weekly training program that also includes prolonged, less-intense workouts, such as long runs.

    But in the past few years, exercise scientists and many of the rest of us have become intrigued by the idea of exercising exclusively with intervals, ditching long workouts altogether.

    The allure of this approach is obvious. Interval sessions can be short, making them a boon for anyone who feels that he or she never has enough time to exercise.

    Previously, I have written about a number of different interval programs, involving anywhere from 10 minutes of exhausting intervals in a single session to seven minutes, six, four and even fewer. Each program had scientific backing. But because of time and funding constraints, most studies of interval training have had limits, such as not including a control group, being of short duration or studying only health or fitness results, not both.

    Consequently, fundamental questions have remained unanswered about just how well these very short, very intense workouts really stack up against traditional, endurance-style training.

    So scientists at McMaster University in Hamilton, Ontario, who had themselves conducted many of those earlier studies of interval training, decided recently to mount probably the most scientifically rigorous comparison to date of super-short and more-standard workouts.

    They began by recruiting 25 out-of-shape young men and measuring their current aerobic fitness and, as a marker of general health, their body’s ability to use insulin properly to regulate blood sugar levels. The scientists also biopsied the men’s muscles to examine how well their muscles functioned at a cellular level.

    Then the researchers randomly divided the men into three groups. (The scientists plan to study women in subsequent experiments.) One group was asked to change nothing about their current, virtually nonexistent exercise routines; they would be the controls.

    A second group began a typical endurance-workout routine, consisting of riding at a moderate pace on a stationary bicycle at the lab for 45 minutes, with a two-minute warm-up and three-minute cool down.

    The final group was assigned to interval training, using the most abbreviated workout yet to have shown benefits. Specifically, the volunteers warmed up for two minutes on stationary bicycles, then pedaled as hard as possible for 20 seconds; rode at a very slow pace for two minutes, sprinted all-out again for 20 seconds; recovered with slow riding for another two minutes; pedaled all-out for a final 20 seconds; then cooled down for three minutes. The entire workout lasted 10 minutes, with only one minute of that time being strenuous.

    Both groups of exercising volunteers completed three sessions each week for 12 weeks, a period of time that is about twice as long as in most past studies of interval training.

    By the end of the study, published in PLOS One, the endurance group had ridden for 27 hours, while the interval group had ridden for six hours, with only 36 minutes of that time being strenuous.

    But when the scientists retested the men’s aerobic fitness, muscles and blood-sugar control now, they found that the exercisers showed virtually identical gains, whether they had completed the long endurance workouts or the short, grueling intervals. In both groups, endurance had increased by nearly 20 percent, insulin resistance likewise had improved significantly, and there were significant increases in the number and function of certain microscopic structures in the men’s muscles that are related to energy production and oxygen consumption.

    There were no changes in health or fitness evident in the control group.

    The upshot of these results is that three months of concerted endurance or interval exercise can notably — and almost identically — improve someone’s fitness and health.

    Neither approach to exercise was, however, superior to the other, except that one was shorter — much, much shorter.

    Is that reason enough for people who currently exercise moderately or not at all to begin interval training as their only workout?

    “It depends on who you are and why you exercise,” said Martin Gibala, a professor of kinesiology at McMaster University who oversaw the new study.

    “If you are an elite athlete, then obviously incorporating both endurance and interval training into an overall program maximizes performance. But if you are someone, like me, who just wants to boost health and fitness and you don’t have 45 minutes or an hour to work out, our data show that you can get big benefits from even a single minute of intense exercise.”

  • #2
    Oh boy lol

    No such thing as shortcuts for hard work, period. Sure a minute will help, sure...but you're gonna look like a minute lifter rather than looking and feeling like an athletic person.

    We need to come up with some money schemes for being fit, because that's all it is. Everyone these days wants an easy way out, or just an easy way of doing/achieving things.

    We've become so complacent because everything is given to us; hardwork seems to have vanished.

    Lazy ass motherfuckers

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    • #3
      I really don't think it's really about people being lazy. I watched this documentary the other day called "Fed Up" it really opens your eyes about how much damage is done by these processed foods. Most people are seriously uneducated when it comes to what they put in their mouth. They trust the box, they see, "low fat" "no added sugar" "zero calories" and they think they are doing the right thing. And food companies spend millions to keep the stupid.

      One of the doctors in the films say, "people aren't fat because they're lazy, they're lazy because they're fat." It's a good movie to watch. That and "Food Inc." Both are on Netflix.

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      • #4
        I'll check it out frank

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        • #5
          From the perspective of a hospitalised individual that has been sedentary for long periods I can see the logic.

          But for making physical changes to an active person you need to put the time in to improve

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          • #6
            Yea that's how I feel about a lot of these studies. For the beginner or someone coming out of rehab it may be useful but not someone that is advanced. Same sort of thing with the thread I posted yesterday about only protein in PWO. It just doesn't work with someone with a lot of muscle. All that muscle needs the sugar after a workout otherwise you start feeling hypo.

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            • #7
              I saw some people complete their crossfit workouts in 5 minutes.....

              I stopped going to that gym. I don't want people cheering me on and I don't agree with doing Olympic lifts racing against a clock. Not for me.

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              • #8
                I can't believe this crap. Another fad for the general public to soak up.

                I can see this conversation, "hey man let's get completely drunk tonight. It's all good because we can do 3 minutes if intense exercise in the morning, which is like 2hrs of regular exercise."

                There are no shortcuts to hardwork.

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