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Many people enjoy alcohol's sedating influence and use it as part of our society's traditions. Here I've put together details about alcohol and will explain main concerns, how it is processed, what they contain, and more... Get the facts!

By: David Robson
Alcohol use - as a well-established part of human culture - is something that has become almost as acceptable as eating and breathing. As a social facilitator and feel good drug of choice for many, alcohol is very popular indeed, with consumption at mass levels.
However, alcohols well-documented deleterious effects - diminished performance, mental impairment, possible addiction, diabetes and liver disease to varying degrees in certain individuals - could be seen as a good reason to steer clear of it.
This being said, many people enjoy its sedating influence and it does play a vital role in many of society's traditions and practices. One effect alcohol has, which is not widely discussed, is its impact on body composition. In its purest form, ethyl alcohol, which supplies seven calories per gram, alcohol provides energy, bumping up ones total energy balance whenever it is consumed.
Unlike macronutrients such as carbohydrates, proteins and fats, alcohol supplies what nutritionists often refer to as empty calories: calories without nutrition. To make matters worse, it is the first fuel to be used when combined with carbohydrates, fats and proteins, postponing the fat-burning process and contributing to greater fat storage. Here is what diet guru Robert C Atkins says regarding alcohols affect on fat storage:
"Here's the problem with all alcoholic beverages, and the reason I recommend refraining from alcohol consumption on the diet. Alcohol, whenever taken in, is the first fuel to burn. While that's going on, your body will not burn fat. This does not stop the weight loss, it simply postpones it, since the alcohol does not store as glycogen, and you immediately go back into ketosis/lipolysis after the alcohol is used up.
If you must drink alcohol, wine is an acceptable addition to levels beyond the Induction diet. If wine does not suit your taste, straight liquor such as scotch, rye, vodka, and gin would be appropriate, as long as the mixer is sugarless; this means no juice, tonic water; or non-diet soda. Seltzer and diet soda are appropriate."
Although Mr. Atkins suggestions are valid ones, especially as he is advocating the elimination of additional sugars along with the higher calorie beers, any form of alcohol can pose problems for those wanting to shed unwanted fat to look their best.
Main concerns are as follows:
1. Alcohol Supplies Almost Twice As Many Calories As Protein & Carbohydrates.
At seven calories per gram, alcohol supplies almost twice as many as protein and carbohydrates. In fact, alcohol has only two fewer calories than fat, which has nine per gram. It must also be remembered that the calories in alcohol lack the nutrients beneficial for a healthy metabolism and will therefore hasten fat storage.
The calories found in the average alcoholic drink are quite concentrated compared to many foods, and this actually causes one to inadvertently take in many more calories than would otherwise be consumed. Alcohol is quite deceptive in that it passes through the system rapidly, often before the drinker is aware of the number of drinks they have had.
Alcoholic drinks also contain calories from other sources, which add to overall caloric intake. Certain cocktails, for example, contain fats. Wine and beer both have high carbohydrate content. Although the affects these various calorie types have on the body are different - carbohydrates release insulin, which can hasten fat storage, while fats will be stored directly in the fat cells - the overall result is added body fat.
An example of how many calories can be easily consumed can be seen with a small glass of wine: a 5-ounce glass of wine will typically contain 110 calories, 91 of which come from the alcohol itself (13 grams), with the remaining five grams coming from carbohydrates.
Beer contains more carbohydrates (although many of the "Lite" beers have a carb content similar to a glass of wine) and less alcohol than wine, but is seen as being more fattening, due to its higher energy content.
2. Alcohol Loosens The Inhibitions.
While drinking, people usually will not stop to consider the impact alcohol is having on their bodies; such is alcohol's affect on loosening the inhibitions. The result of this relaxed thinking could mean more calories consumed and extra body fat gains. Those drinking might also eat more of the wrong kinds of food, without thinking of the consequences.
Alcohol tends to have an appetite stimulating effect as it provides little in the way of nutrition, leaving a craving for other foods at the time of consumption. Add this to the fact that fatty and salty foods tend to accompany most occasions featuring alcohol (as well as alcohol actually stimulating ones appetite for these kinds of foods), and the general loosening of resolve that goes with an inebriated mind set, and you have a recipe for excess fat gain. Alcohol has also been shown to affect motivation, making a healthy diet harder to stay on while it is being used.

Alcohol Can Affect Motivation.
3. Alcohol (When Used To Excess) Can Damage The Stomach, Kidneys, And Liver.
Given alcohol is a by-product of yeast digestion; it can have an irritating effect on the lining of the stomach and gradually weaken the kidneys and liver, leading to serious health problems - even death in certain instances. Any weakening of the stomach will lessen the rate and efficiency at which food is digested, which ultimately interferes with a healthy metabolism and the weight loss process.
The liver - which processes toxins and breaks down fats for fuel - is crucial when it comes to maintaining a healthy body composition. Alcohol is at its most destructive during the livers detoxification process.
4. Alcohol Lowers Testosterone.
Testosterone, which has a powerful fat loss effect, is reduced whenever alcohol is consumed, thus halting its full potential as a fat burner. Also, testosterone as an anabolic hormone, contributes to gains in lean muscle mass. Lowered testosterone means fewer muscle gains, and less muscle means a lowered metabolic rate.
A lower metabolic rate will make the job of losing fat all the more harder, as this is what governs the way we use energy. Those with a higher metabolic rate will burn more calories at rest. By interfering with testosterone production, alcohol indirectly causes the body to lower its metabolic rate (and thus the rate at which it uses energy) and directly prohibits testosterone from exerting its powerful fat burning effects.

And The Hangovers Suck Too.
5. Alcohol Increases Appetite.
Touched on briefly in point two, alcohol can increase appetite, making the combination of alcohol and a fattening meal all the more worse. A Canadian study showed that alcohol consumed before a meal increased caloric intake to a far greater extent than did a carbohydrate drink. Also, researchers from Denmark's Royal Veterinary and Agricultural University showed that if a group of men were given a meal and allowed to eat as much as they wanted, alcohol, rather than a soft drink, would increase the amount of food consumed.
How Is Alcohol Processed In The Body?
To gain an understanding of why alcohol affects us the way it does, it is important to known how it is processed in the body.
After consuming the first alcoholic drink, 25% of this alcohol is absorbed straight from the stomach into the bloodstream, with the remainder taken in through the small bowel. Alcohol is generally absorbed fairly rapidly, but its absorption can be quickened depending on several factors:
- The amount of food in the stomach (a fuller stomach slows the rate of absorption).
- Whether the drink is carbonated (champagne is absorbed more quickly then non-sparkling drinks).
- Alcohol concentration of the drink (higher alcohol drinks are absorbed faster).
Around 98% of alcohol that is consumed is processed in the liver, with the other two to ten percent being expelled through urine, breathing, or sweat. The amount of alcohol in a standard drink will take around 10 hours for the average person to process, which means the more that is consumed at any one point, the greater the rise in blood alcohol content. When the liver processes alcohol, it does so in one of two ways.
For the most part, alcohol is broken down by the enzyme alcohol dehydrogenase (ADH, which is contained in the liver cells). ADH then metabolizes the alcohol into acetaldehyde. Acetaldehyde is broken down into acetate by another enzyme, aldehyde dehydrogenase. In the final stage, the acetate is further metabolized to where it eventually exits the body as waste products carbon dioxide and water.
The other way alcohol can be processed is a less common alternative, which uses a different set of liver enzymes. This alternative pathway, called the microsomal ethanol-oxidizing system, is used when the blood has very high levels of alcohol.
Calorie & Nutrient Content Of Popular Alcoholic Drinks
The alcohol content of our most popular beverages varies, so it is important to know exactly what percentage of alcohol is in any given drink if one is wanting to limit all the empty calories. The following percentages are usually contained in each standard drink -five ounces of wine, 12 ounces of beer or 1.5 ounces of 80 proof (40% alcohol) distilled liquor.
- Beer: 5% alcohol
- Wine: 12% alcohol
- 100 proof liquor: 50% alcohol
- 80 proof liquor: 40% alcohol
The caloric content and nutrient breakdown of several popular alcohol choices follows.
Beer:
One Can Of Regular 4-5% Alcohol Beer Contains:
- 14 milligrams of sodium (1%).
- 12.6 grams of carbohydrates (4%).
- 1.6 grams of protein.
- 14.2 grams of calcium.
- 96.1 grams of potassium.
Total Calories: 153 (includes 97 calories from alcohol).
One Can Of Low Alcohol (2.3% Alcohol) Beer Contains:
- 34.7grams of carbohydrates (12%).
Total Calories: 139.
One Can Of Lite Beer Contains:
- 14 milligrams of sodium.
- 5.9 grams of carbohydrates.
- 0.98 grams of proteins.
- 14.4 milligrams of calcium.
- 75.6 milligrams of potassium.
Total Calories: 105 (includes 78 calories from alcohol).
Wine:
One Glass Of Champagne Contains:
- 2 grams of carbohydrates.
Total Calories: 85 (includes 77 calories from alcohol).
One Glass Of Dessert Wine (Sweet) Contains:
- 9 milligrams of sodium.
- 14.1 grams of carbohydrates.
- 0.1 milligrams of calcium.
- 0.9 milligrams of potassium.
Total Calories: 165 (includes 110 calories from alcohol).
One Glass Of Reduced Alcohol (6%) Wine Contains:
- 10 milligrams of sodium.
- 13.3 milligrams of calcium.
- 130.2 milligrams of potassium.
- 1.7 grams of carbohydrate.
Total Calories: 74 (including 66 calories from alcohol).
One Glass Of Red Wine (Claret) Contains:
- 4.4 grams of carbohydrate.
- 0.1 grams of protein.
Total Calories: 123 (including 105 calories from alcohol).
One Glass Of Table Wine Contains:
- 7 milligrams of sodium.
- 4 grams of carbohydrate.
- 0.1 grams of protein.
- 11.8 milligrams of calcium.
- 146.5 milligrams of potassium.
Total Calories: 124 (including 108 from alcohol).
One Glass Of White Wine (Riesling, Chablis) Contains:
- 5.5 grams of carbohydrate.
- 0.1 grams of protein.
Total Calories: 120 (including 98 calories from alcohol).
One Glass Of White Sparkling Wine Contains:
- 4 grams of carbohydrates (all of white are sugars).
Total Calories: 93 (including 77 calories from alcohol)
Liquors:
One Ounce Of Gin (40% Alcohol) Contains:
- 0.6 milligrams of potassium.
Total Calories: 64 from alcohol content.
One Ounce Of Rum (40% Alcohol) Contains:
Total Calories: 64 from alcohol content.
One Ounce Of Vodka (40% Alcohol) Contains:
- 0.6 milligrams of potassium.
Total Calories: 64 from alcohol content.
One Ounce Of Whiskey (40% Alcohol Contains):
- 0.6 milligrams of potassium.
Total Calories: 64 from alcohol content.
Liqueurs:
One Nip Of Baileys Irish Cream Contains:
- 5.8 grams of fat (3.5 grams of this saturated fat).
- 14 milligrams of cholesterol.
- 33 milligrams of sodium.
- 7.4 grams of carbohydrate.
- 1.2 grams of protein.
Total Calories: 121 (including 35 from alcohol).
One Nip Of Ouzo (40% Alcohol) Contains:
- 11 grams of carbohydrate (10.9 of this is sugar).
Total Calories: 103 (including 70 from alcohol).
One Nip Of Schnapps (40% Alcohol) Contains:
Total Calories: 100 (including 70 from alcohol).
One Nip Of Curacao (35% Alcohol) Contains:
Total Calories: 95 (including 56 from alcohol).
One Nip Of Amaretto (38% Alcohol) Contains:
- 17 grams of carbohydrate.
Total Calories: 110 (including 42 from alcohol).
One Nip Of Coffee Liqueur Contains:
- 3 milligrams of sodium.
- 11.2 grams of carbohydrate (all sugars).
- 0.3 milligrams of calcium.
- 10.4 milligrams of potassium.
Total Calories: 107 (including 63 from alcohol).
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| BODY FAT, IT'S A NECESSARY EVIL |
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Not sure why you are fat. Get some great facts right here! In this article I will discuss body fats composition and why it is needed, how it distributes itself, why some possess excessive levels and what can be done about it.

By: David Robson
One major enemy of the Western world does not come in human form. Rather, it is a substance, an energy component, that many spend their lives trying to rid themselves of. At once considered a health concern and a necessary health component, this substance, fat, which comes in various forms and compositions, is on the minds of many as they begin their day.
Much of big businesses commercial success hinges on fat removal for health and aesthetic reasons. New and innovative diets and training regimens designed for the express purpose of reducing its deposition are springing up almost daily, such is its reputation as a health concern and the implications it has for all who posses excessive levels.
With such an emphasis on fat reduction between much of the world's industrialized population and with all the coverage it receives in various media, there seems to be a surprising lack of insight as to exactly what it is and why we at turns need a certain amount, but not an oversupply.
While many know what body fat is in its more obvious problematic form, few have a detailed understanding of what its purpose really is. So why do we have body fat and exactly what is this, often-unsightly substance that, if maintained at an appropriate level, can be crucial for survival, health and wellbeing?
In this article I will discuss body fats composition and why it is needed, how it distributes itself, why some possess excessive levels and what can be done about it.
Body Fat
What Is Body Fat, What Are Its Problems & Why Do We Need It?
What Is Body Fat?
Stored body fat in its most easily recognisable lumpy form - the type that contributes to obesity if accumulated in significant quantities - is made up of free fatty acids liberated from various lipoproteins (a lipoprotein is a chemical compound made of protein and fat, that transports lipids around the body to perform various biological functions). Once liberated, these fats if not used as energy, will be stored in adipocytes (commonly referred to as fat cells), which form the composition of adipose tissue. From there they are assembled into triglycerides to be stored for future use. When we refer to body fat we are talking about adipose tissue and its lipid containing adipocytes. Adipose tissue is primarily situated beneath the skin, where its main role is to store energy in the form of fat. Depending on its quantity and deposition, this stored fat can be good or bad.
What Are Its Problems?
On the downside, fat cells have been shown to play a role in determining insulin resistance. A large accumulation of abdominal fat (or central obesity) is viewed as an important marker of diabetes as, due to its specific metabolic profile, and given it can prevent a normal insulin response, it is more prone to impaired glucose tolerance, a state that often leads to full-blown diabetes.
Diagnosed by measuring the hip to waist ratio, central obesity (which can be confirmed if the waist measurement exceeds 1.0 in men, or 0.9 in women) also contributes to the expression of Resistin, a hormone that is thought to suppress the ability of insulin to stimulate glucose uptake in fat cells, thus potentially linking obesity to diabetes.
In addition to its influence on insulin response, central obesity is also considered a major risk factor for high blood pressure and heart disease, making it something to be avoided at all costs. In fact, topping the list of combined factors which may result in "metabolic syndrome", or an increased risk for both heart disease and diabetes (type 2), is waist circumference - for men a measurement of 40 inches or more, or for women 35 inches, will significantly increase their chances of getting metabolic syndrome.
Aromatase Production:
An additional concern for those who possess excessive fat is its potential to produce the enzyme aromatase. Adipose tissue is the greatest peripheral source of the aromatase in both males and females and it has been shown, in some cases, to advance breast cancer, although its principal function is to transform androstenedione to estrone and testosterone to estradiol, thus increasing estrogen levels.
Excessive estrogen can contribute to several health problems, including the aforementioned breast cancer (as in women who are estrogen-dominant it may cause rapid growth of cancer cells), risk of heart disease and stroke, baldness, obesity (which can cause a vicious weight-loss cycle) and reduced sexual appetite, not to mention the diminishing of testosterone, which has many beneficial functions such as fat reduction and muscle and bone growth.
Why Do We Need It?
While it is obvious that surplus fat can contribute to a raft of health problems, several of which are mentioned above, at acceptable limits it can be advantageous. An acceptable level of fat (defined as between 18 and 24 percent for men and 25 to 31 percent for women, according to the American Council on Exercise) can promote favourable health conditions.
Hormone Production:
According to Zhaoping Li, M.D., director of clinical research at the UCLA Center for Human Nutrition, "Fat cells are not as passive as physicians once thought. It has been widely accepted that fat tissue doesn't merely store fat but, rather, is an endocrine organ that secretes hormones to regulate appetite, insulin sensitivity and body weight1."
Hormones leptin, which acts on the hypothalamus to suppress appetite and burn fat stored in adipose tissue, TNF (Tumor Necrosis Factor), which controls the production of pro-inflammatory molecules, and helps cells heal or repair, and the prostaglandins (hormone-like substances), which regulate many of the body's functions, are examples of the beneficial molecules liberated from fat.
One who has an acceptable level of body fat will produce sufficient quantities of these hormones, whereas obese people, as mentioned, produce hormones that encourage the accumulation of body fat.
Triglyceride & Free Fatty Acid Levels:
Fat cells also play an important role in maintaining triglyceride and free fatty acid levels, the former being the chemical form in which most fats exist, the latter the components of triglycerides (fatty acids and glycerol) that are released into the blood to provide energy (these fats can yield relatively large quantities of ATP, the body's energy molecule). Therefore, one who has a ready supply of triglycerides, not an excessive amount, will have an additional energy reserve. Fat as energy is often viewed as being one of the more efficient sources. As fat initially contains very little oxygen - it can combine with more oxygen to produce a longer lasting fuel source.
Additionally, and belying its ability to provide long-term energy, it is stored in the average person in comparatively smaller quantities. To illustrate its energy-giving benefits, an example of how it is stored can be used: given one-gram of glycogen - the body's primary fuel source - is stored with three grams of water, if it were to be stored in place of fat, which contains nine calories per gram in comparison to carbohydrates four grams, as fuel, a typical 155-pound male would have to weigh an additional 120 pounds.
Insulation:
As well as providing energy and promoting the release of important hormones, fat cells also have an ability to cushion and insulate the body, while fat ensures the absorption of vitamins A, D, E and K. Controlled levels of fat in the diet will help to the maintain levels necessary to effectively provide a thermal layer that will protect the body against cold conditions.
Fat in this capacity serves as a temperature control mechanism to insulate. It is also important to overall wellbeing in its role as a protector of vital organs. Regardless of how low we reduce our body fat, we all should maintain at least three percent, a percentage that will help to cushion vital organs, in particular the kidneys, heart and intestines.
This will help to hold these organs in place and protect them from injury. To illustrate the importance of this protective mechanism, the body will actually draw from these body fat stores last when its energy reserves are being tapped into.
Vitamin Absorption:
Fat is also needed to absorb certain vitamins that are crucial for health and wellbeing. A, D, E, and K, the fat-soluble vitamins, are so named as they are absorbed by, and stored in the fat cells to be used when needed. In fact this is one of the main benefits to having adequate fat in our diets. The recommended daily intake for fat is low (10-15 grams) so most people will achieve the desired amount through their diet.
Obesity
Who Is Likely To Become Obese & Why?
Generally speaking and as discussed, body fat per se is not the problem; instead, its volume and distribution is what often leads to its reputation as a health concern. While some are genetically more susceptible to storing higher amounts of body fat, others seem to stay slim regardless of how many calories they shovel in.
The former group often have to fight hard to lose appreciable levels, the latter have no problem with regards to fat related conditions - rather they may actually need to increase its intake to obtain necessary levels. Those with unfavourable genetics usually gain fat more readily because one or both or their parents are overweight.
Cultural Context:
In some cases, this obesity problem stems from a survival mechanism needed to sustain certain populations in their original cultural context. For example, the peoples of various Pacific Islands, due, in part, to the cold temperatures experienced travelling by canoe from island to island, developed, as an evolutionary survival mechanism, an additional fatty layer.
Obesity generally did not pose a problem for them. Today, descendants of these people do not brave the same conditions but still have the genetic predilection for fat storage. This inclination combined with modern technology, which often reduces energy output, while increasing overeating due to the abundance of foods available, often results in obesity in people with unfavourable genetics.
If only these people, on a wider scale, knew of this genetic limitation, they could change their eating habits and counter their inbuilt propensity for fat gain. Indeed, changing dietary habits is often touted as a key to controlling weight gain for any population. Compared to some island cultures and their genetic fat storage potential, however, other populations may become obese through different means.
Learned Behaviour:
The impact imparted behaviours can have on future weight gain cannot be understated. Often obese parents will feed their children the kinds of food they themselves ate growing up. Thus, these children, already having the genetics for rapid fat gain, will build more fat cells from an early age, which will contribute to obesity in later life (world reports suggest childhood obesity is on the rise globally).
Fat Cell Growth:
The reason some people gain body fat, whereas others do not is not always genetic in origin though. Like muscle cells, fat cells can also be increased, especially at a young age. Eating fatty foods will, over time, encourage the development of new fat cells. These cells will attract the aforementioned free fatty acids, which will swell them to a greater size, ultimately manifesting itself in obesity.
Although fat can always be lost from these cells, the cells themselves will always be there ready to grow larger with further excessive dietary fat intake.
Gender:
Women and men also experience body fat distribution in different ways. Women, who are genetically programmed to carry more weight for maternal reasons (hence their higher recommended percentage range), tend to accumulate it around their hips and buttocks, whereas men, who are typically leaner and more muscular, generally store it around the waist (the average man has 26 billion fat cells whereas the average women has 35 million).
While both sexes can become obese with excessive calorie consumption, women will, in general, find it harder to lose stubborn body fat. One basis for this, in addition to maternal reasons - maternal fat is essential for reproduction and maintained on the female body to prepare for pregnancy - is its necessary role in ovulation and the higher levels of testosterone men have: it is known that girls don't begin to menstruate until their bodies are composed of at least 17 percent body fat, and men, with their higher testosterone levels will burn greater levels of body fat, both during exercise and at rest due to this hormones ability to use fat for fuel.
So although, as we have seen, there are genetic, cultural, and social reasons for body fat storage, most of us will become obese, or on a lesser scale overweight, if we live our lives in such as way to promote fat storage.
How Does Body Fat Reduction Work?
Body fat reduction can be approached in several ways. One of the keys ways to ensure life-long low body fat levels is to prevent fat cells from growing excessively in the first instance. For most, this means maintaining a diet low in the wrong types of fat (saturated and trans fats) right from the outset. However in all practicality most of us will achieve a good supply of fat cells by adulthood, making the reduction of excessive fat storage all the more important.
The keys to reducing body fat are quite simple but the science behind them is complex. Two major ways to counter fat storage are aerobic training, which uses oxygen and fat as a main fuel source, and resistance training, which builds the necessary muscle needed to stimulate the metabolic rate to burn fat to faster degree.
Aerobic Training:
During aerobic activity, where the body works continuously for an extended period at a lower intensity level, the body will effective liberate fat stores (technically free fatty acids) for energy. Given our bodies carry a comparative abundance of fat, as the most efficient energy source available, it will continue to draw from these stores provided one does not cross the anaerobic threshold. At this point carbohydrates will become the preferred source and direct fat burning will cease.
Resistance Training:
With resistance training the nature of the activity is anaerobic in nature, therefore it will not directly use fat as fuel. Rather it will opt for carbohydrate in the form of stored muscle glycogen. However, as an indirect fat burning tool, resistance training is unparalleled.
Given muscle is a metabolically active tissue - meaning it takes much energy to keep it functioning - it needs a significant amount of fuel in the form of fat to maintain it. Thus, the more muscle one has the greater their fat burning furnace will be and the more body fat they will lose.
Conclusion
Body fat is something that we all have to a greater or lesser extent and it's value as a health component is undeniable. However, excessive amounts have been shown to be problematic, fuelling the desire of many to rid their bodies of it.
From a bodybuilding point of view fat is the enemy as it obscures hard-won muscle, from a health standpoint it can cause a raft of problems including heart disease, diabetes and obesity. Conversely, and as this article has shown, fat serves a valid purpose, as part of the intricate design that comprises our physiology, to keep us functioning properly.
Understanding this vital nutrient and how it works to keep us healthy could be seen as a major step forward in health maintenance and disease prevention.
References:
1.UCLA Healthcare. (2004). Fat cells play active role in overall wellness.
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| CARDIO - HIGH INTENSITY INTERVAL TRAINING |
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Cardio - High Intensity Interval Training

by Kevin Chiak
With High Intensity Interval Training you can burn more fat while spending less time in the gym. I will explain how you can get the best results from this new and cutting-edge type of cardiovascular training.
MHR – Maximum Heart Rate Calculations: 220 – your age = MHR
Example: 220 – 40 years old = 180 (this is your MHR)
Here's What You Do:
- Pick the cardio machine of your choice (treadmill, elliptical, rower, bike, swimming) and perform a 5 minute warm-up.
- Then take time to stretch properly and you are ready to begin.
- Start at a moderate pace for 1 minute, then crank up the pace to 90 or 95% of your Maximum Heart Rate (MHR).
- Continue at this effort for 15 to 20 seconds, then slow down to your starting pace for another minute followed by another all-out sprint for 15 to 20 seconds.
- Do this for no more than 15 minutes.
- After that finish your workout by cooling down for 5 minutes and thoroughly stretch afterwards.
The Reason HIIT Is So Successful Is This:
- When you work at a high intensity, you burn more total calories per pound of body weight.
- High Intensity workouts such as weight training and HIIT boost growth hormone levels.
- Elevates the body's metabolism throughout the entire day!
What Is ATP?
Otherwise known as Adenosine TriPhosphate, ATP is critical to the release of energy. ATP is an adenosine-derived nucleotide that supplies large amounts of energy to cells for various biochemical processes, including muscle contraction and sugar metabolism, through its hydrolysis to ADP.ll not only help your cardiovascular system, but will train the anaerobic ATP/CP system as well. Not only will you increase your cardiovascular endurance, but improve your raw speed and explosiveness as well!
that you will not go back to the traditional way of performing cardio again!
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| DELAYED ONSET MUSCLE SORENESS (D.O.M.S.) |
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Delayed Onset Muscle Soreness (D.O.M.S.)
Pain after exercise
What Is Delayed Onset Muscle Soreness?
Delayed onset muscle soreness (DOMS) after a workout is quite common and quite annoying, particularly if you are just beginning an exercise program or changing activities. For the new exerciser who wakes up one day and goes a three mile walk, followed by push-ups and sit-ups, there is bound to be some muscle pain and soreness the next day or two. This is a normal response to unusual exertion and is part of an adaptation process that leads to greater stamina and strength as the muscles recover and build. The soreness is generally at its worst within the first 2 days following the activity and subsides over the next few days.
Delayed onset muscle soreness occurs hours after the exercise is over. This is much different than the acute pain of a pulled or strained muscle.
A muscle tear, is felt as an abrupt, sudden, acute pain that occurs during activity, that is often accompanied by swelling or bruises.
What Causes Delayed Onset Muscle Soreness?
DOMS is thought to be a result of microscopic tearing of the muscle fibers. The amount of tearing (and soreness) depends on how hard and how long you exercise and what type of exercise you do. Activities that require muscles to forcefully contract while they are lengthening, (eccentric contractions), seem to cause the most soreness. You use eccentric contractions when you descend stairs, run downhill, lower a weight, or perform the downward motion of squats and push-ups. In addition to muscle tearing, swelling can occur in and around a muscle, which can also cause soreness hours later.
What Is the Treatment for Delayed Onset Muscle Soreness?
- Wait. Soreness will go away in 3 to 7 days with no special treatment.
- Avoid any vigorous activity that increases pain.
- Do some easy low-impact aerobic exercise - this will increase blood flow to the affected muscles, which may help diminish soreness.
- Use the R.I.C.E. treatment plan
- Use gentle stretching on the affected area
- Gently massage the affected muscles,
- Try using a nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory medications to reduce the soreness temporarily, though they won't actually speed healing.
- There is some evidence that performing Yoga may reduce DOMS.
- Allow the soreness to subside thoroughly before performing any vigorous exercise.
- Don't forget to stretch and warm up before your targeted activity.
- ** If your pain persists longer than about 7 days or increases despite these measures, consult your physician.
- Learn something from the experience! Use prevention first.
Can I Prevent Delayed Onset Muscle Soreness?
While DOMS is common and annoying, it is not a necessary part of getting into shape. There are many things you can do to prevent, avoid and shorten DOMS. Here are a few tips:
- Warm up thoroughly before activity
- Cool down completely after exercise
- Perform easy stretching before
- Perform thorough flexibility exercises after exercise, while the muscles are warm
- Start with easy to moderate activity and build up your intensity over time
- Avoid making sudden major changes in the type of exercise you do
- Avoid making sudden major changes in the amount of time that you exercise
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Basic Workout Tips
10 things you need to know to get lean and gain muscle quickly during your "2001: A Body Odyssey"
Don't be surprised if you feel more like Mr. Magoo than Mr. Universe the first time you pick up a dumbbell. Learning proper technique can be somewhat involved, considering that each exercise movement has its own set of quirks.
Having said that, don't mistake "somewhat involved" for rocket science. Just as you can trade stocks profitably without a broker if you're willing to educate yourself beforehand (a lengthy education, mind you), you can learn how to correctly perform exercises from any number of sources, including a knowledgeable training partner, a group seminar or a reputable media source-like, ahem, Men's Fitness. (Hell, even most machines in the gym come with written instructions that Magoo himself couldn't bungle.)
Well-designed training programs that arrange those exercises into a coherent, comprehensive system are equally accessible. But whether you decide to do it yourself or to enlist the services of a certified personal trainer, the following tips apply to virtually everyone, neophytes and grizzled veterans alike.
Tip-Off Time
- Don't be a workoutaholic. Many beginners train feverishly under the assumption that more is better, especially when results first appear. However, you're much better off easing into the process. "At first, your muscles aren't ready to do a lot more than they were doing before--they're ready to do a little more," says Richard Cotton, M.A., chief exercise physiologist with First Fitness Inc. in Salt Lake City and a spokesperson for the American Council on Exercise. "You increase your chances of success by moderating your activity a little bit. The morning after a workout, you want to feel like you trained, but you don't want to have to crawl to the bathroom."
- The best rep range for gaining size is eight to 20. "The optimum results for muscle growth come from lifting a weight that's between 60 percent and 80 percent of what you could lift for one, and only one, rep," says Tudor Bompa, Ph.D., professor of theories of training at York University in Toronto. "At 80 percent, the average person can do eight to 10 reps; at 60 percent, he can do 15 to 20. Most people say anywhere from six to 12 reps is best for muscle growth, but six would be more than 80 percent."
- The two most important times to eat are when you wake up and after you train. You need fuel in your tank to train hard, and if you don't fill 'er up at breakfast, you'll be running on fumes later. "Make sure the majority of your breakfast consists of carbs, with some protein, maybe in the form of egg whites, thrown in for good measure," says Jacqueline R. Berning, Ph.D., R.D., an assistant professor at the University of Colorado in Colorado Springs. "Low-fat yogurt, or milk and cereal, would also fit the bill." It's equally critical to refuel immediately after you train, when your body's cells are most receptive to replenishing the energy they just spent. A premade drink containing both carbs and protein will satisfy immediate postworkout needs in the short run. A more substantial meal, however, consisting of complex carbs and complete protein (chicken breast contains a better amino-acid profile than egg whites, for example) should be consumed within 90 minutes of a workout.
- Difficult exercises are good for you, so resist the temptation to avoid them. Most exercises can be classified as either single-joint or multijoint movements. The former includes the barbell curl, in which only your elbow joints move. Along with the deadlift and the bench press, the latter includes the squat, during which your ankles, knees and hips are all being extended and flexed, while your upper body works hard to keep the load stable. Multijoint movements are the more difficult of the two types to master, but it's well worth the effort to learn their proper execution, since they result in maximum muscle growth of more complex muscle groups like the chest or the legs. "People often get too specific in their exercise selection," says Thomas M. McLaughlin, Ph.D., ceo of Biomechanics Inc. in Marietta, Ga. "At some point, you really need to do big multijoint exercises that involve large amounts of muscle mass."
- Unless it is the primary focus of your training, do cardio after, not before, you lift weights. Or do it during another part of the day, or better still, on a separate day. "If you perform aerobic-type exercise first, you'll be fatigued for your weight training," says Cotton. "As a general rule, strength training has less of an impact on cardio than cardio has on strength training."
- Stretch before you train, and warm up before you stretch. Don't jump right into your weight-training session. First, do about 10 minutes of low-intensity exercise on a stationary bike or a treadmill. "To decrease the chance of injury, you need to elevate your body temperature before you do anything more intense," says Michael J. Alter, M.S., author of Sports Stretch. Once your tissues are warm, stretch them for another five to 10 minutes, focusing your effort on those body parts you plan to train. Alter also recommends stretching the body part, or parts, being worked for 15 to 20 seconds after every set. And don't jump right out of your training mode. Follow with a brief cool-down in which you basically just keep moving for five minutes or so, with another five to 10 minutes of stretching.
- Recovery is just as important as training. When you lift weights, you're actually tearing down muscle fibers. It's only after you've completed your workout that your muscle tissues begin the rebuilding process. To allow that process to unfold properly, give your body adequate downtime in between workouts. As a beginner, don't lift more than three or four times a week, never work the same muscle group on consecutive days, and never train a muscle group that's still sore from a prior workout. For optimal results, you also need to maintain a proper nutrition program, which calls for five or six nutrient-packed small meals a day (four, at minimum). Finally, you need to get enough shut-eye--at least eight hours of it. Adequate sleep keeps you mentally and physically sharp for your workouts, and the act of slumber itself accommodates the release of growth-inducing hormones.
- Don't do the same workout over and over. Your body only changes when you force it to, and it's remarkably quick to adapt to new stimuli. If you repeat the same workout every training session even for a month, your body can probably handle it without producing an adaptive response. If you feel like your progress has reached a plateau, that's probably what's happening. The best way to avoid plateaus is by periodizing your training, which simply means arranging it according to discrete phases designed to achieve different, albeit related, goals, including muscle growth, strength and definition. That's also the best way to avoid overtraining.
- Most guys need to consume an additional 2,500 to 3,500 calories a week to gain one pound of muscle each week. You can pump iron until you're blue in the face, but if you don't augment your training efforts with enough food and fluid, the laws of human biology and simple mathematics dictate that you won't get any bigger. "When it comes to gaining muscle, the most important thing is eating enough calories to fuel both your exercise and the metabolic processes needed to build muscle," says Susan M. Kleiner, Ph.D., R.D., author of Power Eating. "Most guys who have trouble gaining weight and strength simply aren't eating enough."
- Women seem to dig men who work out. Sports psychologists could speak on this topic at length, and relevant studies doubtless have been performed, but we know this statement is true because Karen McDougal tells us it is. "Being in shape definitely gives men that extra sex appeal," says Playboy's 1998 Playmate of the Year. "It's the confidence you show that actually leads to the sex appeal, I think. If you're not confident and you don't feel good about yourself, why would someone else be attracted to you? So, yeah, I would say working out leads to self-confidence, which leads to sex appeal."
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| OVERTRAINING AND INJURIES |
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| Most serious weight lifters have been injured before and are familiar with the drawbacks of injury. On another note, many beginning weight lifters, and even those with experience, fall into the trap of overtraining.

I think it is understood that every serious weight lifter has aches and pains. Most have been injured before and are familiar with the drawbacks of injury. On another note, many beginning weight lifters, and even those with experience, fall into the trap of overtraining. They think that the more times you workout in a week, and the harder and longer you go in the gym, the more gains you will make. In this article, I will discuss aspects of injury and overtraining, and give you some tips on how to avoid both of these downfalls.
First off, I think that it would be helpful if you read my last article on fatigue before reading any further. That article has a lot of quality background information that might be helpful in understanding what I will talk about here. Muscle injury causes a reduction in physical function and occurs due to structural change in the muscle from activity. Even something as small as muscle soreness is considered acute injury. In exercise physiology, that soreness is referred to as "DOMS", which stands for Delayed Onset Muscle Soreness, and usually occurs one to two days after training. DOMS occurs by the following mechanism: Strenuous exercise leads to structural damage to muscle cells which causes calcium to leak out of the muscle. This causes the activation of enzymes that breaks down cellular proteins in the muscle. These proteins then cause an inflammatory response by the immune system which then leads to edema (water retention at the site of injury) and pain.
Why Try to Get Sore?
So if this is acute injury, then why do so many weight lifters strive to get sore? This is because of the theory that the breaking down of muscles results in cellular changes that strengthen and protect muscle fibers. Also, this breaking down leads changes in connective tissue in which intramuscular connective tissue is increased. Simply stated, the end result of DOMS is bigger and stronger muscles. In my opinion, that is what happens as long as the soreness is due to DOMS and not a tear or strain. Most say that repeated activity will lower the chances of experiencing DOMS, which is true. However, if you continue to increase the intensity of a workout, either by increasing the number of repetitions or amount of weight, you will continue to get sore.
A simple note to consider is that the lactic acid produced in a workout does not cause DOMS or injury. Remember, we are dealing with structural changes, not chemical changes.
Some good indicators of actual muscle injury are as follows: urinating out brown urine. This is a very good, and painless way to tell if you have injured a muscle. If you are injured, your urine will be either dark gold or brownish. You might be injured if you have a significant loss in muscle strength. A significant amount is about 25% or more of a reduction in strength. If you look in the mirror and the pained area is swollen 1-2 days after the activity, you could have muscle injury.
If You Are Injured...
In the case that you do get injured, you need to take caution. First, make sure that you stop whatever it is that you are doing, and rest before taking off for home. If you can, get some ice and apply pressure to the injured area. Try to elevate the injured area if it is your arm or leg. This method is called the RICE method and stands for Rest, Ice, Compression, and Elevation. After about 15-20 minutes, the ice needs to be removed to avoid nerve or skin damage. Following this first application of ice, you should not need another application. The best thing to do now is to rest and drink lots of water. The water will flush out any proteins that are broken down from the injury, preventing an infection in your kidneys. I would strongly recommend seeing a doctor regardless of the amount of pain. If you're injured, the faster you act on it, the faster you may be back to exercising. Depending on the injury, I think that it would be a good idea to take at least two weeks off from the gym. Even if you start to feel better, stay home. Often times, when a person who is injured starts to feel better, they take off to the gym and lift as hard as they can. This person is doing more harm than good. Once you do make a comeback to the gym, go light with low intensity, stretching throughout the workout. Don't overstretch to the point that you feel pain, just a comfortable stretch will do. After a few more weeks like that, you should be ready to get back into it, just don't "jump the gun" too soon!
Believe it or not, it takes your body about 30 days to fully recover from a high intensity workout. Pretty crazy, huh?! It's true; weight lifters always work injured muscles if they workout on a regular basis. The hope is that the amount of muscle that had microtears was a small percentage of the actual muscle, which in most cases is true. You might want to think about that last point when you are designing a workout and you want to take the right amount of time between training a muscle. I usually try to rest about 8-9 days before I rework a muscle again.
Overtraining Syndrome
As for overtraining, beginners especially need to be cautious in avoiding this aspect. The "Overtraining Syndrome" is characterized by an extremely heavy training regimen with inadequate amounts of rest. The reason that beginners are more susceptible to this syndrome is because they think that they can make gains quick if they workout like this. Overtraining can result in injury or reduce resistance to disease and can be mentally brutal if performance is decreasing while effort is increasing. If you want to know if you're overtraining, then listen up. I am going to list some symptoms of the overtraining syndrome so that you can identify if this applies to you or not.
- Decrease in performance with increased effort.
- Loss of body weight.
- Increased number of infections.
- Chronic fatigue.
- Elevated heart rate and blood lactate levels during exercise.
- Psychological staleness.
- Sleep Disturbances.
- Decreased Appetite.
- Muscle Tenderness.
- Occasional Nausea.
I think that if you are experiencing three or more of these symptoms, you probably need to back off a little and rest more. Overtraining is no joke, so try to be aware of some of these elements during a training cycle.
If you've read carefully, you now know what to do and what not do to in order to prevent injury and overtraining. If you keep these points in the back of your head while you are training, you will be able to make great gains because you will not have to take a month off to recuperate from an injury. The key here is prevention!
Good Luck!
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| THE NEED TO TRAIN LIKE A MAN |
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By: Lauren Brooks
Come on ladies! Are you sick of watching men do pull-ups and you can't even do one? I know I was! As a fitness coach I stay current with the latest developments. I am always looking for workouts to stay in shape that are not only effective, but also fun.
Since most of my clients are more concerned with having a lean physique than with developing real strength, it's been a challenge to convince them that training for strength is an excellent way to become leaner.
Many women have the illusion that if they even glance at free weights, they will end up looking like Arnold's long lost twin sister. As a result, women flock to aerobics classes and exercise machines every year with the hope of discovering the holy grail of fat loss.
I do not have to tell you what the end result is. Think I am being too harsh? Go to an aerobics class today and take a mental note of the class. Now go back in a month and take a look at the results. See what I mean? Results that are noticeable do not come from just cardiovascular exercise.
Make no mistake about it, the best way to get a lean, sexy, and a well defined physique is with heavy weights and low reps. Why? Read the rest of the article to find out. I am also going to go over what I believe is the most effective form of weight training for women and what it did for me.
By the time you get to the end of this article, you will be over the irrational fear that lifting heavy weights make women bulky. You will have a plan of action to develop a body that is super strong and conditioned. The body you have always wanted. Let's get started!
Sarcoplasmic Vs. Myofibril Hypertrophy
Many women who insist on training with light or medium weights and doing many reps end up building sarcoplasmic hypertrophy. Sarcoplasmic Hypertrophy, common in body building, is bloated, soft and useless muscle. It involves the growth of the sarcoplasm and non contractile proteins that do not directly contribute to muscular force production.
Filament area density decreases while cross-sectional area increases, without a significant increase in strength. Proper strength training leads to gains in Myofibril Hypertrophy which is referred to as strong and dense muscle. This type of hypertrophy occurs due to an increase in myosin-actin filaments.

Muscle Filament Structure.
Contractile proteins are synthesized and filament density increases (Zatsiorsky 1995). Using lower reps and heavy weights is the best way to achieve the lean physique. Moreover, you will actually have strength that works; strength that will let you achieve that pull up you've always wanted.
Don't worry, most women do not have the testosterone levels to achieve the big bulky muscles. Men have 10 to 15 times the amount of testosterone women possess. Men still have to work very hard to put on muscle. In order to build big bulky muscles you have to have the right amount of testosterone levels, an increased caloric intake, and a regimen that includes lots of volume.
Lots of volume can mean 5-10 sets per exercise, which then leads to increased volume of sarcoplasmic fluid inside the cell and between the cells.
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