Tag Archive for: aerobic

Exercise Your Heart, Part 2

Did you ever have to hurry to catch a connecting flight? Walk fast or maybe even jog? Were you able to do it?

How about carrying a child who weighs 45 pounds for a quarter mile because she’s hurt her foot? Could you do it?

That’s where your heart reserve comes in: facing challenges that put your heart to the test. Everyday training helps, but getting fitter is also important for those occasions when you need more. If your physician says you can do it, interval training is the solution to building a reserve.

Intervals have been around for decades, and they became a fad with something called High Intensity Interval Training (HIIT). They’re the same thing except that HIIT is supposed to replace all other aerobic exercise to save time. I’m sorry, but it’s just not enough. Doing well on a fitness test isn’t the same as living.

The idea is to exercise as fast as you’re able for 30 to 60 seconds, then rest for one or two minutes, sometimes even more. Repeat the cycle eight to twelve times and you’re done. For some people, walking faster for 30 seconds is enough; for others turning up the intensity on a bike to the highest level for 60 seconds would be the intensity. It doesn’t matter your level when you begin; it will help you build a reserve for challenges. That’s something we all need. Again, you have to check with your physician before exercising to build a baseline or a reserve. It’s one of the keys to living every day.

Think we’re done with exercise? Nope. We’ll turn to those other muscles next week.

What are you prepared to do today?

        Dr. Chet

Exercise Your Heart, Part 1

In my opinion, the single most important thing you can do to be able to live life at your best is to exercise your heart. Every day. You don’t have to run marathons; you don’t ever need to run at all. You just need to train your heart every day. I’ve broken it down into two components that I’ll call baseline and reserve.

The aerobic baseline for your heart is just that: the level of fitness you need to accomplish every day tasks. The baseline will be different based on your age, your initial fitness level, and what your everyday activities are. That’s as simple as walking across a room and as challenging as being a laborer on a construction site or moving furniture up five flights of stairs.

If there are no orthopedic issues, the simplest exercise is walking or it could be long-distance running or bike riding. The goal is to get your heart rate elevated enough to cause the heart to beat faster than it does when resting. That trains the heart in more ways than I can explain.

The simplest way to describe how to do it’s this way. Walk fast enough so that you have to take a deep breath once in a while but you can carry on a conversation. If you can’t talk, slow it down. But if you can sing, that’s too slow. You can use that across every aerobic type of exercise from aerobics to Zumba. The goal is at least 30 minutes most days of the week.

You also need a reserve and I’ll talk about that on Saturday.

What are you prepared to do today?

        Dr. Chet

Raising HDL: Exercise

For many years—even back when I was a graduate student—we’ve known that one of the benefits of regular aerobic exercise is increased levels of HDL cholesterol, AKA the healthy cholesterol. If you want to increase your HDL, you should exercise regularly.

There are still many questions that need to be answered. What is the best type of exercise: aerobic or resistance training? How intense does the exercise have to be? Is walking intense enough or does it have to be faster? There are more questions, but you get the idea.

The reason we don’t know is . . .

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