Exercise & Fitness | Daily Exercise Goals | Andrew Weil, M.D. https://www.drweil.com/health-wellness/balanced-living/exercise-fitness/ Official Website of Andrew Weil, M.D. Tue, 10 May 2022 14:09:27 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.3.1 13 Simple Aerobic Tips https://www.drweil.com/health-wellness/balanced-living/exercise-fitness/13-simple-aerobic-tips/ Tue, 26 Feb 2008 05:00:00 +0000 https://www.drweil.com/uncategorized/13-simple-aerobic-tips/ Regular aerobic exercise is vital for cardiovascular health, weight management, and is even an effective therapy for mild to moderate depression.

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Regular aerobic exercise is vital for cardiovascular health, weight management, and is even an effective therapy for mild to moderate depression. But too many people quit, become injured, or simply find the process less enjoyable than they should. Here  is Dr. Weil’s advice for making aerobic exercise an ongoing, safe and rewarding part of your life:

  1. Any aerobic exercise is better than no aerobic exercise. I would be happy to see you doing even a few minutes of it on a regular basis, but if you want to experience all the benefits, please try to do some continuous aerobic activity for thirty minutes a day, on average, five days a week.
  2. Remember to work up to this level gradually and at your own pace, especially if you have not been exercising.
  3. Remember also that I am recommending an average amount of activity over time. It is not the end of the world if you miss a day or two here and there. You can make it up later. Feeling bad about missing exercise probably does you more harm than missing it.
  4. In addition to these workouts, find other ways to increase your daily activity, such as using stairs more often, parking farther from your destinations to walk more, and doing more physical work yourself instead of delegating it to others.
  5. If you exercise with others, try not to do so competitively. Competitive thoughts negate some of the benefits of exercise, especially on your cardiovascular and immune systems and emotions. If you cannot avoid competitive thinking, exercise by yourself.
  6. Competitive sports like racquetball, handball, and tennis are not substitutes for aerobic activities such as walking, running and cycling. In competitive sports aerobic work is of a stop-and-go nature rather than continuous. It is regular, continuous effort that tones your cardiovascular system best.
  7. Always warm up before you get into the full swing of aerobic activity. The best warmup is a slowed-down version of the activity you are about to perform. For example, walk, run, or cycle in slow motion. You will see many people stretching as a warmup, but this does not prepare muscles for aerobic exercise as well as slow movement does.
  8. Give yourself a few minutes of cool down at the end of the activity. Repeat the same movements in slow motion.
  9. If you have never exercised, get a medical checkup before you start an exercise program. If you have a history of heart trouble or high blood pressure or a strong family history of such problems, a cardiac stress test may be in order.
  10. Pay attention to your body! Discontinue exercise if you develop unusual aches or pains.
  11. Stop exercising immediately if you develop dizziness, lightheadedness, fainting, chest pains, or difficulty in breathing. Get a medical checkup promptly.
  12. Your heart rate and breathing should return to normal within five to ten minutes after the end of aerobic exercise. If they do not, get a medical checkup.
  13. Do not exercise if you are sick. Wait until you feel better, then resume gradually. Don’t worry about losing fitness; it will come back quickly enough. Strenuous exercise at the onset of illness can cause you to be sicker longer.

Read more articles and information on exercise and fitness from Dr. Weil.

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A Hot Bath For Better Exercise? https://www.drweil.com/health-wellness/balanced-living/exercise-fitness/a-hot-bath-for-better-exercise/ Mon, 13 Nov 2017 08:01:11 +0000 https://www.drweil.com/?post_type=qa&p=130082 Recent research suggests that taking a hot bath can help improve running performance in hot weather. Find out Dr. Weil's take on when to take the bath and why.

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A Pill To Replace Exercise? https://www.drweil.com/health-wellness/balanced-living/exercise-fitness/a-pill-to-replace-exercise/ Fri, 08 Jan 2016 05:00:00 +0000 https://www.drweil.com/balanced-living/exercise-fitness/a-pill-to-replace-exercise/ Can you tell me anything about this so-called "exercise pill" I've been hearing about? It sounds far-fetched to me.

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A Watery Workout? https://www.drweil.com/health-wellness/balanced-living/exercise-fitness/a-watery-workout/ Fri, 17 Oct 2003 04:00:00 +0000 https://www.drweil.com/balanced-living/exercise-fitness/a-watery-workout/ What do you think of rowing for physical fitness?

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A Workout In Four Minutes https://www.drweil.com/health-wellness/balanced-living/exercise-fitness/a-workout-in-four-minutes/ Thu, 12 Sep 2013 13:43:52 +0000 https://www.drweil.com/uncategorized/a-workout-in-four-minutes/ Research shows a four-minute workout (using high intensity interval training) may do the same job as 30 minute sessions.

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If your typical excuse for not exercising is a lack of time, you may need a new one. Research has shown that even a four-minute workout – or one that requires as little as seven minutes of your time three times a week – does the same job as 30 minutes of exercise three or more days per week. They key is giving the short workout maximal effort and repeating it several times, which is why it is called High Intensity Interval Training, or HIIT.

The first study showing that HIIT can make you fit quickly came from Canada’s McMaster University. Physiologist Martin Gibala Ph.D. and his team found that three-minute intervals on a stationary bike – 30 seconds of intense pedaling followed by a brief rest, repeated five or six times – led to the same muscle-cell adaptations as a bike ride lasting much longer, an hour and a half to two hours.

The next year, Dr. Gibala’s group reported that HIIT worked better for fat-burning than did conventional aerobics. Participants in this study were divided into two teams. One did 20 weeks of conventional aerobics while the other did 15 weeks of HIIT. The first group burned 48 percent more calories per session than the HIIT group, but those in the HIIT group burned 900 percent more fat over the 15 weeks than the first group burned in 20 weeks.

Since then, more and more studies have shown that HIIT can match the effects of longer, more leisurely workouts if you’re willing to push yourself really, really hard for a few minutes a few times a week.

In an article in the American College of Sports’ Medicine Journal’s May 2013 issue, performance coach Brett Klika and exercise physiologist Chris Jordan described how you can cram a combination of aerobic exercise and resistance training into seven minutes using your body weight instead of machines or free weights. The only piece of equipment you need for this High Intensity Circuit Training (HICT) is a chair (to step up on).

Seven minutes may seem like an impossibly short time to commit to a useful workout, but HIIT and HICT aren’t easy. You would have to be pretty fit to get through the tough seven minutes, let alone repeat the exercise sequence two or three times as the article suggests. Mr. Jordan told The New York Times that even the bare minimum of seven minutes of HICT are not pleasant – on a one to 10 discomfort scale, he figures you’re likely to be at an eight for most of the time (the rests between exercises with this plan last for only 10 seconds).

As for that four-minute workout, the idea comes from Norway where researchers tackled the question of how little time you need to devote to working out for fitness and health. First, they developed a four-minute workout to be performed at 90 percent of study participants’ maximum heart rate. Initially, this had to be repeated four times with a three-minute rest in between each interval. But since the researchers knew that time-consuming workouts aren’t very popular, they recruited 26 overweight and sedentary but otherwise healthy mid-life men and divided them into two groups. One group did the 16-minute workout (four repetitions of the research team’s original four-minute workout) at 90 percent of maximal heart rate three times a week for 10 weeks. The other men did only a single four-minute run (at 90 percent of maximal heart rate) three times a week. The men in both groups made the same fitness gains including lower blood pressure and better blood sugar levels and a 10 percent improvement in endurance capacity.

The latest study on this subject is aimed at regular people (as opposed to those who relish punishing interval training) who want to prevent weight gain. Researchers at the University of Utah determined that each minute of high intensity activity lowers the risk of obesity by five percent for women and two percent for men. That intense activity should equal 2,020 counts per minute of exercise as measured by a gadget called an accelerometer or the equivalent of walking at three miles per hour.

Is it right for you? While HIIT and its variants may deliver the same health and fitness benefits as longer workouts, a 30-minute daily bike ride or walk is far more attractive to some people. Less-intense exercise may also be the only option for those with health issues such as joint pain or impaired heart or lung function.

The bottom line is that HIIT is a faster, but not necessarily better way to get and stay in shape. If it appeals and you have no health issues preventing it, give it a try – but if you have any doubts at all about your ability to safely perform high-intensity workouts, be sure to consult your physician first.

Learn more: Dr. Jim Nicolai demonstrates HIIT.

Sources:
Martin J. Gibala et al, “Effect of short-term sprint interval training on human skeletal muscle carbohydrate metabolism during exercise and time-trial performance,” Journal of Applied Physiology, June 2006.

Martin J. Gibala, “High-intensity Interval Training: A Time-efficient Strategy for Health Promotion” Canada Current Sports Medicine Reports 2007, 6:211-213

Brett Klika and Chris Jordan, “HIGH-INTENSITY CIRCUIT TRAINING USING BODY WEIGHT: Maximum Results with Minimal Investment,” American College of Sports Medicine’s Health & Fitness Journal: May/June 2013 – Volume 17 – Issue 3 – p 8-13 doi: 10.1249/FIT.0b013e31828cb1e8

Gretchen Reynolds, “The Scientific Seven-Minute Workout,” The New York Times, accessed September 9, 2013, http://well.blogs.nytimes.com/2013/05/09/the-scientific-7-minute-workout/

Gretchen Reynolds, “The Four Minute Workout,” The New York Times, accessed September 9, 2013, http://well.blogs.nytimes.com/2013/06/19/the-4-minute-workout/

A.E. Tijønna et al, “Aerobic high-intensity intervals improve VO2max more than moderate training”.. PLoS One. 2013 May 29;8(5):e65382. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0065382.

Jessie X. Fan et al, “Moderate to Vigorous Physical Activity and Weight Outcomes: Does Every Minute Count?”. American Journal of Health Promotion: September/October 2013, Vol. 28, No. 1, pp. 41-49. doi: http://dx.doi.org/10.4278/ajhp.120606-QUAL-286

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Aerobic Exercise for Well-Being https://www.drweil.com/health-wellness/balanced-living/exercise-fitness/aerobic-exercise-for-well-being/ Wed, 13 Feb 2008 05:00:00 +0000 https://www.drweil.com/uncategorized/aerobic-exercise-for-well-being/ Aerobic exercise is any activity that increases your heart rate and respiratory rate, the kind that feels like work and makes you huff, puff, and sweat.

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Aerobic exercise is any activity that increases your heart rate and respiratory rate, the kind that feels like work and makes you huff, puff, and sweat. Aerobic exercise does not just mean aerobics, the classes offered at most health clubs and spas. Aerobics classes are one kind of aerobic activity; there are many others, including running, some kinds of walking, cycling, swimming, cross-country skiing, jumping rope, dancing, and climbing stairs.

Aerobic exercise conditions our hearts and arteries and respiratory systems. It increases stamina and general fitness. It promotes cleansing of the blood by stimulating circulation and perspiration. It gives a sense of strength and well-being, in part by releasing endorphins, the opiatelike molecules in the brain that can make us high, happy, and more tolerant of discomfort. It increases the flow of oxygen to all organs, enabling them to work more efficiently. It burns calories, undoing some of the damage we do by eating too much. It strengthens the immune system. It reduces stress. It lowers serum cholesterol. It tones the nervous system. It is the type of exercise most people need to concentrate on first. With all those benefits, how could you not want to?

Read more articles and information on exercises for well-being in Dr. Weil’s Exercise and Fitness section.

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Are Resistance Bands Safer Than Free Weight Training? https://www.drweil.com/health-wellness/balanced-living/exercise-fitness/are-resistance-bands-safer-than-free-weight-training/ Tue, 20 Jul 2021 07:01:55 +0000 https://www.drweil.com/?post_type=qa&p=144946 Resistance bands can be an effective alternative to free weights, but you’ll still need to take safety precautions.

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Are Ultramarathons Unhealthy? https://www.drweil.com/health-wellness/balanced-living/exercise-fitness/are-ultramarathons-unhealthy/ Tue, 14 Feb 2012 05:00:00 +0000 https://www.drweil.com/balanced-living/exercise-fitness/are-ultramarathons-unhealthy/ I've run a couple of marathons, and found that I enjoy the challenge. I'm thinking about training for an ultramarathon - a 100-mile race. Do you think this is healthy?

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Arnica for Pain? https://www.drweil.com/health-wellness/balanced-living/exercise-fitness/arnica-for-pain/ Fri, 15 Dec 2006 05:00:00 +0000 https://www.drweil.com/balanced-living/exercise-fitness/arnica-for-pain/ The post Arnica for Pain? appeared first on DrWeil.com.

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Balance Board: Are You Losing Your Balance? https://www.drweil.com/health-wellness/balanced-living/exercise-fitness/balance-board-are-you-losing-your-balance/ Tue, 24 Sep 2013 04:00:00 +0000 https://www.drweil.com/balanced-living/exercise-fitness/balance-board-are-you-losing-your-balance/ What can you tell me about the use of a rocking balance board? Do you think it is a safe exercise device for improving balance and muscle tone?

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