Intense Cardio Training Doesn't Work For "Normal People"

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Mar 6, 2016
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The danger of short high intensity workouts

People have less and less time to devote to training, so the fitness industry has developed shorter and shorter training programmes. In order to make these training programmes effective, their inventors have increased the intensity of the exercise. High intensity has become the norm in fitness-land.

Critics are not happy with this development though. Many people who lead a sedentary lifestyle can't stand physical exercise anyway. The more intense the exercise, the more they hate it. So it may well be the case that short workouts don’t actually motivate people to get more exercise, and that in the longer term people may benefit more from less intensive exercise programmes.

The Australians wanted to find out whether the critics had a point.

Study

The researchers got 84 unfit subjects to run for half an hour on a treadmill three times a week for eight weeks. Half of the subjects had to run at an intensity that they described as 'a bit heavy going'. The subjects did moderately intensive training.

The other half had to train at "high" intensity.

In case you're interested, the Australians used the Borg scale to measure the intensity of the exertion. This goes from 6 to 20 RPE. The subjects in the moderate-intensity group ran at an intensity of 13 RPE, and the subjects in the other group at 15 RPE.

Results

The researchers measured how fit the subjects were before the programme started, just after it ended and again six months later. The last measurement indicated that the maximal oxygen uptake – the most important indicator of fitness – had remained stable in the subjects who had done moderate-intensity training. This was not the case for the subjects who had done the intensive training programme.

Conclusion

The moderately intensive training programme had encouraged the subjects to continue doing some exercise of their own accord once the eight weeks had ended, the researchers think.

That was not the case for the subjects who had felt overworked by the intensive training programme.

Source:
Journal of Exercise Science & Fitness 13 (2015) 123-30.
 
Heavy and intense cardio programs aren't for those who are not in shape to begin with as they will end up with injury and also frustration. Slow and steady surely does win the race ;)
 
I agree for over weight or totally out of shape. Only them though.

Plus did they base all that off of only running on a treadmill. That's crap
 
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I agree for over weight or totally out of shape. Only them though.

Plus did they base all that off of only running on a treadmill. That's crap

Try that with a full crossfit WOD...those guys in that study just might not last long on such a regimen. I can say that from experience..crossfit isn't for everyone as it is a really challenging cardio program.
 
That makes sense...crossfit is something like intense cardio, which is great after the heavy lifting.

If you do it correctly it can be awesome. The major problem is people start trying to beat each other and forget form and quality range of motion. Then they can easily get hurt. Gotta do it right and the rest will happen on its own
 
If you do it correctly it can be awesome. The major problem is people start trying to beat each other and forget form and quality range of motion. Then they can easily get hurt. Gotta do it right and the rest will happen on its own

No wonder why people beat on crossfit, because crossfitters are perceived to put speed above form.
 
No wonder why people beat on crossfit, because crossfitters are perceived to put speed above form.

That's the thing. Alot will do exactly that and the coaches will let them. The gym I train at has a few good coaches and they let me stop people and correct them without getting pissed because I'm not exactly a coach there. I just don't want to see anybody get hurt or developed a form that will mess them up at some point.
 
That's the thing. Alot will do exactly that and the coaches will let them. The gym I train at has a few good coaches and they let me stop people and correct them without getting pissed because I'm not exactly a coach there. I just don't want to see anybody get hurt or developed a form that will mess them up at some point.

Good to help others out, and that's a good thing. Bad habits only get people in trouble.
 
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