Which is better for weight loss?
Strength training. While
you burn only up to 10 calories per minute lifting weights, compared with as
many as 12 for cardio, you continue torching calories after you put those
dumbbells down.
"When you jog or hit the elliptical, your body is
actually pretty comfortable,” says exercise physiologist Mike Bracko of
Calgary, Alberta. “But when you strength train, your body is like, ‘Whoa, this
is a lot different!'” And that “whoa” takes you about an hour to recover
from—burning an extra 25 percent on top of the calories you torched during your
workout. That means if you burn 160 calories doing a 20-minute strength
circuit, you’ll actually burn 200 by the time you’ve gone on with your day.
Bonus: Your metabolism stays elevated by up to 10
percent for three days after you lift as your body repairs the microtrauma in
muscles, says Wayne Westcott, Ph.D., an exercise-science professor at Quincy
College in Massachusetts.
Which should I do first?
Whichever you prefer, because
they both have benefits, says. On one hand, moderate-intensity cardio
makes a great warm-up, priming your muscles for strength training. On the flip
side, cardio also makes a great cooldown, helping flush out the soreness-inducing
lactate that builds up in your muscles during tough training and turning it
back into energy you can use. The one exception: If you’re training for an
event like a triathlon or 10K, you want to tackle that type of exercise first,
when you’re fresh.
Does one give a bigger endorphin boost?
Cardio. It’s been shown to
change brain chemistry enough to improve mood, anxiety and depression. And in a
new study in the Journal of Experimental Biology, volunteers who
ran on a treadmill increased their levels of endocannabinoids—marijuanalike
chemicals created in the body that make you feel good and even have a slight
pain-relieving effect.
You can still enjoy an endorphin boost from
strength training, but you’ll need to rev your heart rate. Do that by lifting
heavy weights or moving quickly between sets and strength exercises instead of
taking long rest breaks.
Should I lift heavy or light weights?
Both. Light weights—light
enough that you can do 15 to 20 reps before fatigue sets in—tend to activate
slow-twitch muscle fibers. Heavy weights—so heavy that you can eke out only 8
to 10 reps—activate a higher percentage of fast-twitch ones. Combining the two
lifting styles will give you the best results, says Brad Schoenfeld, Ph.D., an
assistant professor in exercise science at CUNY Lehman College in Bronx, New
York. Ideally, you’d do one light lifting day and one or two heavy days in a
week, or mix it up in a single session.
What if I have time to do only one?
Strength train, for
one simple reason: “It’s possible to get your cardio from strength alone,” says
Westcott. If you keep moving between sets, either by inserting plyometric moves
that leave you breathless (think jump squats) or going straight from one
exercise to the next, you’ll strengthen your heart and lungs along with your
other muscles. Studies show that you can get better results—both aerobic and
strength gains—from three 20-minute strength circuits a week than you can from
60 minutes of cardio five days a week.
Self Magazine
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