Make Your Workout Work for Weight Loss
Follow these four smart strategies for adding more activity to help boost your weight loss.
1) Don’t count on spot training.
So you’d like to lose the extra roll around your middle. Do you do sit-ups until the cows come home, or do you go for a walk? Aerobic (cardio) exercise, such as walking, cycling or swimming, are burn fat all over the body. Those sit-ups may strengthen the muscles under your fat but won’t burn the fat itself. There is no such thing as spot reduction. For weight loss, you need aerobic exercise in your workout.
2) Use your muscles.
More muscle tissue means you’ll burn more calories, says Chuck Corbin, PhD, a professor of exercise and wellness at Arizona State University in Mesa, Ariz. “Muscle is more dense than fat, and because it can be worked, it uses energy,” he says. Fat does not. “Even at rest, muscle is burning more calories than fat,” says Corbin. The best way to build muscle? Strength-training exercises using dumbbells, weight machines or resistance bands.
3) Be orderly.
Which type of exercise should you do first – cardio or strength training? Many personal trainers recommend doing strength training first. Their reason? You’ll use your available energy to lift weights, and then when you do your aerobic exercise, you’ll be more likely to burn fat because you will have already burned through the calories taken in during the day and will reach deeper into fat stores. However, some experts say that if weight loss is your goal, start with cardio. Eric Von Frohlich, a New York City-based private trainer and group exercise instructor at Equinox fitness clubs, says, “If you do strength-training first, your muscles will be fatigued from lifting weights, then you won’t be able to do as much cardio work, which means you’ll burn fewer calories.”
4) Put in the time.
For years experts have been recommending 30 minutes of activity on five or more days per week. But to lose weight, more activity is needed; the USDA recommends 60 to 90 minutes per day. One study showed that people who lost an average of 72 pounds maintained their loss by exercising one hour per day. The 60 to 90 minutes can be a combination, say 30 minutes of walking, 20 minutes of strength training, 10 minutes of stretching and 30 minutes of household chores or gardening.
For general health purposes, experts recommend getting at least 30 minutes of moderate-intensity activity (broken into 10- to 15- minute blocks, if necessary) three times a week. If getting even that much is a challenge for you, you should speak with your doctor about a safe way to push your exercise frequency, duration or intensity higher to spur weight loss.
Move Every Day
A single 24-hour period of inactivity can lead to a 25-percent increase in the amount of fat tissue and a 19-percent increase in the size of fat cells, according to University of Missouri-Columbia researchers who studied the effects of daily exercise and inactivity.



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