520.991.5622
Maggie Rappaport
Personal Training for People in Their 40s, 50s...and Beyond
Tucson, AZ
A popular myth
is that there is a specific range of heart rates in which you must exercise to
burn fat. Even many cardio machines display a “fat-burning zone” on their panels,
encouraging people to exercise in a specific heart rate range. Have you ever
wondered if you really have to exercise in a specific heart rate zone to lose
fat? And what happens if you venture out of that zone? Jason R. Karp, PhD, a
nationally recognized speaker, writer and exercise physiologist who coaches
recreational runners to Olympic hopefuls through his company,
RunCoachJason.com, sheds light on this issue.
You use both fat
and carbohydrates for energy during exercise, with these two fuels providing
that energy on a sliding scale. During exercise at a very low intensity (e.g.,
walking), fat accounts for most of the energy expenditure. As exercise
intensity increases up to the lactate threshold (the exercise intensity
that marks the transition between exercise that is almost purely aerobic and
exercise that includes a significant anaerobic contribution; also considered
the highest sustainable aerobic intensity), the contribution from fat decreases
while the contribution from carbohydrates increases. When exercising just below
the lactate threshold, you are using mostly carbohydrates. Once the
intensity of exercise has risen above the lactate threshold, carbohydrates
become the only fuel source.
If you exercise
long enough (1.5–2 hours), your muscle carbohydrate (glycogen) content and
blood glucose concentration become low. This metabolic state presents a threat
to the muscles’ survival, since carbohydrates are muscles’ preferred fuel. When
carbohydrates are not available, the muscles are forced to rely on fat as fuel.
Since more fat
is used at low exercise intensities, people often assume that low-intensity
exercise is best for burning fat, an idea that has given birth to the
“fat-burning zone.” However, while only a small amount of fat is used when
exercising just below the lactate threshold, the rate of caloric expenditure
and the total number of calories expended are much greater than they are
when exercising at a lower intensity, so the total amount of fat used is
also greater.
For fat and
weight loss, what matters most is the difference between the number of calories
you expend and the number of calories you consume. Fat and weight
loss is about burning lots of calories and cutting back on the number of
calories consumed. For the purpose of losing weight, it matters little whether
the calories burned during exercise come from fat or carbohydrates.
To maximize
your fat loss, try these workouts. For assistance in designing effective, safe
workouts, consult with a certified personal trainer.
Go Hard
A great way to
perform high-intensity exercise and decrease your body fat percentage is
through interval training, which breaks up the work with periods of rest. Not
only does interval training allow you to improve your fitness quickly; it is
also more effective than continuous exercise for burning lots of calories
during exercise and increasing your postworkout metabolic rate. Try one or two
of these workouts each week:
Each of these interval workouts should include a warm-up and a cool-down.
Go Very Long
Long runs or
bike rides (≥ 1.5–2 hours at 65%–70% max HR) that stimulate mitochondrial
synthesis and promote the depletion of glycogen threaten the muscles’ survival,
since carbohydrates are muscles’ preferred fuel. In response to this threat,
muscles “learn” how to use fat more effectively and over time become better
fat-burning machines.
This handout is a service of IDEA, the leading international membership
association in the health and fitness industry, www.ideafit.com.
© 2010 by IDEA Health &
Fitness Inc. All rights reserved. Reproduction without permission is strictly
prohibited.