|
|
| I think for those with cadiovascular problems its a must and I am changing my ways a bit and I'm starting to feel that everyone should do some for the cardiovascular benefit. However, I do NOT feel it is needed for fat loss and diet is the number one key factor for fat loss. |
I couldnt agree more, I do sprints and cardio not for fat loss purposes but for overall health.. and not to mention I enjoy them
|
Originally Posted by Jodi
I think for those with cadiovascular problems its a must. I'm starting to feel that everyone should do some for the cardiovascular benefit. However, I do NOT feel it is needed for fat loss and diet is the number one key factor for fat loss.
|
|
Originally Posted by Jodi
No necessarily. For fat loss you want to rely on your muscle. You want your body to burn fat for you. So, for those fairly lean, especially those competing, doing cardio can be detrimental and cause muscle loss. This is why some would be better off eating less and letting their built up muscle burn the extra calories for them.
For very overweight people I think cardio is a mandatory and not just for fat loss but for cardiovascular purposes. |
|
Originally Posted by Jodi
Cardio has very little effect on increasing your metabolism, only proper weight training will make significant changes to ones metabolism.
|
|
Originally Posted by HoldDaMayo
circuit training > cardio
|
|
Originally Posted by topolo
If I am not mistaken, and I rarely am, HIIT can speed up your metabolism
|
|
Originally Posted by kvyd
Why does it seem that most people think cardio is a must to lose fat?
|
|
Originally Posted by Dale Mabry
Hmmmm, here is my spin...
First, PROPER cardiovascular exercise for fat loss will cause the body to use oxygen more efficiently, thus leading to more fat cals burned. Also, when you do long duration cardio, your body produces more of the enzymes needed to produce energy aerobically, which will also enhance fat loss. HIIT on the other hand will cause the body to produce more of the enzymes that produce energy anaerobically, allowing you to be more explosive. Now for the performance benefits. The folks over at Westside Barbell REALLY push for cardiovasular exercise. Louie Simmons is a genius and realized that with alot of the Westside routines, you need a very advanced level of cardiovascular conditioning, a level most people do not have. I believe one of the caveats he puts on whether or not someoolne should do a Westside routine is their cardiovascular level. I have seen a bunch of people here at UPENN do them and none of them do it properly. Most take too much of a rest, only do half routines, or have shit ass form. If you are taking too much rest, you don't have the level of cardio fitness you need. I imagine if they even dropped the weight to a weight they could handle they still wouldn't do it right. the Westside parameters are THE way to do the Westside routines. They have been researched by Westside for years, so your theory that "15 extra seconds of rest won't make a difference" is not valid. Now that I have stated all of that, let's define Proper Cardiovascular Training. Proper Cardiovascular training is the type of cardiovascualr training that less than 1% of the population actually does. It is where you shave time off of your distance run or whatever on at least a weekly basis. When you get to an intensity to where you cannot progress, you are either ripped as hell, a World Class runner, overtraining, or lazy. It IS NOT the type of cardio you do at Bally's while watching TV, chatting to the chick next to you, reading a magazine, or chatting on your cell phone. |
|
Originally Posted by annarbor930
Do you think its possible that if you were to do light cardio (in the fat burning zone) in the morning on an empty stomach and bulked during the day and lifted in the evening, that you might be able to shed more fat than muscle while doing light cardio, and then gain more muscle than fat by eating clean and lifting? Thus providing a slight fat loss with small muscle gain at the same time. It's probably crazy I know
![]() |
|
Originally Posted by joey2005
yes but wouldnt it be good to run some HIIT right when you get up on a compltely empty stomach so you dont use muscle as energy? especially for the really fat ppl
|