Cardiovascular Exercise Principles and Guidelines: Part Two
By Chad Tackett, president of GHF
For maximum effectiveness and safety, cardiovascular
exercise has specific instructions on the frequency, duration, and intensity.
These are the three important components of cardiovascular exercise that
you really need to understand and implement in your program. In addition,
your cardiovascular program should include a warm-up, a cool-down, and stretching
of the primary muscles used in the exercise. The last article, part one
of this two part series, explained the proper methods of warming-up, stretching,
and cooling-down and discussed the frequency and duration of a sound cardiovascular
routine.
You learned that cardiovascular exercise should
be done a minimum of three times a week, a minimum of 20 minutes per session
and should be done after a 5-10 minute warm-up (at a low intensity of 50-60%
of max HR) and a 5-10 minute cool-down (at a low intensity of 50-60% of
max HR) should follow. Once your muscles are warm (after warm up) and after
the cardiovascular exercise, you should stretch those muscles used in the
exercise.
This article, part two, discusses how to monitor
exercise intensity and heart zone training.
There are several ways to monitor the exercise
intensity. The best way to test the intensity is to take your heart rate
during the exercise, within the first 5 minutes of your cardiovascular exercise
session and again just before the cool-down.
There are two ways in which you can check your
heart rate during exercise. The most accurate one is to purchase a heart-rate
monitor that you strap around your chest. It will give you feedback on a
digital watch that tells you exactly what your heart rate is at a specific
time in the exercise session. The other way to obtain your heart rate is
by palpating (feeling) either the carotid artery, the temporal artery, or
the radial artery. The easiest site is either the cartoid or the radial
artery. The cartoid artery may be felt by gently placing your index finger
on your neck, between the middle of your collar bone and jaw line. Palpating
the radial artery is done by placing your index and middle finger on the
underside and thumb-side of your wrist.
When you're taking your heart rate you measure
it in beats per minute (counting the number of beats for 60 seconds). For
convenience, many people take their pulse for 6 seconds and multiply that
number by 10, or simply add a 0 behind the number just obtained. So, if
in 6 seconds you counted 12 beats, that would mean your heart rate was 120
beats per minute (bpm). Although counting for 6 seconds is most convenient,
keep in mind that the longer the time interval used, the more accurate the
results will be. For example, counting your heart rate for 30 seconds and
then multiplying that number by 2 will give a slightly more accurate reading
than counting your heart rate for 15 seconds and multiplying by 4, or 10
seconds and multiplying by 6. What ever time interval you use, be consistent.
Heart Zone Training
How do you know if you are training too intensely
or not intensely enough for what you want to achieve? This is where Heart
Zone Training comes in. Refer to the chart below. The top of the chart reads
"Maximum Heart Rate," which is 100% of your heart rate (the fastest
your heart will beat). This is different for everyone. To use Heart Zone
Training you must first determine your maximum heart rate (max HR).
You can determine your max HR one of two ways.
One way is to use the age predicted max HR formula, whereby you subtract
your age from 220. So, if you are 40 years old, your predicted max HR would
be 180 bpm. The other method, which is much more accurate and more individualized,
is actually having a medical or fitness professional administer a max HR
test for you, which is usually done on a stationery bicycle or treadmill
for several minutes and requires very hard work. Thus, only those cleared
by a physician should do this test. We do not explain how to administer
this test because only trained professionals should do so. Please refer
to the Global Health and Fitness Personal Training Directory for professionals
in your area (may or may not be trained in administering a max HR test).
Once you have determined your max HR, you will
need to decide what zone you want to train at. There are five different
training zones separated by 10% increments, each having different characteristics
and benefits.
Healthy Heart Zone
The first zone is called the Healthy Heart Zone.
This is 50-60% of your max HR. This is the easiest and most comfortable
zone within which to train and is the one that is best for people who are
just starting an exercise program or have low functional capacity. Those
of you who are walkers most likely train at this zone. Although this zone
has been criticized for not burning enough total calories, and for not being
intense enough to get great cardiorespiratory benefits, it has been shown
to help decrease body fat, blood pressure and cholesterol. It also decreases
the risk of degenerative diseases and has a low risk of injury. In this
zone, 10% of carbohydrates are "burned" (used as energy), 5% of
protein is burned and a whopping 85% of fat is burned.
Fitness Zone
The next zone is the Fitness Zone, which is 60-70%
of your max HR. Once again, 85% of your calories burned in this zone are
fats, 5% are proteins and 10% are carbohydrates. Studies have shown that
in this zone you can condition your fat mobilization (getting fat out of
your cells) while conditioning your fat transportation (getting fat to muscles).
Thus, in this zone, you are training your fat cells to increase the rate
of fat release and training your muscles to burn fat. Therefore, the benefits
of this zone are not only the same as the healthy heart zone training at
50-60% but you are now slightly increasing the total number of calories
burned and provide a little more cardiorespiratory benefits. You burn more
total calories at this zone simply because it is more intense.
Aerobic Zone
The third zone, the Aerobic Zone, requires that
you train at 70-80% of your max HR. This is the preferred zone if you are
training for an endurance event. In this zone, your functional capacity
will greatly improve and you can expect to increase the number and size
of blood vessels, increase vital capacity and respiratory rate and achieve
increases in pulmonary ventilation, as well as increases in arterial venous
oxygen. Moreover, stroke volume (amount of blood pumped per heart beat)
will increase, and your resting heart rate will decrease. What does all
this mean? It means that your cardiovascular and respiratory system will
improve and you will increase the size and strength of your heart. In this
zone, 50% of calories burned are from carbohydrates, 50% are from fat and
less than 1% is from protein. And, because there is an increase in intensity,
there is also an increase in the total number of calories burned.
Anaerobic Zone
The next training zone is called the Threshold
or Anaerobic zone, which is 80-90% of your max HR. Benefits include an improved
VO2 maximum (the highest amount of oxygen one can consume during exercise)
and thus an improved cardiorespiratory system, and a higher lactate tolerance
ability which means your endurance will improve and you'll be able to fight
fatigue better. Since the intensity is high, more calories will be burned
than within the other three zones. Although more calories are burned in
this zone, 85% of the calories burned are from carbohydrates, 15% from fat
and less than 1% are from protein.
Red-line Zone
The last training zone is called the Redline Zone,
which is 90-100% of your max HR. Remember, training at 100% is your maximum
heart rate (maximum HR), your heart rate will not get any higher. This zone
burns the highest total number of calories and the lowest percentage of
fat calories. Ninety percent of the calories burned here are carbohydrates,
only 10% are fats and again less than one percent is protein. This zone
is so intense that very few people can actually stay in this zone for the
minimum 20 minutes, or even five minutes (you should only train in this
zone if you are in very good shape and have been cleared by a physician
to do so). Usually, people use this zone for interval training. For example,
one might do three minutes in the Aerobic Zone and then one minute in this
Redline Zone and then back to the Aerobic Zone (this is called interval
training and will be discussed further in a future article).
I hope you have found the information in this article
helpful. You now have the knowledge to achieve the results you desire and
the benefits your body deserves.
Your greatest challenge, however, is not learning
new cardiovascular exercises or the proper technique; it's not learning
the heart rate zone to train at for your goals and interests or how to monitor
the intensity. Nor is it deciding when to try new cardiovascular exercises.
The greatest challenge facing you at this moment is deciding whether you
are willing to take action and make time for yourself and make cardiovascular
exercise a priority.
When you begin achieving great results, the excitement
and fun you experience will make the change well worth the effort. Action
creates motivation! Good luck: I hope you enjoy all the wonderful benefits
of an effective cardiovascular exercise program.
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