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The Tabata Method, or perhaps more widely known through celebrities and the media as ‘The 4 minute fat burning miracle workout’, is based on High Intensity Interval Training (HIIT), rather than the more commonly used endurance training often associated with going to the gym.Where does the Tabata Method come from?Tabata is named after Professor Izumi Tabata who carried out a training study on his Olympic team in 1996. He decided to split his Olympic speed skater team into two and train them differently to see which reaped the greater training benefit.One group trained at what’s called a ‘Steady state’ – 70% VO2max (70% of the maximum capacity to transport oxygen round the body whilst exercising), the other group trained by using 20 seconds of ultra-intense exercise (at an intensity of about 170% of VO2max) followed by 10 seconds of rest, repeated continuously for 4 minutes (8 cycles).The results?The ‘steady state’ group achieved a higher VO2max on completion, but the Tabata group who had started lower, gained more overall. In addition only the Tabata group had gained anaerobic capacity benefits – meaning being able to live without air for a period of time.OK, so I know most of us aren’t Olympians and therefore you probably just want to know what this actually means in layman’s terms for you.

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What is the Tabata Training Method? | TabataLive – Tabata Live's

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The Tabata Method, or perhaps more widely known through celebrities and the media as ‘The 4 minute fat burning miracle workout’, is based on High Intensity Interval Training (HIIT), rather than the more commonly used endurance training often associated with going to the gym.Where does the Tabata Method come from?Tabata is named after Professor Izumi Tabata who carried out a training study on his Olympic team in 1996. He decided to split his Olympic speed skater team into two and train them differently to see which reaped the greater training benefit.One group trained at what’s called a ‘Steady state’ – 70% VO2max (70% of the maximum capacity to transport oxygen round the body whilst exercising), the other group trained by using 20 seconds of ultra-intense exercise (at an intensity of about 170% of VO2max) followed by 10 seconds of rest, repeated continuously for 4 minutes (8 cycles).The results?The ‘steady state’ group achieved a higher VO2max on completion, but the Tabata group who had started lower, gained more overall. In addition only the Tabata group had gained anaerobic capacity benefits – meaning being able to live without air for a period of time.OK, so I know most of us aren’t Olympians and therefore you probably just want to know what this actually means in layman’s terms for you. Am I right?Well it was originally thought that endurance based exercise workouts were the most beneficial for burning fat, as it was popularly believed that fatty acid utilisation usually occurs after at least 30 minutes of training.However Tabata (or HIIT) has been shown to burn fat more effectively and significantly lower insulin resistance which overall proves to be more beneficial than endurance based training.But as you’ve already heard to do ‘Tabata’ in the truest sense of the word is to train at 170% VO2max.

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What is the Tabata Training Method? | TabataLive

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By Andrew Heffernan / June 2013: Discover Something WonderfulWhen it comes to cardio exercise, most gym-goers are either hares or tortoises: They like their workouts fast and furious or they like them slow and leisurely. Hares love the intensity of going full out; tortoises relish the relaxed groove of a meditative pace.Both types of exercise have proven benefits. Problems can arise, however, when you stick too closely to one type of workout or the other. That’s because your body runs on three separate but interrelated metabolic engines: the aerobic, the glycolytic and the ATP-CP systems. (For more on these systems, see ELmag.com/energysystems.) Each is built to power you through a different type of exercise.Slow and steady long-distance exercise uses primarily the “aerobic” system.

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Three-Speed Cardio : Experience Life

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Intermittent Fasting: Does it Work?Diets, Nutrition | Khruma Myrie | May 7, 2013 5:00 pm In today’s world of crazy fad diet’s, I often get asked what’s intermittent fasting? And does it works? Like many other fad diet’s, little is known about the true significance of intermittent fasting. The reason this type of fasting has received so much attention lately is because of books like Dr. Michael Mosley’s “The Fast Diet” and Dr

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Intermittent Fasting: Does it Work? | GYM FLOW 100

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A Deeper Insight on the Most Effective Tabata Leg WorkoutsThe four-minute revolutionary workout called Tabata Training is gaining more popularity online. This is because a lot of people have watched videos on YouTube and success stories on different blogs all over the internet. For those who are still unfamiliar with this workout, here is a bit of an introduction to let you know what the training is all about. © Dmitriy Shironosov | Dreamstime.comTabata training is a 20 seconds high intensity workout followed by a 10 seconds rest, to be done 8 times and all in a span of 4 minutes

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A Deeper Insight on the Most Effective Tabata Leg Workouts …

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Dear Fitbabe, What are your thoughts on intermittent fasting? I have heard about this a lot in the media lately. Do you eat this way? Thanks, HenryDear Henry, Intermittent Fasting is the process of taking a break from eating for a certain period of time

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ASK A TRAINER #12: “What's Up with Intermittent Fasting …

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It’s what Charles Mobbs, a neuroscientist from the Mount Sinai School of Medicine, calls the “metabolic mystery.”  Since the early 1930s, research studies have consistently demonstrated that too many nutritional resources, resulting in conditions like obesity and diabetes, can be toxic to the brain.  In contrast, more restrictive diets result in a complicated (and counterintuitive) cascade of protective effects, preventing aging-related diseases and ultimately prolonging life.  Today, neuroscientists are learning that the old adage, “you are what you eat,” might need to be updated to “you are how you eat.”  And the new work from the National Institutes of Aging suggests that fasting may help promote optimal brain health in aging adults.Eating: Less is more?Several studies have demonstrated that regular exercise helps protect the brain from age-related decline.  But in a recent essay published in the March 2012 issue of Nature Reviews Neuroscience, Mark Mattson, a neuroscientist at the National Institute of Aging, argues that diet is just as important.  Specifically, he cites results demonstrating that intermittent fasting—one day on food, the next day off of it—can also protect the brain.  So why might abstaining from food every 24 hours be such a brain benefit? “Fasting is a challenge to the nervous system, to the energy regulating systems,” says Mattson.  “And what we’re thinking, from the standpoint of evolution, is that animals living in the wild, including our ancestors, often had to go extended time periods without food.  If you haven’t had food for a while, your mind becomes more active—it has to become very active, to help you figure out how to find food.”That activity manifests itself in neuroplasticity; in mouse models, Mattson and colleagues have shown that intermittent fasting helps protect the brain from both oxidative stress and direct injury.  Those protective effects result in the upregulation of brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF) as well as anti-oxidants, DNA-repair enzymes, and other gene products that help promote plasticity and survival of neurons over time.“It makes evolutionary sense that caloric availability would have an impact, not just on brain regions involved in metabolism, such as the hypothalamus, but also on brain regions involved in learning, such as the hippocampus,” says Alexis Stranahan, a professor at Georgia Health Sciences University and Mattson’s co-author on the Nature Reviews Neuroscience essay.  “Your mind needs to be sharp if you are looking for food.  At the other end of the spectrum, it also makes sense that an overabundance of food would dull the senses, making it harder to form associations.”In the past, some studies suggested that caloric restriction promoted good health—and researchers have seen improved outcomes in animal models of Alzheimer’s disease, Parkinson’s disease, stroke and Huntington’s disease by simply reducing the number of calories an animal eats each day by a significant percentage.  But Mattson argues that, when it comes to the brain, fasting may be more effective.  “We find that the intermittent fasting increases neurogenesis while limited daily reduction in calories has very little effect,” he says.  “BDNF levels are increased in response to both exercise and intermittent energy restriction.”Fasting and human trialsTo date, intermittent fasting has been tested in two human trials.  The first was conducted by James Johnson, a plastic surgeon and professor at Louisiana State University, who was inspired by Mattson’s work.  He was interested in seeing if caloric restriction might help reduce inflammation and breathing issues in people with severe asthma.“I had a patient who had asthma who used three inhalers plus some oral medication every day,” he says.  “After three weeks of alternate-day fasting, she was down to using the inhalers once a day.  And after six weeks, she stopped using the inhalers at all.  Her asthma symptoms had essentially gone away.  It was astonishing.”Johnson partnered with Mattson and other local scientists to do a small clinical trial.  They recruited 12 overweight people with asthma to take part in an alternate-day fasting-like regimen.  Participants alternated eating whatever they wanted on “on” days and consuming shakes that limited caloric intake to 500-600 calories on “off” days, for two months. “It was a small trial but participants lost weight.  They said they felt good.  And their asthma symptoms improved,” says Mattson.  Measurements of airway resistance improved and the researchers found many markers of inflammation and oxidative stress diminished over the first few weeks.  Johnson marked it enough of a success to write a book about the regimen, called “The Alternative Day Diet.” A second clinical trial, led by the University of Manchester’s Michelle Harvie, divided a group of about 100 overweight women with a high risk of breast cancer into three diet groups:  average diet, a diet that restricted calories overall by 15 percent and intermittent fasting (with “off” days permitting 600 calories).  The results have not been published yet but, once again, Mattson says participants in the fasting group lost weight and improved their insulin sensitivity. Moving forwardBetween the replicated work in animal models and the success of the two small clinical trials, Mattson now has his sights set on the human brain.  He and his colleagues are planning to do a study looking at people who are at risk for age-related cognitive decline.  He is optimistic that the results will mimic those seen in the smaller trials, demonstrating solid protective effects in the cortex.  He and his colleagues also plan to contrast intermittent fasting with exercise in animal models. Mobbs, however, cautions that there’s no reason for everyone to start fasting just yet.  He maintains that there is still quite a bit we don’t know about caloric intake and the brain. “That’s why I call it the ‘metabolic mystery.’  And certainly we know that diseases like anorexia are very toxic to the body and the brain.  We don’t know when or how these processes go from being healthy to unhealthy yet,” he says.  “So your best bet for a healthy brain and a healthy body is still to listen to your doctor and use common sense:  follow a reasonable caloric intake, exercise, and avoid obesity.”

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The Brain's Metabolic Mysteries – Dana Foundation

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