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It’s a HIIT! High Intensity Interval TrainingFitness trends come and go, but experts have found a favorite—and you’ll be surprised how good it really is.What is HIIT?High Intensity Interval Training, also known as HITT, is a refreshing cardio workout that specializes in alternating between really intense and take it easy. Start out with 1 minute at a dead sprint, then ease up and walk for 2 minutes. You repeat this interval four or five times and—BAM—you see results pretty darn fast.Why We Love ItEfficient, fun, and endlessly creative, HIIT is quickly becoming the people’s workout choice

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Proform Blog » It's a HIIT! High Intensity Interval Training

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Have you heard of intermittent fasting? Basically, it’s a diet that involves a period of regular eating followed by one of fasting. The fast can last as long as 24 hours and involve only drinking water, black coffee or tea, or it can last for just eight hours. In other iterations, the fast period involves a restriction of calories – such as consuming only 600 calories on the fast day – which is much more feasible for many people

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Intermittent fasting: Does it work? | Naturade

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October 29, 2013 | By Dr. Sara Solomon Sign up for my Intermittent Fasting Tutorials directly to your inbox! The purpose of this email series is to help you find a fasting protocol that works best for your lifestyle so you can effortlessly maintain a lean physique 365 days a year.In this email series, I will be addressing the following:The research and theory behind fasting Fasting protocols (ie. 16/8, 20/4, alternate-day, 24 hour fasts, 5:2, etc) Fasted training Supplementation Flexible dieting How to survive your fasts FAQs >

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Start Intermittent Fasting Today! | Dr. Sara Solomon

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When it comes to fitness, there are few quick fixes. If you want a rockstar body, you’re expected to put in hours at the gym for maximum results. Or at least 20 minutes a day, right? Wrong! Let me introduce you to Tabata training.Tabata training is a type of high intensity interval training that supposedly can give you results similar to a 30- to 60-minute, moderate cardio routine in only 4 minutes

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Can You Really Cram a Full Workout Into 4 Minutes? – Health News …

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Image Source: thejoshuacollective.comAn empty stomach is perfectly natural. Fasting is something we all do while we’re asleep and whenever we don’t have food in our mouths — you’re probably fasting right now. Due in part to a recent spate of bestsellers and documentaries, “intermittent fasting” (or “IF,” typically defined as consuming nothing but water for 16 to 36 hours) has gained tremendous popularity in health and fitness circles as a way to lose fat, live longer, and even build muscle.But taking a break from food can be incredibly controversial, particularly among those who are still sold on the old doctrine of eating six small meals per day.

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What Is Intermittent Fasting? | GlobalFit Blog

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Intermittent Fasting ExplainedI get so many questions about Intermittent Fasting, so I decided to devote an entire episode of Live Lean TV to discuss the IF basics.Lets get right into it. Intermittent Fasting. Does it work? Can IF double your fat loss results?Well, I can’t personally answer that for you (yet – keep reading) cause I haven’t yet applied it to my own body. As you know, I believe in coming to conclusions based on experimenting and analyzing personal results rather than just being a “what the research shows” kind of guy.Remember, everything I talk about on Live Lean TV, I have used in my journey to Live Lean 365 days a year. I truly live my message.Now, to get to my current health and physique, I’ve followed a meal cadence of eating every 3-4 hours for 5-6 meals a day.This has worked for me.But does that mean it’s optimal for maintaining lean muscle, optimal for fat burning, and optimal for increasing mental performance and overall energy?Well I know it helps

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Intermittent Fasting 101: Can IF Double Your Fat Loss? #LLTV | Brad …

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Tabata Protocol – The Four Minute Exercise You Won’t Forget!It seems as though every time you turn on the TV there’s a new “miracle” workout being advertised. “Burn fat in 10 minutes!” “Shape your rear in 8 minutes!” “Completely transform your body in 5 minutes!” The reason these fads come and go so quickly? They hardly ever work. That is until Izumi Tabata came along. While Tabata doesn’t fit the image most of us imagine when we think of figures from the popular health industry, his protocol works.Enter TabataIzumi Tabata is a very non-intimidating man.

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The Tabata Protocol – The Four Minute Exercise You Won't Forget!

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Play Now: Physique Frontier Episode 02 with Brad Pilon [42:25m]: Play Now | Play in Popup | DownloadBrad Pilon steps into the lime light as our guest expert in Episode 02 of the Physique Frontier podcast.Brad is widely known for his approach to Intermittent Fasting and his book Eat Stop Eat. But as we discus in this podcast, fasting is just one of the tools Brad uses in his ongoing body transformation.What he is most passionate about is shaping and sculpting the body.…As you can see in his photo, he’s done one heck of a job at that!Brad is part of the team over at Adonis Index and Venus Index, which focus on sculpting an aesthetically pleasing physique with ideal proportions, balance, and symmetry.Our views on Physique Training are very much in alignment and I’m constantly gaining valuable insights from Brad’s interpretation of the latest research in the fitness industry.Here are a few of the topics we cover in this installment of Physique Frontier…The 3 most important measurement tools to accurately monitor and track your progress.Big aha moments and insights Brad gained from 2 very important self experiments he did this year.What the research says about shaping a specific area of a muscleIntermittent Fasting as a ‘tool’… and a bit about my self experiment with IF.The new bodybuilding trend and what Brad hopes to see from it.This is an information packed discussion I’m certain you will enjoy!Download the mp3 here ==> Episode 02 with Brad PilonSculpt a Masterpiece,Scott Tousignant About The Author Scott Tousignant is a Certified Fitness Consultant and Elite Natural Bodybuilder with the UFE. Scott specializes in helping regular guys get ripped abs insanely fast. With his careful attention to the finer details, you’ll carve out a rock hard and jacked physique in no time flat!

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Physique Frontier Episode 02: Muscle Shaping With Brad Pilon

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Wayne Westcott Ph.D. C.S.C.S.Men and women who do not perform regular resistance exercise experience progressive muscle atrophy.Research indicates that inactive adults lose about one-half pound of muscle per year during their 30s and 40s.(5,8)   The rate of muscle loss may double to one pound per year in people over fifty years of age. (13)  Unfortunately, the higher rate of fat gain masks the muscle loss.  Adults typically lose about five pounds of muscle and add about 15 pounds of fat each decade during midlife years.Importance of resistance trainingBased on body-weight  the average adult changes approximately ten pounds per decade.  But, based on body composition, the average adult changes approximately twenty pounds per decade (five pounds less muscle and fifteen pounds more fat).A woman in her 50s may have fifteen pounds less muscle and 45 pounds more fat than she had in her 20s.  This represents an unhealthy 60 pound change in her body composition, which increases her risk for a variety of devastating degenerative problems, such as cardiovascular disease, many types of cancer type 2 diabetes and low-back pain.While the focus is typically on fat loss (one out of two American adults is presently on a weight-reduction diet plan), more emphasis should be placed on muscle gain. This is due to the fact that the five pound-per- decade loss of muscle is largely responsible for up to a five-percent-per- decade reduction in resting metabolic rate. (5, 12)  a slower resting metabolism means that some calories previously used by high-energy muscle tissue are no longer needed, and are therefore stored as fat.Because one pound of muscle requires between 35 to 50 calories a day for tissue maintenance, a 10-pound muscle loss may reduce resting metabolism by 350 to 500 calories daily.

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Strength Training for Seniors: Part 1 – Restart Retirement

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Sixteen weeks of resistance training can decrease the risk of metabolic syndrome in healthy postmenopausal women Original Research (231) Total Article Views Authors: Conceição MS, Bonganha V, Vechin FC, Berton RP, Lixandrão ME, Nogueira FR, Souza GV, Chacon-Mikahil MP, Libardi CA Published Date September 2013 Volume 2013:8 Pages 1221 – 1228DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.2147/CIA.S44245 Received: 20 February 2013 These dates are only available for papers published since January 1, 2012″ /> Accepted:16 March 2013Published:16 September 2013 Miguel Soares Conceição,1 Valéria Bonganha,1 Felipe Cassaro Vechin,2 Ricardo Paes de Barros Berton,1 Manoel Emílio Lixandrão,1 Felipe Romano Damas Nogueira,1 Giovana Vergínia de Souza,1 Mara Patricia Traina Chacon-Mikahil,1 Cleiton Augusto Libardi21Exercise Physiology Laboratory, School of Physical Education, State University of Campinas, Campinas, 2Laboratory of Neuromuscular Adaptation to Strength Training, School of Physical Education and Sport, University of São Paulo, São Paulo, BrazilBackground: The postmenopausal phase has been considered an aggravating factor for developing metabolic syndrome. Notwithstanding, no studies have as yet investigated the effects of resistance training on metabolic syndrome in postmenopausal women. Thus, the purpose of this study was to verify whether resistance training could reduce the risk of metabolic syndrome in postmenopausal women.Methods: Twenty postmenopausal women were randomly assigned to a resistance training protocol (n = 10, 53.40 ± 3.95 years, 64.58 ± 9.22 kg) or a control group (n = 10, 53.0 ± 5.7 years, 64.03 ± 5.03 kg). In the resistance training protocol, ten exercises were performed, with 3 × 8–10 maximal repetitions three times per week, and the load was increased every week. Two-way analysis of variance was used to evaluate specific metabolic syndrome Z-score, high density lipoprotein cholesterol, fasting blood glucose, triglycerides, waist circumference, blood pressure, strength, and body composition.

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Sixteen weeks of resistance training can decrease the risk of metaboli

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