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The Most Important Fitness Component
Wayne L. Westcott, Ph.D.
When you
think of physical fitness, perhaps your mind reflects back on the fitness tests you
performed in elementary and secondary school. If so, you may recall a running test
to assess your aerobic capacity, a pull-up or push-up test to measure your muscle
strength, a sit-up or squat jump test to estimate your muscle endurance, and a sit and
reach test to determine your joint flexibility. Although aerobic capacity, muscle
strength, muscle endurance and joint flexibility are important components of overall
physical fitness, they pale in comparison to the role of body composition.
Body
composition is not something you do, like 10 push-ups or 50 sit-ups. Body
composition is something you are, but it has a lot to do with what you do.
Basically, Your body is composed of two types of tissues known as fat weight and lean
weight. Fat weight is the fat stored in fat cells throughout the body. Lean
weight includes all other tissues, such as organs, bones, blood, skin, and muscle.
Approximately half of our lean weight is muscle which, along with fat, is most likely to
change during our adult years.
As we
age, we typically lose about five pounds of muscle and add about 15 pounds of fat every
decade of life. While this represents a 10-pound change in bodyweight, it is
actually a 20-pound change in body composition. The muscle loss adversely affects
our physical function and personal appearance. Perhaps more importantly, it results
in a reduced metabolic rate that facilitates fat gain. This is because every pound
of muscle loss reduces our resting metabolism by at least 35 calories per day.
Assuming we eat approximately the same amount of food, calories that were previously used
for muscle maintenance are now placed into fat storage, resulting in creeping obesity.
Excess
body fat is a major health risk associated with many medical problems including low back
pain, type II diabetes, various forms of cancer, high blood pressure, and heart disease.
Most people understand this, and half of all Americans are presently on low calorie
diet plans to reduce unwanted fat. Unfortunately, dieting alone has a dismal record
of success, with over 90 percent of dieters regaining all of this fat weight within one
year. Even worse, about one-quarter of the weight lost through dieting is muscle,
further reducing this vital tissue and resting metabolic rate. No wonder a return to
normal and necessary eating behavior results in fat regain.
Because
the deterioration in body composition is a two-fold problem (too little muscle and too
much fat), restoration of desirable body composition requires a dual solution (muscle
replacement and fat reduction). Obviously, regular exercise is essential for
replacing muscle tissue. However, only strength training is effective for this
purpose. Endurance exercise is ideal for improving cardiovascular fitness, but it
neither builds muscle nor prevents the loss of muscle during our adult years.
So step
one in attaining a more desirable body composition is a basic program of strength
exercise. Our research reveals excellent results from two or three weekly training
sessions of 25 minutes each. This is all the time it takes to complete one set of 12
different exercises that address all of your major muscle groups. Each set is
performed at a slow movement speed through a full movement range with a weightload that
permits between eight and 12 repetitions. When you can do 12 good repetitions the
resistance should be increased by one to five pounds.
Combining
this simple strength training protocol with 25 minutes of endurance exercise (treadmill
walking, stationary cycling, etc.) is an excellent approach for enhancing body
composition. In one of our studies, almost 300 men and women performed this
combination exercise program for a period of eight weeks. On average the
participants added three pounds of muscle and lost nine pounds of fat, for a six-pound
reduction in bodyweight and a 12-pound improvement in body composition. These
beneficial changes were accomplished without strict dietary intervention, but everyone
received heart-healthy eating guidelines and sample menu plans.
In all
probability, the three-pronged approach is best for permanent weight management and
optimal body composition. The most important component is strength training (two
25-minute sessions per week are sufficient) to replace muscle, raise resting metabolic
rate, and improve physical function. The second component is endurance exercise
(three 25-minute sessions per week are recommended) to reduce fat stores and increase
cardiovascular fitness. The third component is a commitment to better eating habits
and sound nutrition, which typically requires more food rather than less. This is
because the recommended foods (grains, vegetables, fruits, lean meats, and low-fat dairy
products) generally have fewer calories per serving than the less-nutritious foods that
they replace (popular fast foods, fried foods, fat foods, and snack foods).
The
results of our summer research study support the three-piece plan for a variety of
personal benefits besides better body composition. In addition to adding muscle and
losing fat, the 87 participants in our Keeping Fit Program achieved significant
increases in their muscle strength, performance power, and static balance, and attained
significant decreases in their waist girth and hip girth. They also realized a
one-third inch increase in height due to improved posture resulting from stronger lower
back, upper back, and neck muscles.
Wayne L. Westcott, Ph.D., C.S.C.S, is
Fitness Research Director at the South Shore YMCA in Quincy, MA. He is strength training
consultant for numerous national organizations, such as the American Council on Exercise,
the American Senior Fitness Association, and the National Youth Sports Safety Foundation,
and editorial advisor for many publications, including Prevention, Shape, and Club
Industry magazines.
He is also author of 20 fitness books
including the new releases, No More Cellulite, Building Strength and Stamina, Strength
Training Past 50, Strength Training for Seniors, Complete Conditioning for Golf, and
Strength and Power for Young Athletes.
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