WABC-TV 7—August 9, 2011
While working out, you can jog from 5 miles an hour up to 9.5 miles per hour, but you don't have to stay there long. That's the idea behind high intensity interval training.
"Instead of maintaining one speed for the entire duration, we alternate between more intense and less intense but within the session," said exercise physiologist Josh O'Brien in the Sports Rehabilitation and Performance Center at Hospital for Special Surgery.
O'Brien demonstrated interval training on Kendra Nichifor, who is training for her second marathon. She alternates between one minute recovery periods and one minute sprints.
The speeds can vary, but the sprint should be fast enough that you're tired at the end and the recovery should let your heart rate come down but not all the way. Studies show that interval training builds endurance, builds muscle mass and burns more fat in less time.
"I'm seeing intervals of 30 seconds, even 10 seconds with tremendous results," said O'Brien."Workouts that last only 5 to 10 minutes can be quite effective at improving markers of cardiovascular function."
One of those cardiovascular markers is VO2 max, the maximum amount of oxygen your body can take in during exercise.
Interval training has been shown to improve your VO2 max, which means every day activities will feel easier and improve lactic acid removal which means you can work out harder.
You do need to check with your doctor before doing a workout like this, to see if you can sustain the high intensity part, especially if you have heart disease or if you're at high risk for it. You may need a stress test first.
View the story at abclocal.go.com.
Enter a last name to search for information about a doctor.
Phyllis Fisher
212.606.1197
fisherp@hss.edu
Tracy Hickenbottom
212.606.1197
hickenbottomt@hss.edu
Elyse Bernstein
212.606.1197
bernsteinel@hss.edu
© Hospital for Special Surgery. 535 East 70th Street, New York, NY 10021