High Intensity Interval Training (HIIT) – Kick the Cardio Bunny Routine for Better Results

10 Apr

I had been writing a post about Fitocracy, but I’m going to put it on the backburner for now because I think addressing cardio is way more urgent (although I can’t wait to post the Fitocracy one either!).

For as long as I’ve remembered, I’ve hated cardio.  Most of the women at every gym I have ever gone to do a slow-pace workout that lasts for upwards of 20 minutes, sometimes as long as one to two hours and it is just so terribly boring to me. I’ve done the same thing before, and it’s just a long, dull struggle of “when is this going to be over!?” I’ve never understood how someone could be content just swinging their legs along the elliptical for an hour.

Don’t get me wrong, there are plenty of people who absolutely adore running a few miles, or cycling for long distances or doing other endurance sports, and that is fantastic. But I’m trying to get through to the women who think long runs and long machine workouts are the best way that cardio can burn fat, and that they’re the only way to get in better cardiovascular shape. I think a lot of women do these workouts because they’re never told otherwise. That’s why you see most women spend over half their time at the gym on a treadmill or elliptical or bicycle, with many of them reading a book or magazine, or watching TV, utterly unengaged.

So what should I be doing instead?

I’d like to introduce a novel, somewhat-new concept: high intensity interval training, or HIIT. The idea is that you do shorter bursts of intense work (say, sprints), followed by longer recovery work such as walking or resting. This can be done with sprinting/walking, bodyweight exercises/rest, most things really, as long as you’re exercising at a really intense level, followed by recovery. Then you repeat it. It typically lasts no more than 20 minutes, and I’ve seen programs as short as 4 minutes.

In my opinion, the best part of this is that it’s done for a much shorter period of time than your usual cardio workout. I’ve never seen an account of anyone going for longer than 20 minutes, mostly because you’re just working so damn hard. You no longer have to set aside an hour to get your cardio in, hell you can get your cardio done in under 10 minutes.

There have been tons of studies done on HIIT vs. long, slow-pace cardio – fat loss between the two, cardiovascular improvements, etc. I’m going to pull a lot of my stats from a bodybuilding.com article on HIIT found here,which quotes a number of these studies. One of the most mind-blowing ones reported that:

females following a 20-minute HIIT program, consisting of 8-second sprints followed by 12 seconds of rest, lost six times more body fat than the group who followed a 40-minute cardio program performed at a constant intensity of 60 percent of their maximum heart rate.

I’d like to let that sink it. By spending half the amount of time working out, women were able to lose six times as much fat as the women doing steady-pace cardio. I haven’t found the exact percentages lost, but even if the women doing the 40 minute sessions only lost 1% of body fat on average, the other group would have lost 6%. That’s the difference between marginal fat loss (sure it happened, but you can’t tell) and noticeable fat loss.

After doing HIIT, you will burn more calories in the 24 hours following your workout than if you did steady-pace cardio – about 10% more calories. There is also less muscle loss with HIIT, and it is a much more efficient means of increasing cardiovascular fitness as well.

Okay, I’m sold. How can I start doing HIIT?

Another one of my favorite things is that there’s tons of ways to do HIIT. If you don’t have access to it, you don’t need equipment, or even proper running shoes, so there’s an option for everyone. (Although if you’re going to be running, you should definitely have good running shoes.) Here’s a list of ways to start out:

  • follow the 8-week program outlined in the bodybuilding.com article . You can use an elliptical, a treadmill, stationary bike, or run outside. Their program starts with a 1:4 work-to-recovery ratio, working up to 2:1.
  • do 8 seconds of sprinting followed by 12 seconds of walking or resting, and repeat for 20 minutes
  • Use the Tabata method – perform bodyweight exercises such as burpees, lunges, squats, pushups, tricep dips, v-sits, etc. for 20 second intervals, followed by 10 seconds of rest. Do this for 4 minutes.
  • Crossfit – it’s based on functional fitness and high intensity exercise that incorporates weightlifting, plyometrics, and gymnastics. Be sure to research a reputable Crossfit box – you want to make sure your trainers are focusing on form and not reps or time, because doing Olympic lifts and gymnastics with bad form will hurt you. It can be very expensive, but it is less focused on the work/time ratio, and can be a way to incorporate weightlifting and cardio into the same workout.

Since I started HIIT, I no longer dread cardio, which is damn huge for me. Besides cutting my cardio workouts in half and getting a better result, I feel more accomplished afterwards, similar to how I feel after a hard session of heavy weightlifting. So give it a try, and stick with it for a few months. You’ll probably find you’ll have more free time and faster results, so what’s there to lose?

5 Responses to “High Intensity Interval Training (HIIT) – Kick the Cardio Bunny Routine for Better Results”

  1. savynaturalista April 10, 2013 at 5:18 PM #

    I am looking to get lean, I thought this was a great article I dislike hitt so much but I love fasted cardio… I guess I will try and take up hitt again if it does that much for fat lost…

    • lkskinner April 11, 2013 at 9:35 AM #

      HIIT isn’t an end all be all solution to fat loss, but I think it can make it a happen a lot faster. If you haven’t before, try the Tabata method (20 seconds work, 10 seconds rest for 4 minutes) with whatever bodyweight exercises you want, and see if you like that better. If you hate it, just stick to your fasted cardio 🙂

  2. Tall Tales Brewing April 20, 2013 at 9:09 AM #

    I’ve heard that you can lose a lot of fat and trim you legs, butt and core with doing aerobic intense walking. Example, putting the treadmill on the highest incline it can go, but keeping your pace between 2.0 – 3.0 max. I believe it’s suppose to get your heart rate up into the aerobic level, but never exceed, and this enacts your body to eat up fat for energy rather than sugar/carbs when you are in an anaerobic state.

    Again, I was told this, and this did seem to work for me on the treadmill, but could you do some research for me and post about this? I’d love to know the truths behind how your body functions in an aerobic and anaerobic state.

    Thanks Snowflake!

    • lkskinner April 20, 2013 at 10:19 PM #

      Hey there Kyle 🙂

      I really haven’t been able to find anything that specifically addresses doing slow-state cardio at an aggressive incline. That being said, here’s the what relevant information I’ve found.

      From what I’ve found, in aerobic exercise, your body will initially burn glycogen, and then move on the fat shortly afterward, which sounds better than anaerobic, which burns pretty much just glucose. But here’s where it gets complicated. Anaerobic exercise burns more calories overall (I think it’s fewer during a workout, but much more over the following 24 hours), but aerobic exercise burns glycogen and then fat. Based off the results from the studies quoted in the bodybuilding.com article, I would assume that the fat burned in aerobic exercise is less than the fat lost from the deficit that anaerobic exercise gives. Also, anaerobic exercise is more conducive to retaining muscle mass, which will help maintain a higher metabolism (I’ve read that the impact of muscle on metabolism is usually exaggerated, but that it still makes a difference, so the point stands), which increases your resting metabolic rate. Anaerobic exercise like HIIT can take much less time, so it can be a lot more practical.

      On a slightly different note, there’s the usual “you can’t spot train,” so the fat lost from legs, butt and core will just be part of an overall decrease in fat.

      I’ll stand by the standard though – it’s near impossible to out-exercise a bad diet, so make sure your nutrition is in check! Most of this is just gleaning information from a few sources and trying to make sense of it because no one is outright comparing the calories burned vs. fuel type used. Sorry I can’t give a more solid answer, but I hope it helped clear some things up!

      ❤ l

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