Cardiovascular
Exercise - Part One
Part Two
By
Chad Tackett
For maximum
effectiveness and safety, cardiovascular
exercise has specific instructions on the
frequency, duration, and intensity. These
are the three important components of
cardiovascular exercise that you really need
to understand and implement in your program.
In addition, your cardiovascular program
should include a warm-up, a cool-down, and
stretching of the primary muscles used in
the exercise. This article is part one of a
two part series discussing the very
important principles and guidelines of a
safe and effective cardiovascular exercise
program. Part one will explain the proper
methods of warming-up, stretching, and
cooling-down and discuss the frequency and
duration of a sound cardiovascular routine.
Part two will discuss how to monitor
exercise intensity and heart zone training.
Warming
Up and Stretching
One very common mistake is stretching before
muscles are warmed-up. It is important to
stretch after your muscles are warm (after
blood has circulated through them). Never
stretch a cold muscle. First warm up. A
warm-up should be done for at least 5-10
minutes at a low intensity. Usually, the
warm-up is done by doing the same activity
as the cardiovascular workout but at an
intensity of 50-60% of maximum heart rate (max
HR). After you've warmed-up for 5-10 minutes
at a relatively low intensity, your muscles
should be warm. To prevent injury and to
improve your performance, you should stretch
the primary muscles used in the warm up
before proceeding to the cardiovascular
exercise.
Cooling
Down
The cool down is similar to the warm-up in
that it should last 5-10 minutes and be done
at a low intensity (50-60% of max HR). After
you have completed your cardiovascular
exercise and cooled-down properly, it is now
important that you stretch the primary
muscles being used. Warming-up, stretching,
and cooling-down are very important to every
exercise session. They not only help your
performance levels and produce better
results, they also drastically decrease your
risk of injury.
Frequency
of Exercise
The first component of cardiovascular
exercise is frequency of the exercise, which
refers to the number of exercise sessions
per week. To improve both cardiovascular
fitness and to decrease body fat or maintain
body fat at optimum levels, you should
exercise (cardiovascularly) at least three
days a week. The American College of Sports
Medicine recommends three to five days a
week for most cardiovascular programs. Those
of you who are very out of shape and/or who
are overweight and doing weight-bearing
cardiovascular exercise such as an aerobics
class or jogging, might want to have at
least 36 to 48 hours of rest between
workouts to prevent an injury and to promote
adequate bone and joint stress recovery.
Duration
of Exercise
The second component of cardiovascular
exercise is the duration, which refers to
the time you've spent exercising. The
cardiovascular session, not including the
warm-up and cool-down, should vary from
20-60 minutes to gain significant
cardiorespiratory and fat burning-benefits.
Each time you do your cardiovascular
exercise, try to do at least 20 minutes or
more. Of course, the longer you go, the more
calories and fat you'll "burn" and
the better you'll condition your
cardiovascular system. All beginners,
especially those who are out of shape,
should take a very conservative approach and
train at relatively low intensities (50-70%
max HR) for 10-25 minutes. As you get in
better shape, you can gradually increase the
duration of time you exercise.
It is important
that you gradually increase the duration
before you increase the intensity. That is,
when beginning a walking program for example,
be more concerned with increasing the number
of minutes of the exercise session before
you increase the intensity, by increasing
your speed or by walking hilly terrain.
Please check back
for Part Two, where I'll discuss how to
monitor your training intensity and how to
use heart zone training to achieve the
specific results you desire. Until then,
remember that cardiovascular exercise should
be done a minimum of three times a week and
a minimum of 20 minutes per session. Once
your muscles are warm (after warm up) and
after the cardiovascular exercise, you
should stretch those muscles used in the
exercise. For example, after bicycling,
stretch your quadriceps, hamstrings, calves,
hips, and low back. After doing the rowing
machine, stretch your legs, back, biceps,
and shoulders. Good luck and enjoy all the
wonderful benefits of cardiovascular
exercise.
Chad Tackett is President of Global Health & Fitness. Learn how you
can have your own personal online trainer, dietician and motivator at Global
Health & Fitness.
Part Two
Recommended resources
Live a healthy life with Veriuni™ nutritionals.
Tasty liquid multivitamin ensures you'll get nearly every daily nutrient
required for prolonged health. Powerful antioxidant unleashes the power
of red wine extract and polyphenols for the ultimate mind and body
energizer. All-natural ingredients. No sugar or artificial preservatives.
For more information, check out
http://www.quickinfo247.com/8596058/VNU.
|
|