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Why Resistance Training Is So Effective For Weight Loss

Weight lifting, also known as resistance training, has been practiced for centuries as a way of building muscular strength. Research shows that resistance training, whether done via bodyweight, resistance bands or machines, dumbbells or free weights, not only helps us build strength, but also improves muscle size and can help counteract age-related muscle loss.


More recently it’s become popular among those looking to lose weight. While exercises such as running and cycling are indeed effective for reducing body fat, these activities can simultaneously decrease muscle size, leading to weaker muscles and greater perceived weight loss, as muscle is more dense than fat. But unlike endurance exercises, evidence shows resistance training not only has beneficial effects on reducing body fat, it also increases muscle size and strength.


The ‘after-burn effect’


When we exercise, our muscles need more energy than they do when resting. This energy comes from our muscles’ ability to break down fat and carbohydrate (stored within the muscle, liver and fat tissue) with the help of oxygen. So during exercise, we breathe faster and our heart works harder to pump more oxygen, fat, and carbohydrate to our exercising muscles.


What is less obvious, however, is that after we’ve finished exercising, oxygen uptake actually remains elevated in order to restore muscles to their resting state by breaking down stored fat and carbohydrates. This phenomenon is called excess post-exercise oxygen consumption (EPOC) – though more commonly known as the “after-burn effect”. It describes how long oxygen uptake remains elevated after exercise in order to help the muscles recover.
The extent and duration of the after-burn effect is determined by the type, length, and intensity of exercise, as well as fitness level and diet. Longer-lasting exercise that uses multiple large muscles, performed to or near fatigue, results in higher and longer-lasting after-burn.
High-intensity interval training (HIIT) and high intensity resistance training are most effective at elevating both short and long-term after-burn. The reason HIIT-type exercises are thought to be more effective than steady-state endurance exercise is because of the increased fatigue associated with HIIT. This fatigue leads to more oxygen and energy required over a prolonged period to repair damaged muscle and replenish depleted energy stores. As such, resistance exercise is an effective way to lose excess fat due to the high calorie cost of the actual training session, and the “after-burn effect”.


Long-term fat loss


Resistance training can also be effective for long-term weight control, too. This is because muscle size plays a major role in determining resting metabolic rate (RMR), which is how many calories your body requires to function at rest. Resting metabolic rate accounts for 60-75% of total energy expenditure in non-exercising people, and fat is the body’s preferred energy source at rest.


Increasing muscle size through resistance training increases RMR, thereby increasing or sustaining fat loss over time. A review of 18 studies found that resistance training was effective at increasing resting metabolic rate, whereas aerobic exercise and combined aerobic and resistance exercise were not as effective. However, it’s also important to control calorie intake in order to lose fat and sustain fat loss.


Resistance training exercises should engage the largest muscle groups, use whole body exercises performed standing and should involve two or more joints. All of these make the body work harder, thereby increasing the amount of muscle and therefore RMR. An effective resistance training programme should combine intensity, volume (number of exercises and sets), and progression (increasing both as you get stronger). The intensity should be high enough that you feel challenged during your workout.


The most effective way of doing this is using the repetition maximum method. For the purpose of fat loss, this should be performing between six and ten repetitions of an exercise with a resistance that results in fatigue, so that you cannot comfortably do another full repetition after the last one. Three to four sets, two or three times a week for each muscle group is recommended.


The repetition maximum method also ensures progression, because the stronger you get, the more you will need to increase resistance or load to cause fatigue by the tenth repetition. Progression can be achieved by increasing the resistance or intensity so that fatigue occurs after performing fewer repetitions, say eight or six.


Resistance training helps with excess fat loss by increasing both after-burn after exercise, and by increasing muscle size, thereby increasing the number of calories we burn at rest. Combining it with a healthy diet will only further increase the loss of excess body fat – and may also provide other positive health benefits.

Written by:
David R Clark, Senior Lecturer, Strength and Conditioning, Liverpool John Moores University
Carl Langan-Evans, Postdoctoral Research Fellow, Strength and Conditioning, Liverpool John Moores University
Robert M. Erskine, Reader in Neuromuscular Physiology, Liverpool John Moores University

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How Exercise Can Help Improve Anxiety & Depression

Mental health can often get overlooked in the fitness industry. We tend to focus on the physical benefits and the visual changes, but keeping our mental state in order is key to everyone’s overall health. 

Everyone will have their own personal journey with mental health throughout their lives and everyone will have their own way of both healing and managing their own minds. 

For many the gym is their escape, their chance to unwind, a way to channel those negative energies and thoughts into something positive, something productive. When your mind becomes cluttered, exercise can be the route to a still mind.

Whether it be a cardio workout to sweat out the stresses of the day or a weights session to pump out the day’s frustrations, the gym can be your place of solitude, the place to focus on yourself and your own goals.

You don’t have to be a fitness fanatic to reap the benefits. Research indicates that modest amounts of exercise can make a real difference. No matter your age or fitness level, you can learn to use exercise as a powerful tool to deal with mental health problems, improve your energy and outlook, and get more out of life.

 

Exercise & Depression

Exercise is a powerful depression fighter for several reasons. Most importantly, it promotes all kinds of changes in the brain, including neural growth, reduced inflammation, and new activity patterns that promote feelings of calm and well-being. It also releases endorphins, powerful chemicals in your brain that energize your spirits and make you feel good.

Finally, exercise can also serve as a distraction, allowing you to find some quiet time to break out of the cycle of negative thoughts that feed depression.

 

Exercise & Anxiety

Exercise is a natural and effective anti-anxiety treatment. It relieves tension and stress, boosts physical and mental energy, and enhances well-being through the release of endorphins. Anything that gets you moving can help, but you’ll get a bigger benefit if you pay attention instead of zoning out.

Try to notice the sensation of your feet hitting the ground, for example, or the rhythm of your breathing, or the feeling of the wind on your skin. By adding this mindfulness element—really focusing on your body and how it feels as you exercise—you’ll not only improve your physical condition faster, but you may also be able to interrupt the flow of constant worries running through your head.

How We Can Help

So if you’re looking for a positive outlet to life’s stresses and struggles, we at Results are here to help. It doesn’t matter if you are a complete beginner or not been to a gym in years, we include on-going exercise plan design within our memberships. We can create an exercise programme for you based on your personalised goals and run you through it in a 1-1 session. Contact us for more information and to get yourself booked in.

If you’re struggling with your mental health right now please know you’re not alone. Please visit www.mind.org.uk for help and support. 

Authors: Lawrence Robinson, Jeanne Segal, Ph.D., and Melinda Smith, M.A & sections/edits by Susie Dane.

Read the full unedited article here: 

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The 80/20 Rule

There are a lot of unhealthy relationships within the fitness society ranging from making poor food and exercise choices, to the other end of the spectrum with food and exercise obsessions. Both extremes are unhealthy; excessive exercise and food obsessions are not conducive to sustainable, long term results. They are generally not enjoyable and can make for a restrictive lifestyle that is difficult to maintain.

THE 80/20 LIFESTYLE

However, the 80/20 fitness principle that I like to follow for long term results is as follows; put in a top effort 80% of the time in order to obtain the health and fitness results you desire and for the remaining 20%, don’t worry about it – enjoy your life!

Maybe you think that by allowing yourself to relax for 20% of the time that you won’t achieve the results you’re after.  However, the opposite is in fact true and let me explain why;

First of all, 80% of the time is a very large proportion; For every ten meals that you eat, aim for eight of them to be as nourishing as possible. For the remaining 20% you can allow yourself to eat in a way that doesn’t exactly follow the health guidelines, but this 20% won’t stop you from being on track.

How can this be true? When you successfully change your lifestyle so that you eat healthily the majority of the time, you are not really going to be tempted to gorge yourself on an unhealthy fast food meal or eating a full bar of chocolate. Believe it or not, in time you won’t get cravings for these sorts of foods any more and even if you do, once you start eating them you’ll realise that they’re making you feel sick, or they just don’t taste like real food any more. If by chance you do go ahead and eat something like this, you’re likely to get a sore stomach or feel low on energy later in comparison to those good foods 80% of the time; then you’ll probably crave the delicious healthy food you’re used to eating!

However, if you are getting cravings to this degree & ‘binge eating’ on the regular, just keep working on healthy choices & eventually these unhealthy binges will become a thing of the past.

LOOK AT THE BIG PICTURE

The 80/20 diet means that you won’t feel like you’re depriving yourself of things by saying, “I can never eat that”.  In small, infrequent amounts of more appealing options are not going to disrupt your goals. Instead,

‘it is the person who tells themselves they can’t have something that later feels deprived and binges in a way that will actually hinder their progress’.

Hooper, L. 2021. Ref; McGuiness, K. 2017.

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