Vitamin World

Strength Training and Weight loss

January 25, 2010

The Bible Cure for Weight Loss and Muscle Gain

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  • ISBN13: 9780884196846
  • Condition: NEW
  • Notes: Brand New from Publisher. No Remainder Mark.

Product Description
Bestselling BibleCure series from Dr. Don Colbert.

The Bible Cure for Weight Loss and Muscle Gain
Price: $3.07

December 17, 2009

Strength Training Prevents Age Related Muscle Loss

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The condition known as sarcopenia derived from the Greek words for vanishing flesh is the gradual wasting away of lean muscle tissue of one’s body. Twenty years ago this condition did not even have a name, but now is well on the way to becoming a household word like osteoporosis. Responsible for robbing both women and men of their strength, health, mobility and independence in their senior years, sarcopenia is a significant global health problem and is one of the most serious long term threats to being able to remain healthy as adult’s age. Usually seen in physically inactive people, sarcopenia exerts its debilitating effects in a slow, sneaky fashion over a period of decades. This loss of muscle begins at around the age of 30 at the rate of 10% per decade increasing to 15 % per decade in the 60’s and 70’s then about 30% per decade thereafter. This insidious and crippling process not only robs people of their functional health and mobility but further pushes them into unhealthy and inactive lifestyles. This vicious cycle continues with increased risk of other diseases associated with a sedentary lifestyle such as cancer, diabetes and heart disease. Research in the anti aging field is finding ways to prevent and treat muscle loss in aging adults and concludes that strength training exercise has a remarkable effect on recovering lost strength. The negative attitude towards strength training by older adults has changed over time as they are learning how they can benefit from this old but proven form of exercise. Strength training is exercise that uses resistance – to strengthen and condition the muscular system. This can be achieved with resistance training machines or free weights found in your local gym. The amount of resistance a muscle has to work against determines how strong it will get. Strength training is not running on a treadmill, riding a stationary bike, or using an elliptical machine. Although those types of aerobic machines use “resistance” to increase your workout intensity, it’s not the same as strength training and will not strengthen muscles. Any exercise that involves contracting your muscles many times with little or no resistance such as walking or cycling doesn’t prevent loss of muscle mass. Runners still lose muscle mass even if they’re highly active. When challenged by strength training exercise your muscles and bones are continually forced to renew themselves, sweeping out old, degenerated cells and rebuilding new tissue that is younger, stronger, and healthier. To get started a properly prescribed exercise program should be set up and the initial sessions monitored by an Exercise Professional at your local gym or health club. This program should include both strength training and cardiovascular exercise at about a 60/40 ratio. If you risk losing your functional health and mobility as you get older, you risk losing your precious independence – and your dignity along with it. The good news is, as a health-conscious adult you can take immediate steps to get started on a strength training program to ensure this will never happen to you.

Do you want to discover the secret to rejuvenating your body and regaining lost vitality and improving the quality of your life? Download my free ebook “I’ve Found the Fountain of Youth- Let Me Show You Too!” here: ways to look younger Carolyn Hansen is a certified fitness expert and fitness center owner who coaches clients to look and feel younger.

December 10, 2009

Gaining Strength and Building Muscle Weightlifting Strength Training

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Strength Training is any exercise that causes you to build lean muscle mass. This can be accomplished best with moderate weight lifting. While there is a definite correlation between gaining strength and building muscle, you can tailor your weight training program specifically for strength. Strength training routines are different than weightlifting routines designed specifically for building muscle mass.

Sequence and Speed

When doing a series of exercises, you’ll generally want to start with the larger muscle groups and compound movements and work toward the smaller muscle groups and isolation movements. This allows you to do the most demanding moves when you’re the least fatigued.

Sets and Reps

A set is a group of successive repetitions performed without resting. A rep or repetition is the number of times you repeat the move in each set.

Progression and Frequency

Progressive resistance is the key to any well designed strength program. This means that as your muscles adapt to a given exercise, you need to gradually increase the resistance or the repetitions to promote further gains.

More Benefits of Strength Training

Strength training increases your bone density, preventing osteoperosis
Strength training boosts your metabolism, helping you to burn more calories throughout the entire day – and even while you’re sleeping.
Strength training lowers your blood pressure, cholesterol, and risk of stoke, diabetes, cancer, and arthritis.
Strength training releases endorphins – powerful hormones in your system that promote better mood and sleep patterns.
Strength training raises your energy levels so you can lead a more active lifestyle.
Strength training improves your balance by strengthening your stabilizer muscles. This helps to prevent injuries due to falls and slips

The real benefit of Strength training is this: lean muscle mass burns more calories than fat body mass does. If you take two people who both weigh 200 pounds, however one person is made up of mostly muscle and the other is obese, the muscular person is burning far more calories while resting than the obese person is. Muscle tissue is very calorie-hungry, and this is a good thing. For more details please visit online http://www. soundbodytrainer. com in NewYork city.

Representing the Strength training in the website www. soundbodytrainer. com

November 30, 2009

Muscle Building the Sensible Way

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If you have been thinking about weight training, you need to separate bodybuilding facts from fiction.

1. 12 Repetitions are a must do

Not really. Most weight training programs extol 12 repetitions as a hard and fast rule for gaining muscle. The truth is, this approach actually denies important muscle groups of enough tension for effective muscle gain over the life of your training program. High tension, caused by use of heavy weights, provides tension so the muscle group being worked actually grows in size. This leads to noticeable gains in strength. Using the 12 rep rule boosts muscle size by generating tension on tissues around muscle fibers. The payoff is greater strength and endurance.

The standard prescription of eight to 12 repetitions provides a balance but only will get you to a level where you can esaily handle the weight. At that point, tension is no longer provided. In other words you peak and do not generate greater tension levels necessary for muscle growth and even greater strength and endurance. So, what to do?

The answer for you may be heavier weights and lesser reps. This steps up the level of tension and you get bulky muscles in the process. You may end up looking like Arnold. On the other hand, if you just want to lose some fat and tone your muscles, the key is less weight and more reps. Use just enough weight to feel tension and go for more reps. Listen to your body and adjust the number of reps and the weight to where you get your heart rate elevated but not to the pointing of grunting red-faced.

2. 3 Set rule with the 12 rep rule

Apply this correctly and there’s nothing wrong with three sets. A set, in case you don’t know, is doing 12 reps 3 times in a row. Each set of 12 reps is one set. And, the number of sets you perform should be based on your goals and not on a hard and fast rule that’s been around for 50 years. Your body is unique. Listen to it. A good rule of thumb is, the more repetitions you do on an exercise, the fewer sets you should do, and vice versa. This keeps the tension provided by the total number of repetitions at a manageable level. But, you decide the right amount of tension, not the rules.

3. Three to four exercises per muscle group

Wrong and a waste of you gym dues. You will spread yourself too thin and not accomplish the tension you need for each muscle group. Instead, focus on parts of the body over several days. In other words, work your upper body one day, your abs the next day, your lower body the next and just wash, rinse, and repeat. This gives muscle groups 24 to 72 hours for repair and rejuvenation.

4. The Baloney Squat

If someone says – “don’t let your knees go past your toes” – when doing squats, ask them if they have a back problem because they probably do or, at the very least, they will need back or knee surgery soon. The fact is, you have to lean forward to keep your knees from going past your toes. This causes way too much stress on your lower back and is more likely to cause an injury. There is ample research that confirms this type of squatting causes undue knee stress, as much as 30% more. Even worse, hip stress increases nearly 10 times or (1000 percent) when the forward movement of the knee is restricted. Plus, squatting that way transfers all that strain to the lower back.

When you do squats, focus on your upper body position and less on the knees. Keep the torso in an upright position as much as possible when doing squats. This will lessen stress on the hips, knees, and back. A good excercise to do, without using any weights at all, is to practice standing upright, before squatting, squeezing the shoulder blades together. Hold your shoulder blades in that position, slowly squat keeping your forearms 90 degree to the floor. Do this as many times as it takes to get your balance and only then add some weight. If your gym has a leg sled, that’s even better.

Since I’m on the subject of back injuries, need I say you should be wearing a so-called “kidney belt”? If you don’t know what that is, run to your nearest sports store and buy one. Your lower back will love you for it.

5. Crunches make great abs

Not really. There is a better way. Muscles work in groups to stabilize the spine because the spine is your center of gravity. Abs, or the transverse abdominis, literally takes of itself. During most exercises, various muscle groups that are needed most for support of the spine are activated. You will notice this during your workout. Your abs and back muscles will be tense. They are being worked during almost every step of your weight training. If you are crunching your way to rippled abs, you may be overworking that muscle group at the expense of other groups. You can activate wrong muscles and limit the right muscles. This increases the chance of injury.

I saved the best for last. Before you begin any exercise program, talk with your family doctor. He or she knows what your body can handle and may give you an exercise plan that best fits your age and body style.

Jim DeSantis

Jim DeSantis is a retired broadcast journalist who edits Free Fitness Videos and Easy Fat Loss Videos websites.

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