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By Vince DelMonte
Cardio has always had a special place in the
process of a physique transformation. But doing too much cardio or not the
right kind of cardio may literally be killing your gains in the gym - causing
you to lose muscle, gain fat, or both!
My inbox literally is flooded with questions
on this topic:
Bulking: "Should I do cardio if I am
bulking?"
Cutting: "I am in a cutting phase, how
much cardio should I be doing?"
The question is, do you know if your cardio
sessions are helping or hindering your results? If you answered, "I don't
know... ", then this article is for you.
Basically it all boils down to the quality and
quantity of the cardio being done.
Time For A History Lesson
Back in the early 1970s, an entire fitness
craze was hitting the nation... jogging. It was marketed as the primary way to
improve health, lose weight and maximize body composition. Gyms became flooded
with pieces of cardio equipment.
It is no wonder why when people think about
improving their physiques by losing body-fat, the first thing they think of is
cardio. But here is the problem...
If your goal is a lean and muscular physique,
cardio may be destroying your efforts.
MED And How It Applies To Cardio
When implementing a cardio protocol, I like to
apply the "minimum effective dose" or MED. The MED is the MINIMUM
amount of something you need to produce a result.
Think of it this way. When you are taking a
medication to fight a cold, 1 gram a day for a week would get rid of the cold
and taking 10 grams a week will produce the same results. So why would you do
more than you had to if taking either dose will kick the cold? Not to mention
the added dosage may have harmful effects.
This is the principle you can apply to cardio
if your goal is minimizing fat-gain during bulking or maximizing fat-loss
during a cutting phase.
Do the minimum amount to produce the result
you are looking for.
How Much Cardio Is Too Much?
Anything more then the MED therefore is too
much. Once you start doing excessive amounts of cardio, your body shifts to a
catabolic environment. It uses calories that could have been used for muscle
building, stress hormones increase, glycogen decreases, and your ability to
recover from weight training decreases.
But here is the good news. As you may or may
not know, there is a type of cardio that when done properly will burn more net
calories throughout the day and improve hormonal responses for an optimal
environment to burn fat and build muscle. This type of cardio is known as high
intensity interval training or HIIT. During a HIIT session, there are periods
of near maximum intensity (like sprinting) and periods of rest (a slow jog or
walk).
HIIT vs. Steady-State Cardio...
Think of it this way. Picture some of the
World's greatest sprinters and pin them up against the World's greatest marathon
runners.
I know these are both extreme cases, but it
will help paint a picture.
The sprinters are just as lean and sometimes
even leaner than marathoners, but sprinters have a level of muscularity that is
unmatched by even the most muscled marathon runner.
OK. So No More Steady-State Cardio!
Not exactly. Steady-state cardio has its'
place by working an energy system that typically doesn't get touched when doing
HIIT cardio, plus it will give you a good break to recover from either a HIIT
training session or a heavy leg training session the previous day.
Why Do Cardio At All During A Bulking Phase?
Even if your goal isn't to cut, there are
several reasons why it is a good idea to do cardio during a bulking phase:
#1. You will burn-off excess fat
#2. You will improve your hormonal response to an anabolic environment
#3. You will have increase your vascularity (yah pump!) mitochondrial density
(improves energy)
#4. You will be better able to handle your carbohydrates to use them as energy
rather than storing them as fat.
#5. By improving blood flow, you will be improving recovery from weight lifting
workouts.
I Am Sold! When And How Much?
For clients in a bulking cycle, I would have
them perform two separate 20 minute HIIT session and one 40 minute steady-
state cardio session to minimize and burn off fat gained during the bulk.
In the case of somebody that is cutting, I
would recommend three sessions of HIIT and two steady-state cardio sessions for
maximum effect.
Example Of A HIIT Protocol: 6 Week Plan
Your method of HIIT can vary, as long as you
are working to near maximum levels. This can be done on a bike, swimming,
running, whatever you want.
The program below is meant to be difficult. If
you aren't gasping for air by the end of it, you aren't going hard enough. And
each week you are working on a progression to improve, just like you would in a
weight lifting protocol.
Week One
30 seconds high-intensity, 30 seconds low-intensity
Week Two
45 seconds high, 45 seconds low
Week Three
60 seconds high, 60 seconds low
Week Four
60 seconds high, 45 seconds low
Week Five
60 seconds high, 30 seconds low
Conclusion
Doing some cardio is better than nothing, but
if you are going to be doing cardio, choose HIIT. By doing HIIT-style cardio
you are improving your ability to build muscle in the long-run (see reasons #2,
#3, and #5).
In addition, you will look more
"ripped" and muscular because your body-fat percent will be lower
than if you did a bulking phase without doing cardio.
And for some of you, the ultimate reason to do
some cardio may just be to improve your overall health!
Whatever your reasons - cutting, minimizing
fat during a bulk, or health- HIIT cardio (and maybe a little steady-state
cardio here and there) is the solution.
Vince DelMonte is the author of No Nonsense
Muscle Building: Skinny Guy Secrets To Insane Muscle Gain found at
VinceDelMonteFitness.com. He specializes in teaching skinny how to build muscle and gain 20 pounds of
rock-hard muscle mass without drugs, supplements and in less time.
Article Source: EzineArticles.com
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