High-Intensity Interval Training: A Time-Efficient Strategy For Health Promotion?
High-Intensity Interval Training: A Time-Efficient Strategy For Health Promotion?
Corresponding author Martin J. Gibala, PhD Department of Kinesiology, McMaster University, 1280 Main Street West, Hamilton, Ontario, L8S 4K1, Canada. E-mail: [email protected] Current Sports Medicine Reports 2007, 6:211213 Current Medicine Group LLC ISSN 1537-890x Copyright 2007 by Current Medicine Group LLC
Introduction
Regular endurance training induces numerous physiologic adaptations that facilitate improved exercise tolerance and physical well-being, in large part by increasing the bodys capacity to transport and utilize oxygen. In contrast, brief bouts of high-intensity, sprint-type exercise are generally thought to have less of an effect on aerobic energy metabolism. However, a growing body of evidence suggests that low-volume, high-intensity interval training (HIT) may represent a time-ef cient strategy to induce adaptations normally associated with endurance training. This commentary brie y highlights recent work from my laboratory that has examined rapid adaptations in exercise capacity and aerobic energy metabolism after short-term HIT.
minimal time commitments represent a potentially valuable approach to increasing population activity levels and population health. HIT is often dismissed outright as unsafe, impractical, or intolerable for many individuals. However, there is growing appreciation of the potential for intense, interval-based training to stimulate improvements in health and tness in a range of populations, including persons with coronary artery disease. In addition, some data suggest that a low-frequency, highintensity approach to training is associated with greater long-term adherence as compared with a high-frequency, low-intensity approach.
Conclusions
Elite endurance athletes have long appreciated the role of high intensity interval exercise in a comprehensive training program. Recent data from our laboratory suggest thatin young healthy persons of average tnessintense interval exercise is a time-ef cient strategy to stimulate skeletal muscle adaptations comparable with traditional endurance training. However, fundamental questions remain regarding the minimum volume
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of exercise necessary to improve physiologic and psychologic wellbeing in various populations, the effectiveness of alternative (less extreme) interval training strategies, and the magnitude of adaptations that can be elicited and maintained over the long term. A comprehensive evaluation of adaptations induced by different interval training strategies in a wide range of populations will permit evidence-based recommendations that may provide an alternative to current exercise prescriptions for time-pressed individuals.
Recommended Reading
1. Burgomaster KA, Hughes SC, Heigenhauser GJ, et al.: Six sessions of sprint interval training increases muscle oxidative potential and cycle endurance capacity in humans. J Appl Physiol 2005, 98:19851990. Gibala MJ, Little JP, van Essen M, et al.: Short-term sprint interval versus traditional endurance training: similar initial adaptations in human skeletal muscle and exercise performance. J Physiol 2006, 575:901911. Warburton DE, McKenzie DC, Haydowsky MJ, et al.: Effectiveness of high-intensity interval training for the rehabilitation of patients with coronary artery disease. Am J Cardiol 2005, 95:1080 1084.
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