What is Cardio Training?
Cardiovascular Fitness Basics
What is Cardiovascular Fitness?
Cardiovascular fitness can be defined simply as your body’s ability to get oxygen and blood to the muscles. The slang term “wind” sums it up nicely.
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When you do physical activity and your pulse quickens and your breathing gets deeper, you are using your cardiovascular system.
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You can improve your cardiovascular system’s efficiency through regular training.
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The short term used when referring to cardiovascular exercise is “Cardio”
How much Cardio do I need?
| There are a few simple guidelines you can follow when determining how much cardio work you should do. Basically, it all comes down to your goals.
If you are trying to lose fat, you need to do more cardio than if you are trying to gain weight. For fat loss, three to five times per week at 20 to 40 minutes per session is plenty. Start conservatively if you are just starting training, e.g. three times per week, 20 minutes per session. (Fitness Depot Recommended Equipment for this goal; Treadmill, Elliptical, Recumbent Bike)
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Which Type of Cardio Should I Do?
Cardiovascular training, no matter what the exercise, is categorized based on duration and intensity. When you are choosing which type of cardio to do, keep your goals in mind.
- If your goal is to improve your general cardiovascular fitness, do moderate intensity work where you are starting to breathe deeply and you can feel that you are working..
- If your goal is fat loss but you’re in poor shape, do low intensity, long duration work such as walking.
- If you want fat loss and you’re in reasonably good cardiovascular shape, do the type that burns the most calories, i.e. high-intensity training (explained in detail below).
Maximum Heart Rate
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Target Heart Rate
Your Target Heart Rate is the range of heart beats per minute at which you should work at in order to best achieve aerobic fitness. This range is typically between 60% to 80% of your HR max. The bottom end of the scale is best for low intensity training while the top end is for high intensity training.
Taking Your Heart Rate
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The Low Intensity = Fat Loss Myth
It is a myth that low intensity is best for fat loss just because more fat is burned for fuel as a percentage of the total calories burned.
Say, for example, you burn 100 calories in 20 minutes of L.I. work compared to 160 calories in 10 minutes of HI work, you’ve still burned more total fat doing HI. |
Low Intensity 100 calories x 50% = 50 calories High Intensity
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- High intensity training will also boost your metabolism long AFTER the workout is done. This does not happen with low intensity training. High Intensity training is a powerful fat loss tool, but should only be used by trainers who already have a good level of fitness.
The basic idea when you’re trying to lose fat is to create a caloric deficit. The type of training does not matter so much as creating that deficit. High Intensity training just creates the deficit more efficiently than Low Intensity training.
Aerobic vs. Anaerobic
Aerobic literally means with oxygen while anaerobic means without oxygen.
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The Anaerobic Threshold is the point at which the aerobic, oxygen-burning system can no longer supply enough energy to meet the demands of the exercise and you begin to produce lactic acid. Once over 85% HR max, you will not last longer than a few minutes unless you decrease the intensity. High caliber endurance athletes can feel the point where they are about to cross their Anaerobic Threshold and can operate for long periods of time just below it.
Cardio and Weight Training
The best way to incorporate cardio into your training is to do it in a completely different session then your weight training. If you plan on doing both weights and cardio in the same session, do the weights first. There are two major reasons for this:
- First, doing cardio before weights will pre-fatigue your muscles, limiting your weight training. Doing cardio after weights will not.
- Second, weight training will serve as a sort of pre-exhaust for cardio; lowering your blood sugar and allowing you to burn fat immediately after you start cardio. If you do cardio first, it will take about 20 minutes before you really start to burn fat
TREADMILLS, STEPPERS, RECUMENT BIKES, ELLIPTICALS are all Great forms of Cardio Trainning Avaliable From Fintess Depot Arizona and www.fitnessdepotsuperstore.com



