Fitness 24x7An online fitness equipment catalog
Find Product   
Fitness Equipment
   Ab Machine
   Bench
   Elliptical
   Exercise Bike
   Home Gym
   Incline Trainer
   Rider
   Skier
   Stepper
   Strength Training
   TreadClimber
   Treadmill
Shop by Brands
   Smooth Fitness
   Proform
   NordicTrack
   Bowflex
   Health Rider
   (All Brands ...)
Q & A
   Treadmill
   Eliptical
   Exercise Bike
   Whey Protein
   Body Building
   (All Q & A ...)
   
Home » Q & A » Strength Training

Question: Eating right, strength training and minimal or no cardio?


Question Description:
Does anyone know real information on the idea behind losing weight by eating a healthy diet, watching caloric intake and an excersize program that consists of strength training and minimal or no cardio?I ask because I normally think of a weight loss plan that includes more cardio than strength training. I wonder if there is good science behind this idea.How does this idea work?Serious answers only, please.

Answer#1: Weight loss is big businessRemember that health clubs, personal trainers, and equipment manufacturers have a vested financial interest in tying weight loss to strength training. Since you don't need them or their equipment to go out for a run or a bike ride, any advice or data you get from those sources is going to show strength training in a favorable light.Lifting is important to overal fitness, and yes, muscle requires more calories than fat, but the numbers are small. You would have to put on a LOT of muscle mass to have a significant effect. Going out for a run wins going away in the calorie burn derby. You also have to consider that the most important muscle in your body is your heart.


Answer#2: I think the theory behind the strength training with little cardio is that muscle burns more calories than fat, so if one had more muscle, they'd burn more calories. How true it is, I don't know.


Answer#3: I am not aware of any scientific study that has looked at weight loss, healthy eating and strength training and then divided groups (and compared them) into cardio vs. no cardio. I would be interested to know if there have been any studies like this.




Source: Questions and Answers Powered by Yahoo! Answers