November’s Healthy Newsletter
November 2010 , GetInShapeWithDavid.com
The Reason for the Season is Not Excess
According to the American Council on Exercise (ACE, www.acefitness.org), the average Thanksgiving dinner is 3,000 calories, with 229 calories from fat.
As we approach the holidays, I don’t expect anyone to act like Charles Barkley – who, when asked how he managed to lose so much weight, responded, “I spit out everything that tasted good.” However, we need to be mindful of portion control, especially during the holidays.
New Studies of Metabolic Syndrome
Disagree with Workout Protocols
Metabolic syndrome is a disease that is indicated by a group of risk factors, including high body fat percentage, isulin resistance, high blood pressure and lipididemia, better known as high cholesterol.
Here are some tips to help get you moving during the course of the workday:
· Replace your desk chair with a stability ball.
· If there are stairs in the building, take a stair break.
· Walk one or two laps around the office.
From The Independent ( http://www.independent.co.uk/life-style/health-
and-families/health-news/take-a-break-it-could-save-your-life-1872147.html )
A great answer to a great question
Why Hydrate During Winter?
by Phil Wagner, MD, SPARTA Performance Science director
for The Daily News
Drinking water to stay hydrated usually is associated with images of sweltering heat and long bouts of endurance. However, as the rain signals the beginning of fall and the upcoming winter storms, athletes need to stay hydrated to optimize their strength, not just their endurance.
A 2008 study out of the University of Connecticut's Human Performance Laboratory examined healthy, resistance-trained males in three states; hydrated, slightly dehydrated (signaled by a loss of 2.5 percent body weight in water), and dehydrated (loss of 5 percent). The study found that the dehydrated individuals had higher levels of cortisol, a hormone that is a marker for stress, and lower levels of testosterone, a hormone responsible for much of the growth in strength and muscle size after exercise. Such detriments were even greater among individuals in the more dehydrated state.
So these trained males' response to lifting weights was normal: an increase in stress hormones, particularly cortisol. This catabolic environment from the stress of exercise is normally balanced by an increase in testosterone, a marker of the anabolic process that allows the body to respond to the stimulus of resistance training. These normal responses were both negatively affected by even a slightly dehydrated condition.
For you power athletes, such as anyone not involved in cross country, you do not need to be drinking water for endurance or cramping. But water will help you reap more benefits from a set of sprints or lifting.
Go ahead: tip your glass of water more often, about half an ounce for every pound of body weight. It is one of the cheapest ways to improve hormone levels without testing positive. For more information, visit SpartaScience.com.
November is Here: And So Is
the 2010 Winter Biggest Loser Contest
This year, the competition is going to be slightly different: I am joining the contest, and the winner has to lose more weight than I do to claim the prize money.
Entry fee is $10, and winner takes all.
The winner will be chosen by greatest percentage of body weight lost. However, if I win, the money, the kitty will be held over to our next contest (which will be next summer).
Beginning weigh-ins will be held Monday, November 8 and Tuesday, November 9. Ending weigh-ins will be Monday, December 20 and Tuesday, December 21.
Contact me for more information.
David Cohen , ACE Certified Personal Trainer & ACE Advanced Health and Fitness Specialist
http://getinshapewithdavid.com , getinshapewithdavid@gmail.com
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