Calgary Herald

Combo workout best for obese teens

Study advises to do strength and cardio

- LAUREN LA ROSE THE CANADIAN PRESS

TORONTO — Obese teenagers seeking to trim body fat and slim their waistlines will yield greater health benefits by combining both heart-pumping and muscle-strengthen­ing activities, a new Canadian study suggests.

Researcher­s at the University of Calgary and the University of Ottawa led the Healthy Eating Aerobic and Resistance Training in Youth (HEARTY) trial. In the paper, published in the journal JAMA Pediatrics, researcher­s said the study’s importance was due to the “little evidence” that exists on which type of exercise is “optimal” for obese teens.

“Traditiona­lly, aerobic exercise has always been prescribed to adults, to children because it’s been most studied in the literature and with research,” said study co-author Angela Alberga, PhD, a post-doctoral fellow at the University of Calgary.

Alberga said their study is the first that has the largest sample to evaluate difference­s between solely aerobic and resistance training — as well as a combinatio­n of the two — and its effects on teens.

The study recruited 304 previously inactive obese teens between ages 14 and 18, 70 per cent of whom were female. Exercise training took place at six community-based facilities in Ottawa and Gatineau, Que.

For the first month all participan­ts took part in both aerobic and resistance training. Aerobic training involved use of bikes, elliptical machines and treadmills, while resistance training referred to use of pulley-type weight machines or exercises using body weight as resistance, such as pushups and situps. During the first week of the study, teens were prescribed to exercise for 15 minutes, four times a week at 65 per cent of their maximum heart rate, Alberga said. For the next three weeks, they gradually increased their individual workout sessions by fiveminute increments.

After the first month, participan­ts were divided into four groups: one group that did only aerobic training, one that did only resistance training, another that did combined aerobic and resistance training and a fourth group that didn’t exercise at all. Each group was monitored for an addi- tional five months.

Among the teens exercising, Alberga said they gradually increased the duration and intensity of their activity. Toward the end of the program, those who were active exercised up to 85 per cent of their maximum heart rate.

Among the groups who exercised, the teens who did so at least three to four times a week had greater health benefits — regardless of the type of training, Alberga said. However, those who did both aerobic and resistance training had a noticeable advantage.

“When we looked at teenagers who exercised three to four times per week, we found that the combined training group had larger decreases in per cent body fat compared to the group that only did aerobic exercise alone,” said Alberga, noting the combined group had a 2.4 per cent decline versus 1.2 per cent for the aerobic group.

The combinatio­n of aerobic and resistance training has benefits because they target different energy systems, she explained.

“The resistance training is well-known to increase muscular strength and muscular endurance and actually affects some of the muscle fibre types,” Alberga said.

 ?? Justin Sullivan/Getty Images ?? The combinatio­n of aerobic and resistance training has benefits because the two target different energy systems, noted Angela Alberga, PhD, co-author of a study that appeared in the journal JAMA Pediatrics.
Justin Sullivan/Getty Images The combinatio­n of aerobic and resistance training has benefits because the two target different energy systems, noted Angela Alberga, PhD, co-author of a study that appeared in the journal JAMA Pediatrics.

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