Staying Health

Interval training: A shorter, more enjoyable workout?

As one of the most popular exercise trends for more than a decade, high-intensity interval training (HIIT) clearly provides some perks. These workouts aren’t just a time-efficient way to boost your fitness. Research shows that HIIT can improve key measures of cardiovascular health for all sorts of people, including those recovering from heart attacks or heart surgery. Another advantage: high-intensity effort, even for just brief bursts, may trigger the release of mood-boosting brain chemicals.

As its name implies, HIIT features high-intensity (vigorous) activity done in intervals (short time periods) with brief periods of either rest or lower-intensity activity in between. During the bursts of vigorous exercise, your heart rate rises higher, and then it remains higher than it would normally be in between those high-intensity bouts. Compared to 20 minutes of moderate-intensity exercise, a 20-minute HIIT session will burn more calories, strengthen your heart more, and help your body use oxygen more efficiently.

“If your goal is to improve your fitness, doing moderate-intensity exercise certainly works. But HIIT workouts may raise your fitness level faster in a shorter period of time,” says Dr. Sawalla Guseh, director of the Cardiovascular Performance Program at Harvard-affiliated Massachusetts General Hospital. As he points out, if you do mostly vigorous exercise, you can meet the federal exercise guidelines in just 75 minutes per week, whereas doing mostly moderate exercise takes twice as long (150 minutes per week).

Happier with HIIT?

If long sessions of vigorous exercise feel too challenging, adding some HIIT workouts to your exercise regimen can be a happy medium. Even short stints of high-intensity exercise appear to trigger the release of endorphins — the brain’s “feel good” chemicals. “In our clinic, we certainly see patients who say that HIIT workouts bring them the most joy,” Dr. Guseh says. In addition, endorphins can counteract pain, which may mitigate some of the discomfort that can occur during HIIT workouts, so people perceive them as more pleasant than expected.

Still, the most important thing is to find a form of exercise that you enjoy and can do consistently over the long haul, Dr. Guseh says. Steady, moderate-intensity exercise is also a great way to keep your cardiovascular system healthy.

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