What Are The Risks Of Doing HIIT?

By Russ Hollywood


Today we are going to be looking into HIIT to help you get more from your workouts. Too many fitness enthusiasts suffer unnecessary setbacks in the gym because they are not taking the time to weigh up the possible risks beforehand.

Whether it's using creatine supplements without researching, or trying weights without learning the correct technique, the gym can be a dangerous place if you don't learn the ropes.

Before you try something as intense as interval training it would make sense to look at the things which other people get wrong and ensure you learn from their mistakes. []

While it's primarily seen as an excellent way to lose weight, high intensity interval training can also become a negative influence on your training if you fail to use it correctly. The two main areas we will be looking at here are as follows:

1) How many sessions per week are needed for maximum fat loss results?

2) How to avoid injuries with interval training.

Do not make the common gym mistake of presuming that more means better. In fact, your body needs adequate time to recover from each workout you perform and it is during these rest periods that your muscles grow bigger and stronger. If you choose to cut these rest periods out of your schedule and train every single day you run the risk of damaging your results rather than helping them.

With the interval method, the results do not happen when you are in the gym working out. They occur after you have left. Your body will continue to burn off calories, more specifically body fat, at almost 27% higher than the usual rate and this period lasts a mighty 14 hours. Some call it the afterburn effect, but to fitness professionals this is known as excess post-exercise oxygen consumption. If you go back to the gym before you have allowed time for this vital recovery period you hinder your own results, so keep your hit sessions at a maximum of three per week.

Injuries are part and parcel of training but those performing high intensity interval training are a little more at risk than mos. This is of course down to the very intense nature of each workout and it usually comes to to people simply skipping their warm-up exercises in a bid to save a little time. If you went straight into sprints without warming up your muscles, you can say goodbye to your hamstrings!

A warm-up need only take five minutes and the benefits are clear. However, we live in an impatient world where folks want to get in and out of the gym as quickly as humanly possible and this sometimes means skipping the warm-up and cool-down sessions. Much like if you tried using whey protein or creatine supplements without researching them first. this only comes back to haunt you and your hiit sessions will suffer as a result.




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