Can You Get Fit in Six Minutes a Week?

Phys Ed
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A few years ago, researchers at the National Institute of Health and Nutrition in Japan put rats through a series of swim tests with surprising results. They had one group of rodents paddle in a small pool for six hours, this long workout broken into two sessions of three hours each. A second group of rats were made to stroke furiously through short, intense bouts of swimming, while carrying ballast to increase their workload. After 20 seconds, the weighted rats were scooped out of the water and allowed to rest for 10 seconds, before being placed back in the pool for another 20 seconds of exertion. The scientists had the rats repeat these brief, strenuous swims 14 times, for a total of about four-and-a-half minutes of swimming. Afterward, the researchers tested each rat’s muscle fibers and found that, as expected, the rats that had gone for the six-hour swim showed preliminary molecular changes that would increase endurance. But the second rodent group, which exercised for less than five minutes also showed the same molecular changes.

The potency of interval training is nothing new. Many athletes have been straining through interval sessions once or twice a week along with their regular workout for years. But what researchers have been looking at recently is whether humans, like that second group of rats, can increase endurance with only a few minutes of strenuous exercise, instead of hours? Could it be that most of us are spending more time than we need to trying to get fit?

The answer, a growing number of these sports scientists believe, may be yes.

“There was a time when the scientific literature suggested that the only way to achieve endurance was through endurance-type activities,” such as long runs or bike rides or, perhaps, six-hour swims, says Martin Gibala, PhD, chairman of the Department of Kinesiology at McMaster University in Ontario, Canada. But ongoing research from Gibala’s lab is turning that idea on its head. In one of the group’s recent studies, Gibala and his colleagues had a group of college students, who were healthy but not athletes, ride a stationary bike at a sustainable pace for between 90 and 120 minutes. Another set of students grunted through a series of short, strenuous intervals: 20 to 30 seconds of cycling at the highest intensity the riders could stand. After resting for four minutes, the students pedaled hard again for another 20 to 30 seconds, repeating the cycle four to six times (depending on how much each person could stand), “for a total of two to three minutes of very intense exercise per training session,” Gibala says.

Each of the two groups exercised three times a week. After two weeks, both groups showed almost identical increases in their endurance (as measured in a stationary bicycle time trial), even though the one group had exercised for six to nine minutes per week, and the other about five hours. Additionally, molecular changes that signal increased fitness were evident equally in both groups. “The number and size of the mitochondria within the muscles” of the students had increased significantly, Gibala says, a change that, before this work, had been associated almost exclusively with prolonged endurance training. Since mitochondria enable muscle cells to use oxygen to create energy, “changes in the volume of the mitochondria can have a big impact on endurance performance.” In other words, six minutes or so a week of hard exercise (plus the time spent warming up, cooling down, and resting between the bouts of intense work) had proven to be as good as multiple hours of working out for achieving fitness. The short, intense workouts aided in weight loss, too, although Gibala hadn’t been studying that effect. “The rate of energy expenditure remains higher longer into recovery” after brief, high-intensity exercise than after longer, easier workouts, Gibala says. Other researchers have found that similar, intense, brief sessions of exercise improve cardiac health, even among people with heart disease.

There’s a catch, though. Those six minutes, if they’re to be effective, must hurt. “We describe it as an ‘all-out’ effort,” Gibala says. You’ll be straying “well out of your comfort zone.” That level of discomfort makes some activities better-suited to intense training than others. “We haven’t studied runners,” Gibala says. The pounding involved in repeated sprinting could lead to injuries, depending on a runner’s experience and stride mechanics. But cycling and swimming work well. “I’m a terrible swimmer,” Gibala says, “so every session for me is intense, just because my technique is so awful.”
Meanwhile, his lab is studying whether people could telescope their workouts into even less time. Could a single, two- to three-minute bout of intense exercise confer the same endurance and health benefits as those six minutes of multiple intervals? Gibala is hopeful. “I’m 41, with two young children,” he says. “I don’t have time to go out and exercise for hours.” The results should be available this fall.

The Phys Ed column will appear here in Well every Wednesday and also in print once a month, in the Sunday magazine. In it, Gretchen Reynolds, who is working on a book about the frontiers of fitness, will write about what the latest science can tell us about how to make ourselves stronger, more flexible, less prone to pain and generally fitter and healthier. We want to hear what you think, so stay tuned and offer your comments and questions.

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What we need is a study that shows that 6 minutes of pottering around has a huge impact on fitness

This is interesting, but the risk of injury from short bouts of “all-out” exercise shouldn’t be overlooked, especially in people who aren’t already extremely fit. I did this sort of interval training on an elliptical trainer, set on a high level, for several weeks. What I didn’t realize was how much pressure I was putting on my feet. After a while, they started hurting when I walked, a condition that lasted for months even after I stopped the training.

CrossFit.com … they’ve been doing this for years.

FROM TPP — Many many readers in this string are talking about Crossfit. Here’s a great story about Crossfit from the Times’ Physical Culture column called “Getting Fit, Even If It Kills You. And here’s another story from the New York Times Magazine on CrossFit called God’s Workout.

I think intensity is the key. I knew a woman who was so proud of herself for spending 2 hours at the gym but then wonder why the scale wasn’t moving. She probably spent those hours not doing intense enough exercise. Not that she had to spend the entire 2 hours at a high level, but workouts should vary in intensity. The basis of my workouts is interval training and pilates. Periods of high activity and rest have given me great results and a lot faster than what I had been doing before. Can I get away with 6 minutes a week? Probably not…but I also enjoy working out so six minutes would be cheating myself out of something I enjoy.

CrossFit has been promoting this type of training for years and labeling it as “Tabata” interval training (after I think some Japanese scientist who did research in the field). Typical Tabata workout is:

4 minutes pullups (8 sets of 20s. on, 10s. off)
4 minutes pushups (8 sets of 20s. on, 10s. off)
4 minutes situps (8 sets of 20s. on, 10s. off)
4 minutes squats (8 sets of 20s. on, 10s. off)

The assertion in the article that 6 minutes a week of exercise will help you achieve “fitness” is of course ridiculous, unless you define fitness as having a higher level of mitochondria in your cells. Will one “tabata” workout a week make you stronger? Maybe very slightly. Will it make you less fat? Again, very slightly. (only compared to, say doing nothing). Flexibiity? Nope. Balance? No. Speed? No.

I think 12 minutes of tabata-style stuff 4-5X a week would be a useful start to overall fitness, mixing in more movements than those outlined above.

Alex Lickerman, M.D. June 24, 2009 · 1:10 pm

There’s an entire body of literature behind this notion already. I’ve been preaching the benefits of short burst, high-intensity exercise for fitness and weight loss to my patients for years. The problem is most people seem to have a hard time motivating themselves to reach high intensity in their workouts. The benefits of doing this are multiple, however, only some of which does the study in this article suggest. For more information about how high-intensity workouts help with weight loss, interested readers might want to check out the link below.

//www.happinessinthisworld.com/2009/03/29/the-truth-about-how-to-lose-weight/

I doubt that the 2-3 minute bouts will have the same effect as the multiple 20-30 second bouts, simply because the level of effort is much lower in the longer bouts. However, we often outsmart ourselves by passing judgment before the results are in. This is why it is important to actually do trials, instead of speculating based on insufficient data.

That’s the principle of the Tabata protocol, created by a Japanese researcher of some sort. I tried it, doing intervals on a stationary bike. I can say it’s the only exercise where I’ve been able to quickly see a difference in how winded I get when walking up flights of stairs, for instance.

The 20-seconds on, 10-seconds rest schedule is known as the Tabata Protocol (named after its creator, Dr. Izumi Tabata of Japan).

It has also been successfully employed by world-class human athletes, but is not to be taken lightly — if you’re doing it right, you often wind up feeling like you’re going to either heave or faint after about five or six of the brief bursts of effort.

Particularly with running, high-intensity interval training (HIIT) regimens like the Tabata Protocol require both proper warmup and also a strong base layer of fitness in order to minimize the risk of injury.

In short, there are no easy shortcuts.

Your timing is off. You say the students biked at high intensity for 20-30 seconds, rested for 4 minutes, then repeated the cycle 4 to 6 times. By my accounts that would equal between 17 and 26 minutes of exercise, but you say it is only 6. Please explain.

This is a great study that pretty much confirms what combat athletes (boxers, wrestlers, mixed martial artists) have known for years, and also what Crossfitters routinely incorporate into their workouts.

The key point to remember is that workouts are supposed to suck. They should feel like hell. If they don’t–if you can carry a conversation or watch the news or read a paper, that’s not a workout.

The 20second/10second interval described in the study is called a Tabata interval (Google it), named after the Japanese scientist who discovered it. The only difference is that Tabatas are designed to be done for eight intervals (total time elapsed = 4 minutes, with less than 3 minutes of that actually exercising.) Why eight and not 14? Because if you really pushed yourself to maximum intensity, you’ll collapse after eight intervals.

A great thing about these intervals is that ANYONE can do them regardless of fitness. If you’re a triathlete or Olympian or if you’re a senior citizen, the protocol remains the same–the difference is that obviously (or hopefully) what counts as maximum intensity for a triathlete will be greater in absolute terms than what counts as maximum intensity for a non-athlete.

Key here is “a group of college students”; at my age, I need plenty of warmup and stretching no matter how little I work out. I don’t mind – giving up my car / walking 5 miles a day helps – but if I just did tiny spurts of all-out activity I’d have no end of injuries, cramps, and problems. Nice info though.

An intriguing study but good grief, why is everyone in this country always looking for a short-cut? Some us run or cycle for an hour a day because we like to. The benefits of the long work-out are greater than the sum of the mitochondria in our muscles. Do six minute work-outs lift one’s spirits the same way as heading down the beach for a 45 minute run as the sun comes up?

To put it another way, if science developed a pill you could take which would eliminate the need for food, would you take it in lieu of eating? I thought not.

//milestogob4sleep.blogspot.com

Mark

As one that not only rose to the upper echelons of drug free bodybuilding as a result of 10 to 15 minute workouts and a personal trainer that has succesfully used 10 minute workouts exclusively with clients ranging from bodybuilders to US Navy SEALS for the past 18 years I would have to agree 100%. Brief and higher intensity workouts are far more productive than conventional training methods.

This sounds quite promising, though it might be difficult to implement on one’s own. How does one know when she has reached a high enough level.
I also wonder about these short term results. Just because the results of the two types of workout start out the same can we assume that they will remain the same?
What about types of fitness other than endurance–are they improved too?
Still, 6 minutes a week (plus the extras you mention)….

I’ve done fitness sessions like these before (30s all-out sprinting on a bike followed by a brief recovery, then repeat). While the muscular and cellular adaptations are similar, meaning the benefit is similar for those seeking health, I think you’ll find the performance results are different.

A few months after doing these 30-30s sessions, I joined up with the local cycling ride group. I found that, while I could outride almost anyone in the group over a short, steep climb, my overall endurance was lacking.

I replicate intense workouts by filling up my bathtub and jumping in and out of the side of the tub. The water splashes all over, but it also acts as a source of huge resistance. I do this before going to work in the morning, and it is an energizing way to start the day.

Nobody knows anything. Within six months there will be a study that tells us how damaging 6 minutes of an “all out” workout are on our bodies.

If your goal is weight loss as well as fitness, then it still seems you’d do better to stick with a moderate-intensity 90-minute workout most days rather than a high-intensity 6-minute one, since the longer workout will burn many hundreds more calories.

@Ben
You shouldn’t be using an elliptical trainer anyway–unless you’re rehabbing from an injury. These machines train your body to move in a way that is inconsistent with what it should do in the real world and how it should move naturally, and thus, they make you MORE prone to injury.

But I guess you found that out.

Cross Fit has been doing this for year, TJ’s right. It’s real, legitimate, not a fad, and doesn’t involve spending money on fad crap.

Now what we need is a study on well trained athletes to establish the need for endurance training.

Kevin Richardson has been training people with this system for almost 20 years! – //www.naturallyintense.net

It’s upsetting to read about this kind of research being performed on lab rats when it could easily have been performed on humans, with results more accurate to human physiology. “A second group of rats were made to stroke furiously through short, intense bouts of swimming, while carrying ballast to increase their workload.” Ugh.

Crossfit (I know its been mentioned but it needs to be mentioned again) Tara–with all the health stuff you’ve been promoting I think you should do an article on Crossfit. Before starting crossfit I couldn’t do a push-up. After 2months of training I am in better shape than the vast majority of my friends, and I am enjoying exercise for the first time in my life.