Busting the Twenty-Minute Fat-Burning Myth

Fat Burning Myth by Christian Finn

Editor's Note:  In this article, Christian Finn tells us that fat burning can occur during long workouts or short ones. So if you're crammed for time and don't think that fifteen minute workout won't do any good - think again!

Back in 1999 when I was studying full-time at university, and working both a full-time and a part-time job, one of the big challenges I faced was making the time to exercise.

When I started university, I often failed to make it to the gym at all, even for just 20 or 30 minutes. And even if I did manage to summon the enthusiasm to train, by the time I'd finished changing and warming up, it was almost time to leave again.

However, after several weeks of moaning and complaining to anyone who would listen that it was now "impossible" for me to do any exercise at all, I decided to do something about it. My plan was to cut each workout in half. Driving to work in the morning, I'd stop at the gym and get the first half done. On the way back home at night, I'd do the second half.

However, a few people I spoke with told me that this idea was "silly" and "wouldn't work."

"Your body doesn't start burning fat until you've been exercising for at least 20 minutes," they told me. I was warned that I "wouldn't lose any fat at all" unless I did at least 45 minutes of continuous aerobic exercise.

It's true that your body relies more on carbohydrate and less on fat during the early stages of exercise. It's also true that your body uses more fat and less carbohydrate the longer you spend exercising. But this ignores what happens to your metabolism after exercise, when the number of fat calories burned tends to go up.

To lose fat, you need to create a calorie deficit — to consistently burn more calories than you consume. And it doesn't make a great deal of difference whether those calories are burned in one long workout or several shorter ones.

Some evidence for this comes from research carried out at the University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine [1]. For the study, a group of overweight women was assigned to one of two groups. Group one performed a single bout of exercise lasting 20-40 minutes. Group two did the same amount of exercise, but it was split into several smaller bouts lasting just 10 minutes.

And the result?

Twenty weeks later, the women who split their workouts into shorter bouts had lost 20 pounds, compared to just 14 pounds in the single-bout group. The reason for the extra weight loss is simply that women in group two did more exercise (and thus burned more calories) than women in group one, possibly because they found it easier to fit shorter workouts into their day.

Research published in the Journal of the American College of Nutrition shows similar results [3]. There were no significant differences in weight loss with three 10-minute bouts of exercise per day compared with two 15-minute bouts or one 30-minute bout.

Changes in body composition weren't reported in this study, so we don't know how much of the lost weight came from muscle and how much came from fat. I'm guessing that the women lost some muscle, which is fairly common with aerobic-only exercise programs. When you're losing weight, it's important to do some kind of resistance training to help preserve lean muscle (see How to Fight Fat and Win and Lift Weights and Lose Fat in the Members-Only Area for more information).

Fat is stored energy. To lose it, you have to use more energy (calories) than you get from your diet. And it doesn't really matter whether you burn those calories in one long workout or several shorter ones. As these studies (and my own experience) show, both approaches work.

Read other articles by Christian Finn

Recommended Links:

The Facts About Fitness - subscribe to Christian Finn's website today and you'll enjoy immediate access to a "secret vault" of expert knowledge and university-tested tips and tricks you can use to shed stubborn fat once and for all.

Burn The Fat Feed The Muscle - an easy-to-follow fat-burning exercise and diet program that works by Tom Venuto.

 

 


About the Author

Christian Finn is a Certified Personal Trainer and holds a masters degree with distinction in exercise science. He's lectured at a number of universities and private training organizations around the United Kingdom on fitness training, weight loss and the effective use of nutritional supplements. He writes extensively on the subject and his articles have been published in numerous magazines, leading industry journals and websites worldwide, including Men's Health, Men's Health Muscle, Fit Pro (April/May 2001), CAM magazine (February 2003), Image (January 1997), Zest (March 2004), and Body Life magazine (March/April 1997). He was also featured in the July 2004 issue of Muscle & Fitness (UK edition). His website, TheFactsAboutFitness.com, is dedicated to providing its members up-to-date, unbiased information and research on the world of fitness.


References


1. Kershaw, E. E., & Flier, J.S. (2004). Adipose tissue as an endocrine organ. Journal of Clinical Endocrinology and Metabolism, 89, 2548-2556
2. Levine, J.A., Eberhardt, N.L., & Jensen, M.D. (1999). Role of nonexercise activity thermogenesis in resistance to fat gain in humans. Science, 8, 212-214
3. Wang, Z., Heshka, S., Zhang, K., Boozer, C.N., & Heymsfield, S.B. (2001). Resting energy expenditure: systematic organization and critique of prediction methods. Obesity Research, 9, 331-336
4. Weyer, C., Pratley, R.E., Salbe, A.D., Bogardus, C., Ravussin, E., & Tataranni, P.A. (2000). Energy expenditure, fat oxidation, and body weight regulation: a study of metabolic adaptation to long-term weight change. Journal of Clinical Endocrinology and Metabolism, 85, 1087-1094

 


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