Editor's Note: If swimming is your primary
form of exercise for weight loss, you might want to rethink your strategy
after reading this article. As Christian explains in this article, it
appears not to be as effective as other forms of exercise for maximum weight
loss.
Swimming is often touted as the best form of exercise for weight loss.
And when you think about it, it seems to make sense.
After all, swimming uses almost all of your major muscle groups. It places a
vigorous demand on your heart and lungs. Swimming is also popular with
people who are extremely overweight, pregnant, or suffering from some kind
of injury.
When you swim breastroke or backstroke, you're burning about the same number
of calories as a fast walk or a slow jog. However, for some reason, swimming
appears to be less effective than other forms of exercise at promoting
weight loss.
Swimming weight loss
Research published in the American Journal of Sports Medicine shows that in
the absence of a controlled diet, swimming has little or no effect on weight
loss [1].
Professor Grant Gwinup compared three exercise programs for three months.
Each program began with up to 10 minutes of daily exercise. The length of
each workout was increased by five minutes every week.
- Test subjects following the walking program lost 17 pounds of weight during the
three-month study.
- Those following the cycling program lost 19 pounds of weight.
- However, subjects following the swimming program actually gained 5 pounds.
Assuming that all three groups burned a similar number of calories, the
swimmers must have compensated by eating more. "Presumably," speculates
Professor Gwinup, "swimming in cold water stimulates the appetite to
increase caloric consumption."
Professor Louise Burke, Head of Nutrition at the Australian Institute of
Sport, also points out that competitive swimmers typically have body fat
levels that are higher than those of runners or cyclists who expend a
similar amount of energy when they train.
"Many female swimmers have fought well-publicized battles with their body
fat levels," says Burke. "They are generally prescribed 'land training'
(running or cycling) in addition to their many laps of the pool in the
belief that it is a necessary treatment to produce lower skinfold levels."
Appetite
There are suggestions that swimming doesn't cause the same drop in appetite
that accompanies heavy running and cycling training. Many people feel
extremely hungry after training in the pool, and may simply replace all the
calories they've burned with a large post-exercise meal.
"Many people observe that they feel like 'eating a horse' after they have
finished a swim training session, and may overcompensate for the energy they
have just burned," says Professor Burke.
"Some research suggests that this is due to the cool temperatures in which
swimmers train. By contrast, runners and cyclists usually experience an
increase in body temperature during training, which may serve to suppress
appetite - at least in the short term."
In one recent study, researchers examined the effect of water temperature on
calorie intake after exercise [3].
A group of 11 men exercised for 45 minutes in "neutral" and "cold" water
temperatures. After the workout, they were allowed to eat as much food as
they wanted.
The men burned a similar number of calories in the cold and neutral water
conditions, averaging 505 and 517 calories, respectively. However, calorie
intake after exercise in the cold water averaged 877 calories, which was 44%
more than for the neutral temperature. The problem here is that the water
temperature during the "cold" condition was extremely cold (20 degrees
celsius), and isn't really indicative of the water temperature of most pools
(which is usually nearer 30 degrees celsius).
Professor Burke also points out that swimmers are less active outside their
training sessions. They are so tired from the hours spent training that they
sleep, sit or otherwise avoid any real physical activity outside their
sessions.
In one study, researchers compared collegiate swimmers and collegiate
distance runners [2]. As you can see in the table below, the runners had
lower body fat levels than swimmers. However, detailed three-day food
records and one-day activity records offered no convincing explanation as to
why.
| |
Swimmers |
Runners |
| Men |
12% |
7% |
| Women |
20% |
15% |
According to Professor Burke, it's almost impossible to measure usual
energy intake from diaries.
"Apart from the errors in translating descriptions of food into calorie
counts," she says, "it is unlikely that people eat 'normally' while they are
recording. It is well-known that those who are conscious of their body fat
underreport their food intake."
"In reporting, athletes try to appear as 'good' as possible and thereby
cover-up the clues to any energy balance problems. The behavior of
individuals may also be masked by the 'averaging' of results."
Burke also speculates that elite swimmers are predisposed to higher body fat
levels because it is a help, or at least less of a disadvantage, to their
swimming - rounded shoulders and smooth curves may simply be more
biomechanically sound than bony angles.
Muscle
One of the reasons a properly designed weight-training program is so
effective at burning fat is that just one workout can give your metabolic
rate a real boost. In some cases, this rise can last for well over a day
[4].
When your metabolic rate goes up, you burn more calories. And more calories
burned means faster weight loss.
One of the things that contribute to this rise in metabolic rate is the
muscle damage caused during resistance exercise [5]. And it's eccentric
muscle actions (pronounced ee-sen-trick) that appear to cause most of this
damage.
What's an eccentric muscle action?
Take one hand and let it hang down by your side. Now, bend your arm as if
you were curling a weight, bringing your hand towards your shoulder.
The muscle that's working to raise your arm is the biceps (other smaller
muscles are also working to assist it). The movement is known as a
concentric muscle action (pronounced con-sen-trick).
If you lower your arm under control (rather than just letting it flop down)
your biceps are working again. Only this time, the muscle action is called
eccentric.
So, what does all of this have to do with swimming? Most of the work your
body does in the water involves concentric muscle actions. There's virtually
no eccentric work there at all. Because of this, I'm guessing that swimming
has only a minor impact on your metabolic rate after exercise.
The Bottom Line
I prefer to put all forms of exercise into one of three categories -
good, better or best.
Any form of exercise, be it swimming, walking or weight-training, is good if
the alternative is doing nothing. A mixture of some form of resistance
exercise and cardiovascular exercise is better, while combining interval
exercise and free weights - in my opinion at least - is the best way to get
in shape (see How to fight fat and win in the Members-Only Area for an
example of this type of program).
Losing weight is all about burning more calories than you eat. Any form of
exercise, swimming included, will get the job done.
If you enjoy swimming, then stick with it. It's more important to be
consistent with an exercise program you enjoy than to be inconsistent with
one you hate. Just make sure to guard against the urge to eat more after you
get out of the pool.
Read other
articles by Christian Finn
| Recommended Links:
The Facts
About Fitness - do you need help burning the fat from your belly or
packing muscle on your chest, shoulders, and arms? Christian Finn's site
contains everything you need to know to achieve your fitness goals!
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. Gwinup, G. (1987). Weight loss without dietary restriction: Efficacy
of different forms of aerobic exercise. American Journal of Sports Medicine,
15, 275-279
2. Jang, K.T., Flynn, M.G., Costill, D.L., Kirwan, J.P., Houmard, J.A.,
Mitchell, J.B., & D'Acquisto, L.J. (1987). Energy balance in competitive
swimmers and runners. Journal of Swimming Research, 3, 19-23
3. White, L.J., Dressendorfer, R.H., Holland, E., McCoy, S.C., &
Ferguson, M.A. (2005). Increased caloric intake soon after exercise in cold
water. International Journal of Sport Nutrition and Exercise Metabolism, 15
4. Schuenke, M.D., Mikat, R.P., & McBride, J.M. (2002). Effect of an
acute period of resistance exercise on excess post-exercise oxygen
consumption: implications for body mass management. European Journal of
Applied Physiology, 86, 411-417
5. Dolezal, B.A., Potteiger, J.A., Jacobsen, D.J., & Benedict, S.H.
(2000). Muscle damage and resting metabolic rate after acute resistance
exercise with an eccentric overload. Medicine and Science in Sports and
Exercise, 32, 1202-1207