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Ask Marc: What Is The Afterburn Effect?


What Is The Afterburn Effect?

In short, the definition of the afterburn effect is calorie burn AFTER exercise. If you are doing an intense activity like sprinting, your body experiences a metabolic disturbance. It takes time and calories for your body to get back to homeostasis. This is the crux of the afterburn effect. The greater the metabolic and muscular disturbance, the greater the afterburn effect will likely be.

Why Is The Afterburn Effect Important?

In short, the more calories you burn, the easier it is to lose fat and keep your metabolism humming. So if you are seeking to get leaner and lose fat, might as well try to maximize the amount of calories you are burning during and after exercise.

Why Has It Taken So Long To Understand The Afterburn Effect?

For decades, most exercise physiologists focused on estimating calorie burn during exercise. For exercises that don’t require a lot of intensity like jogging, or walking, this makes a lot of sense. It’s easy to estimate how many calories are burned during a jog by measuring the oxygen your body consumes during that jog with a metabolic cart. But what about if you are weight lifting intensely, or sprinting? Recent research shows that as much as 95% of the calorie burn from anaerobic exercise (short bursts of intense activity) may occur AFTER the exercise.

How Do You Maximize The Afterburn Effect?

In a phrase – short burst of intense activity. In other words, high intensity interval training and strength circuits types of workouts, which are the foundation of the workouts we create at BuiltLean. The better shape you get in, the less time it takes to maintain your great shape because you can crank up the intensity.

How Do I Learn More About The Afterburn Effect?

Check out a 45 minute interview with the world’s foremost expert on the Afterburn Effect Dr. Christopher Scott right here: Afterburn Effect Interview.

http://www.builtlean.com/2013/08/07/afterburn-effect-definition/?utm_source=newsletter&utm_medium=email&utm_content=afterburn&utm_campaign=weekly+newsletter&inf_contact_key=1acff1a3799f08209dc655d922ee61af889834fb07ebb3d1dab2fc4e3de20cbe




       

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Afterburn Effect: Burn 500+ Calories from 10 Minutes of Exercise?


I have an interview below with Dr. Christopher Scott, PHD, who is an exercise physiology professor at the University of Southern Maine and one of the world’s foremost experts on the Afterburn Effect, which is calorie burn AFTER exercise.

At BuiltLean, we think the afterburn effect is so important that we created our strength circuitsTMmethod to help increase the afterburn effect so you can burn more calories for days.

Surprisingly, very few people in the exercise physiology community and more generally in the fitness industry have acknowledged his pivotal research and its potential to change public health policy and your ability to burn more fat in less time.

I was able to get Chris on the phone and record a 40 minute conversation with him. You can play the audio of our conversation below, download the 20-Page transcript, or view the summary and highlights I put together below.

 

Click the image below to view/play, or right click to download

Audio MP3

(40 minutes)

Written Transcript

(20 Pages)

 

 

Document Type: pdf, Size = 0.36MB

 

Afterburn Effect Summary

 

What is the Afterburn Effect?

In short, the afterburn effect is calorie burn AFTER exercise. The afterburn effect is difficult to estimate as you’ll learn in a moment. The more intense the exercise, the greater the afterburn effect. For example, sprinting as fast as you can for 30 seconds for 5 rounds will have a much larger afterburn effect compared to jogging for 30 minutes.

What is Energy Expenditure?

 

Energy expenditure is the total amount of calories you burn. More specifically, energy expenditure refers to the amount of energy a person uses during all bodily activities from movement, to blood circulation, to breathing, to digestion. When it comes to exercise, energy expenditure is the total measure of calorie burn during and after exercise.

What is Aerobic vs. Anaerobic Exercise?

 

Aerobic exercise is a type of activity marked by long distances and slow paces like running, or cycling. Anaerobic exercise is marked by activities that require strength, speed, and power like weight lifting, or sprinting.

Energy Expenditure From Exercise: 3 Components

 

While total energy expenditure is the sum of the following 3 components, the Afterburn Effect is the sum of #2 and #3 components:

1) Calories Burned During Exercise (O2)- This is the amount of calories you burn during a workout. A metabolic cart can accurately measure you calorie burn aerobically during exercise. This is because oxygen uptake (how much oxygen your body uses) is proportional to heat expenditure (calorie burn) for aerobic activities. This component is NOT part of the afterburn effect.

2) Calories Burned AFTER Exercise (EPOC) – At higher exercise intensities, oxygen uptake is NOT proportional to heat expenditure. An oxygen debt is created, where EPOC (excess post-exercise oxygen consumption) is used to help restore the body to a resting state and adapt it to the exercise just performed, which requires energy. This component is part of the afterburn effect.

3) Lactic Acid Contribution of Exercise – EPOC is NOT enough to fully account for anaerobic contribution of exercise to total energy expenditure. This is a VERY important point and what differentiates Chris’ research. Chris has proposed that by measuring blood lactate reasonable estimates of rapid glycolitic ATP turnover are available and should not be omitted from the estimation of energy expenditure from anaerobic exercise, especially when anaerobic contributions are large. This component is part of the afterburn effect.

The Afterburn Effect Can Be BIG

 

Energy Expenditure component #2 is typically referred to as the “Afterburn Effect”, when it should really be #2 and #3. The afterburn effect is minimal for traditional cardio, but can be significant for strength and power related activities.

In his first major study, Chris proposed that as much as 95% of the calorie cost of intense anaerobic exercise can come AFTER exercise! While Chris says the numbers are not perfect estimates and were used to help highlight the importance of anaerobic contribution to exercise, they are still revealing.

Why Most Exercise Physiologists Estimate The Afterburn Effect Incorrectly

 

One reason may be that the exercise industry is dominated by aerobic exercisers like runners, cyclists, and triathletes:

“I think that the way scientists have started the origins of exercise physiology are pretty much all aerobic exercise. That’s what it is. Now many people are applying aerobic exercise concepts like long-distance running and cycling, and they’re using what they found there and applying it to resistance training and weight lifting. That’s where I pretty much have drawn the line. I’m not going to do that.”

A Possible 4th Component of Energy Expenditure – Hypertrophy

 

While Chris did not separate out the effects of Hypertrophy as a possible 4th component of total energy expenditure and 3rd component of the afterburn effect, he did note that it does require energy and that it’s not being estimated/measured.

“If you’re working your muscle to the point where you’re causing damage at the microscopic level, it’s going to take energy to repair that… breaking proteins and laying down new proteins, that is most certainly going to be raising your energy expenditure…There’s also medical issues, if you will, that increase energy expenditure, and the largest one is burns. If you’re a burn victim, you can literally double your resting metabolic rate with severe burns. The reason why is you look at your skin, which is mostly protein, you’re laying down new protein. Your nutritional demands are literally off the chart.”

High Intensity Anaerobic Exercise Burns More Fat Than Cardio

 

“There was a study I saw years ago, and I still quote it, and they were doing these six-second bursts of all-out cycling. It was 10, 15 sets of this, and they found this unheard of amount of free fatty acids that were broken down from fat stores within the muscle. It begs the question why, during an anaerobic activity that clearly utilizes glucose as a fuel, why is so much fat being broken down?

The answer appears to be, well, the exercise component is six seconds long, and that’s using glucose, but however long the recovery component is, that’s when you’re burning fat. If you add all these intermittent periods together…you’re primarily burning lactate and fatty acids, and that’s where the body composition stuff comes in.

If you want to lose weight, lose body fat, get ripped, I’m under that impression that intermittent bursts of high-intensity activity followed by rest periods, that’s the way to do it.”

And one more add on:

“A similar thinking [by many health organizations] was that if you wanted to burn fat, you would have to do long, slow, distance activity because that’s going to burn the most fat. We’re starting to realize now that in fact it’s the other way around that during really brief, intense intermittent bouts of strength, speed and power-related stuff, I’m under the impression you can burn even more fat.”

Nutrition Is Still King For Losing Fat

 

“Then another thing I always tell people – I’m not a nutritionist, obviously, but I know a little bit about it – if you really were to come to me and wanted to lose weight, and we made a list of ten things, one through seven of them would be dietary, watching what you eat. Then eight, nine and ten would be exercise.”

The Afterburn Effect: Research Still Has a LONG Way to Go

 

“We have a long way to go before we understand this, and that there are times when it’s almost – for me, from a scientific standpoint – it’s almost overwhelming because we’re finding out that isotonic contractions are different than isometric, that are different from isokinetic. Then you add different one repetition maximums or ten repetition maximum, how much exercise time’s involved, number of reps, the number of sets, the number of rest periods in between sets.

We have a long way to go before we find the perfect exercise program, if you will. The truth of the matter is there’s probably not one perfect program. There’s probably dozens of perfect programs. Again, it all goes down to the independence of the person that’s involved. What’s actually best for them?

The bottom line, though, I think, though, Marc, and again, from anecdotal evidence that I’ve heard from you and others, is that when you really start doing the intermittent large muscle group, high-intensity-type exercise, that’s when people start getting into these ripped, cut, nice body composition adjustments.”

About Dr. Christopher Scott, PHD

 

Dr Christopher Scott is an Associate Professor at the University of Southern Maine. Dr. Scott has been called a “pioneer” for his research focusing on the determination of energy expenditure for strength, speed, and power related activities, both during and after exercise. He has been a professor of exercise physiology for 9 years and is the sole author of the 5-star ranked textbook “A Primer for the Exercise and Nutrition Sciences: Thermodynamics, Bioenergetics, Metabolism”.

For a longer bio, Curriculaem Vitae, and Publications, you can visit Dr. Scott’s website athttp://www.anaerobicenergyexpenditure.com.

Please Rate this article. Was it good?



       

mods please lock this thread I think jayWood2010 account got lock by a spam bot



Bet reminder: I bet with Tboned51 that Splatoon won't reach the 1 million shipped mark by the end of 2015. I win if he loses and I lose if I lost.

chapset said:
mods please lock this thread I think jayWood2010 account got lock by a spam bot


lol  problem with the article?  The afterburn effect is a great method combined with HIIT's.  I'd recommend them to anybody and I have.  I've helped people in the past and now Im posting it to VGC for an overall healthier life.  So what is the problem exactly?

If you don't care for these articles, don't like being healthy or like exercising etc then ignore them by all means.




       

My bad I thought it was a spam bot



Bet reminder: I bet with Tboned51 that Splatoon won't reach the 1 million shipped mark by the end of 2015. I win if he loses and I lose if I lost.

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chapset said:

My bad I thought it was a spam bot


I assume you thought so back then too? 

http://gamrconnect.vgchartz.com/post.php?id=5480503




       

spurgeonryan said:
Besides the threat of the thread being locked, I will add my own take on this.

They do this in the Army. AFter you do your initial stretching and push ups, you go running. Then when you are done you may do some other stretching and excercises to keep it going even if it is not at the same rate.


Yeah, I always recommend this kind of stuff because it saves people a ton of time as well.  Glad it is getting more popular.  

I don't know much about military training but my friends who has come out of the military says it is pretty brutal.  Considering what some of them looked like before going in and what they looked like coming out I believe them lol




       

JayWood2010 said:
chapset said:

My bad I thought it was a spam bot


I assume you thought so back then too? 

http://gamrconnect.vgchartz.com/post.php?id=5480503

I knew I saw this once before, that's why I thought this was a spam bot. Anyway keep on getting lean patna



Bet reminder: I bet with Tboned51 that Splatoon won't reach the 1 million shipped mark by the end of 2015. I win if he loses and I lose if I lost.

Ohhh. No toilet jokes?