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There’s no question that high intensity exercise burns mega-calories in minimum time. But when that high intensity comes in the form of running, jumping, and sprinting, you’re only as strong as your weakest link—and for many that means your hips and knees, which are more vulnerable to injury as impact levels rise. “Stress and impact are amplified with high intensity training routines and sudden force can cause damage to joint cushions, tendons, and muscles,” says Nicholas DiNubile, MD, orthopedic surgeon and best-selling author of the FrameWork series of books. “This is especially true as we age, or if you’ve had previous injuries, as your musculoskeletal frame is not as durable or limber."
The good news is you can raise your heart rate and rev your metabolism to burn calories and fry fat without the jarring impact. Here are 10 relatively gentle workouts your joints (and your waistline) will love. Note: Just because a workout is low impact doesn’t mean it’s zero risk. You can further minimize your chances of pulling a muscle or straining a joint by starting your exercise sessions slowly so you can warm up your muscles and lubricate your joints before turning up your efforts.
Kettlebells
These versatile hand-held weights pack a powerful metabolic punch when you start swinging them, so much so that research finds that kettlebell swings—a standard move in kettlebell routines—revs your heart rate enough to burn 12.5 calories per minute, or comparable to what you’d burn out on a jog. Another study found that exercisers who performed a 30-minute kettlebell workout burned as many calories as they did when they power walked on a treadmill on a 4% incline for the same amount of time. And you’re making lean muscle tissue to boot! Get total-body toned with this 8-minute kettlebell workout.
Cycling
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Rowing
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Power yoga
Based on Ashtanga Yoga, power yoga is a bigger calorie burner than most practices because you’re in near constant motion. You hold each pose for only a few breaths before flowing into the next, and continue over and over so you’re pressing, pushing, balancing and lifting your body weight nearly constantly. Because you’re engaging every muscle, your heart rate stays elevated throughout the class—and you sweat, especially if the room is heated, a lot—so an hour-long class can burn up to about 300 calories, while also improving your range of motion and building full body strength and balance. This high-intensity interval yoga flow takes 18 minutes and can be done at home.
LIT Method
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Elliptical training
This gym floor staple gives you the benefits of running without any of the pounding impact. Many of them have ski-pole like arm handles, so you can engage your upper body muscles and amp up your calorie burn while also toning your arms, shoulders, and upper back muscles. As a bonus, the elliptical will build your butt better than fitness walking. In one study that compared elliptical training at various speeds and stride lengths found that every one of them fired up the glute muscles, which are notoriously weak in many adults, better than walking. This fat-burning elliptical workout is actually fun, and takes about 30 minutes to complete.
TRX
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Swimming
Water is nearly 800 times denser than air, so while swimming is the ultimate low-impact workout, it’s anything but easy to propel your body from one side of the pool to the other and back. In one head-to-head comparison of the health and fitness benefits of swimming versus walking in 116 sedentary women, researchers found that those who swam three times a week for 6 months lost more weight, improved their body composition, slimmed their hips and waist and improved their cholesterol levels better than those who performed a similar walking program for the same time.
Circuit training
Strength training is low-impact and important for retaining lean muscle mass and staying strong as you get older, but it doesn’t burn a lot of calories while you’re doing it. You can change that by doing circuit training, which involves alternating between different strength training exercises with no rest between moves. By eliminating the down time, you keep your heart rate up and burn more calories while you build muscle. For the biggest calorie burn, research shows you should aim to use moderate weights (about half the amount of the maximum weight you could lift one time) and lift at a brisk, more explosive—but still controlled—pace. Test out this type of training with Jen Widerstrom's fat-burning dumbbell circuit.
Barre
These dancer-inspired blended workouts incorporate elements of ballet, Pilates, yoga, and mat work. They're low impact, but deceptively intense as you perform a continuous series of leg lifts, plies, bridges, and other sculpting moves often using light hand weights, resistance bands, and/or small weighted balls to add resistance. Research shows that plies and other dance-based lifts and bends can recruit more low body muscle than traditional lower body moves like squats and heel raises. Look for a class that incorporates cardio sequences along with sculpting circuits to maximize your calorie burn. Try this 10-minute workout from Pure Barre to get started.
SOURCE: Health
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