Coastal
Center for Obesity - Exercise for Life
Program Development: Matthew Rice, CSCS, NSCA-CPT
Forgotten Benefits of Exercise
1. Reduces appetite
2. Reduces high blood pressure
3. Reduces the development of heart disease
4. Reduces risk for colon and other cancers
5. Reduces depression and anxiety
6. Reduces stress
7. Helps improve and maintain tone of all connective tissue to
include muscle and skin
8. Improves balance and independent living
9. Improves digestion
10. Improves self-esteem
11. Improves flexibility
12. Improves energy levels
13. Improves sleep
14. Improves sexual satisfaction
15. Improves overall quality of life
Still not sold on exercising? Research has
clearly proved that those patients who choose to maintain a moderate
exercise program after surgery not only lost more weight, but at a
slightly quicker pace.
NOW LET’S GET
STARTED
If you are a “couch potato” this term should no longer be considered
cute. The Center for Disease Control (CDC) and the American Heart
Association (AHA) have begun to equate the absence of exercise as a
health risk for heart disease in the same category as high blood
pressure, high cholesterol and cigarette smoking. The Surgeon
General has added to this effort by stressing the importance of
physical activity by stating that a sedentary lifestyle “is
hazardous to your health.” You must realize that your sedentary
lifestyle has become a serious health problem that must be dealt
with. You must take responsibility for yourself, for all that you
are and all that you can become. We must make time for physical
activity. This translates into making physical activity a priority
and scheduling it as any other important event, such as a business
meeting. This will require planning and preparation, but no matter
how proper the preparation or how enduring the motivation; we cannot
add a new activity to our life without taking something else out.
My Final Sales Pitch! My Best Offer
Perform the following activity:
1. Fully open your right or left fist
2. Then for one full minute make a very tight fist then open it as
many times as you can
3. Count how many times you can perform this activity in one minute
Is your hand sore, tired or numb? Imagine your hand being your blood
pumping heart beating at 70 beats per minute. If that does not give
your hand a workout, then relate it with how your heart beats at
least 70 times per minute twenty-four hours of the day. That would
be clinching your fist over 100,000 times a day. What does this mean
to you? Exercise strengthens the heart, and over time with
conditioning, it reduces the number of beats per minute, per day.
Whose heart muscle will most likely wear out quicker, a fit
individual with a resting heart rate of 50 beats per minute or the
average person’s heart beating at 70 beats per minute? This would be
equivalent to 28,000 more heart beats per day for the unfit person.
Adding insult to injury: the average severely obese individual has a
resting heart rate of around 100 beats per minute or 144,000 beats
per day.
Setting the Stage for a Successful
Exercise Prescription
If you have been inactive for many years, it is likely that you are
not ready to leap into an exercise program. Therefore, it makes more
sense to identify your benefits that go along with starting an
exercise program and then plan your course.
List your benefits for starting an exercise program:
1.
___________________________________________________________________________________________
2.
___________________________________________________________________________________________
3.
___________________________________________________________________________________________
4.
___________________________________________________________________________________________
Although there are many benefits to physical activity, list two
benefits that are most important to you? (Be specific)
1.
___________________________________________________________________________________________
2.
___________________________________________________________________________________________
There are many roadblocks that can interfere with physical activity.
Before you begin a program, check the following roadblocks that may
interfere with your program.
£ I
cannot find the time
£ I
do not enjoy exercising
£ I
am too overweight
£
Exercise is boring
£ I
am too tired to exercise
£
No place to exercise
£ I
am afraid of failing
£
Nobody to exercise with
£
Bad weather (too hot or too cold)
£ I
never see improvement
£
Unsure of what to do
List the two biggest roadblocks that keep you from wanting to
exercise.
1.___________________________________________________________________________________________
2.___________________________________________________________________________________________
The above roadblocks are only roadblocks. You must figure out ways
to get around them, and having the answer before you start is the
sign of an intelligent exerciser.
Roadblock #1
___________________________________________________________________________________________
Solution:
___________________________________________________________________________________________
___________________________________________________________________________________________
___________________________________________________________________________________________
___________________________________________________________________________________________
Roadblock #2
___________________________________________________________________________________________
Solution:
___________________________________________________________________________________________
___________________________________________________________________________________________
___________________________________________________________________________________________
___________________________________________________________________________________________
You are Now Ready For Developing
Your Personalized Exercise Prescription
When an exercise prescription is developed for you, it should
include your current level of activity and fitness level. In
addition, it will consist of the following principle. It is call the
FITT principle and represents the following.
F = Frequency of exercise, how many times or days per week
I = Intensity or how hard must the exercise be to obtain results
T = Time or how long should each exercise session last
T = Type or mode of physical activity, i.e. walking
F = Frequency
It has been determined that exercising on most or all days of the
week will provide you with the greatest benefits. You should strive
for at least a minimum, 4 days each week.
I = Intensity
This is the level at which you exercise to obtain benefits. The
ideal exercise plan is individualized and begins with a lower level
of effort, working your way up gradually. One of the best ways to
gauge your level of intensity is by measuring your heart rate. In
order to do this you must learn to find your heart rate or pulse.
Putting the numbers all together for your training heart rate!
For most bariatric surgery patients the following formula is ideal.
* Estimate maximum heart rate is equal to 220 minus (-) your age (_____________)
=
(______________)
Example: a 20-year-old person would have an estimated maximum heart
rate of 200 beats per minute.
· Now let’s set up your exercise intensity workout by filling in the
following blanks. (if you are currently taking beta-blockers or any
other medication that slows your heart rate down, you must obtain
advise from your physician.)
0.6 x
_____________(est. max heart rate) =_____________
beats per minute (lowest level of
workout benefit)
0.7 x
_____________(est. max heart rate) =_____________
beats per minute (moderate level of
workout benefit)
0.8 x
_____________(est. max heart rate) =_____________
beats per minute (higher level of
workout benefit)
T = Time
This means how long is the duration of exercise. New exercise
guidelines have established that your program does not have to be
all in one session, but that you can accumulate your time. This
means the recommended 30 minutes on most days of the week can be
done throughout the day. For example, you could do three (3) ten
(10) minute exercise sessions throughout the day. Although this is
the ideal, those who are not quite able to accomplish the above
should do the best they can and slowly work up to these
recommendations.
T = Type
There are multiple activities that can be preformed which increase
our heart rate and strengthen our cardiovascular system.
Post-operatively for a least the first month, walking should be your
activity of choice. Although walking is probably the best exercise,
there are many options
*Swimming (once your surgeon approves)
* Bicycling / Lifecycle
* Golf (without a cart)
*Dancing
*Mopping or scrubbing floors
*Gardening / mowing
*Tennis (doubles)
*Aerobic dance
*Cardio-kick boxing
*Rowing
*Skating
*Race walking
Just to name a few.
Your Personalized Plan
F = Frequency of exercise, how many times or days per week (5)
I = Intensity or how hard must the exercise be to obtain results
(60% to 80% Est. max heart rate)
T = Time or how long should each exercise session last (5 – 40
minutes)
T = Type or mode of physical activity, i.e. walking (Walking)
Initiating Your Exercise Prescription
Exercise has five physiological training effects. Exercise builds
cardiovascular endurance, strengthens muscles, increases
stabilization of the abdominal muscles, increases flexibility and
burns calories. There are two basic energy systems trained, the
aerobic energy system and the anaerobic energy system. For now you
will focus only on aerobic exercise. Aerobic exercise, with oxygen,
can be defined as any exercise that increases the heart rate for
long periods of time. Such exercises performed to achieve this goal
are walking, stair climbing, stationary cycling, rowing, swimming
and circuit training.
Following surgery you should begin to walk only, but before you dash
out the door for your walk, don’t omit an important aspect of
proficient exercise program – warm up. Just as you need to prepare
your automobile’s engine for a trip (your heart is your engine);
prepare it the same way. Always warm up before you begin your
exercise. Ease into the activity with a few minutes of easy level
activity such as walking or stationary bicycling. Your purpose is to
slowly increase heart rate to your training level, warm the muscles
and help prevent injuries. If this sounds more like a workout than a
warm up for you, that is all right. Begin with something easier,
like slowly marching in place with your knee-lifts. You could then
add some should rotations going forward and back-wards. By
performing these movements with your larger muscle groups, you will
stimulate the blood flow throughout your body and prepare your
muscles for action.