Dr. Kazushige Goto of the University of Tokyo noted in the Journal of Applied Physiology that breaking up exercise sessions by adding rest periods may boost a workout’s fat-burning efficiency. Two 30-minute sessions and a 20-minute rest break in between were seen to burn more fat than a 60-minute session.
According to NCAA president Myles Brand, the governing body of the NCAA issued letters to schools based on academic performance. Schools receiving warning letters could face harsh sanctions in the future. A second offense could result in a reduction of practice time or games played.
A study in the New England Journal of Medicine suggests that obesity is socially contagious. Research explains that a person’s perception of body size is affected by friends.
In the past 25 years, obesity among U.S. adults has shot up from 15 to 32 percent.
Most studies have now largely exonerated dietary fat – total, saturated, or otherwise – from playing a significant role in causing cancer. However, evidence suggests that limiting fat intake to less than 15% of your daily calories may prevent breast cancer and prostate cancers from progressing or recurring.
Recent studies have shown that sleep deprivation cuts into the academic and athletic performance of college students. Short-term side effects of sleep deprivation include delayed reactions and the tendency to make mistakes. A sleep deficit over just five nights can significantly stress the heart.
Researchers from the U.S Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) found that college football players get injured more than high school football players, but high school injuries seem to be more severe. Boys between the ages of 10-14 were most likely to end up in the emergency rooms with traumatic brain injuries due to activities such as bicycling, horseback riding, football, basketball, and the use of all-terrain vehicles (ATVs).
For some time, misinformation about nutrition has confused us all. Let’s see what science says about these myths:
A healthy diet that includes a variety of so-called “super-foods” can help maintain your weight, fight disease, and live longer. These foods include:
Consuming a variety of antioxidants is the key to preventing disease. Research shows a diet rich in fruits, vegetables, grains, and legumes keeps cells healthy, repairs DNA damage from toxins, slows the growth of cancer cells, and fights oxidation, a chemical process that damages cells.
There are 38,000 sports-related eye injuries in the United States each year that require a trip to the emergency room. Of these injuries, 90% are preventable. Making sports protective eyewear a part of athletic uniforms can significantly reduce the potential for eye injuries. Protective eyewear must be made of the proper materials and should be fitted correctly. Here’s what to look for when choosing protective eyewear:
Back pain is the second most common neurological disorder in the United States. It is preceded only by the headache. The first step in treatment is to be properly assessed by a doctor. The following items may serve as back pain remedies:
Your immune system is a precious asset. It protects you from the continual assaults of bacteria, viruses, fungi, and parasites. To help protect your immune system:
An exercise prescription is a key component to a client/athlete’s success. A trainer’s ability to create a program and systematically update that program can be simplified prior to the commencement of an activity by meeting client/athletes to become fully aware of their situations, personal goals, limitations, time frame, and starting base-line of fitness and health. With this information, the trainer can prescribe a program that addresses client/athletes’ needs, improves their abilities, motivates them, and creates a fun atmosphere.
Progressive resistance training dates back to ancient Greece. Legend states that wrestler Milo of Croton trained by carrying a newborn calf on his back every day until it was fully grown. Resistance training involves the use of elastic resistance rather than gravity, whereas weight training provides the majority of the resistance at the beginning. Elastic resistance provides the greatest resistance at the end of the motion, when the elastic element is stretched to its fullest capacity (Todd, 1995).
Introduction
What type of leadership behaviors do student-athletes prefer from university coaches? Do characteristics like gender, competition levels, or types of sport influence tae-kwon-do student-athlete behavior preferences? The lack of answers to these questions is due to the complexity inherent in the questions themselves. Past attempts to answer these questions have been sporadic and often peripheral (Chelladurai, 1984; Beam, Serwatka, & Wilson, 2004).
Strength training is not a modern invention. Egyptian tombs show pictures of lifting bags filled with sand and stone swinging and throwing exercises. These types of things were also popular in early Germany, Scotland, and Spain. Weightlifting competitions date back to the early Greek civilization. These events led to the origination of games that later became known as the modern Olympics. The pioneers of these events did not have the sophisticated equipment that we have today or the research on training and physiology to back up the exercises, but they did have the most important thing — the desire to lift something heavy for fun, sport, and physical health.
The old Spanish-style building had sported individual tiles, each of which depicted a different icon of classic athletic performance… I am sure few people even thought to notice that every single one of the athletes depicted on these beautiful tiles was a man. But in 1999 when they were building the new gym somebody did notice…[So] side by side, with the old tiles on the façade of the new gym […] new ones depicted women athletes hurdling, playing basketball and soccer. The gender symmetry depicted on the tiles of the new gym represents a dramatic shift toward and acceptance - even a symbolic celebration - of girls’ and women’s presence in sports.
Exercise is a critical component in managing diabetes. Aerobic exercise can decrease the requirements of insulin and increase the body’s sensitivity to insulin. Exercise can also help to attain and maintain ideal body weight and decrease the risk for hypertensive diseases, including cardiovascular and peripheral vascular disease, while slowing the progression of diabetic nephropathy (kidney damage).
Introduction
Since 1980, cheerleading has evolved into an activity demanding high levels of skill and athleticism (Brenda, Shields, & Gary, 2006). Cheerleading in the United States is a year round competitive activity spanning three typical sports seasons (fall, winter, and spring), and culminating with summer camp and competition. Catastrophic injuries have increased over the years, presumably because of an increase in the gymnastic-like stunts common in cheerleading (Mueller & Cantu, 2003; Jacobson, Redus, & Palmer, 2005).