|


|
Target Heart Rate Calculator
Information in this article is from the American
Council on Exercise
except where it is highlighted in yellow.
Aerobic conditioning is the ability of the heart,
lungs, and circulatory system to supply oxygen and nutrients to the
working muscles. It involves the ability to persist in activities, such
as elliptical training, walking, jogging, and cycling. Improved aerobic
endurance is associated with increased health and reduced risk of
chronic disease, such as obesity, heart disease, type 2 diabetes, high
blood pressure, and stroke.
To experience the health benefits of aerobic endurance
training, you should participate in prolonged aerobic exercise
(eventually reaching 20 to 60 minutes of continuous training) at an
intensity (or level) that stimulates the aerobic system. Fortunately, if
you are a beginner who has been inactive for a long time, you can start
with 5 to 10 minutes of aerobic exercise and still get aerobic health
benefits. The intensity of aerobic exercise (or how hard you work) is
simple to determine if you know how to measure your heart rate and if
you pay attention to how you feel during a workout.
Target Heart Rate
The rate at which your heart beats during exercise can
be used to assess how hard you are working. When performing light to
moderate exercise, your heart rate increases as your work rate
increases. This ensures that blood gets to the muscles so that they can
get the oxygen and nutrients they need to continue working.
Being able to measure your heart rate allows you to
determine aerobic exercise intensity by taking your pulse during the
workout and comparing it to your target heart rate. A common method to
determine your target heart rate is based on a percentage of your
estimated maximum heart rate.
Input your age in the SUM Heart Rate Calculator and the
calculator will produce a range (50% - 75%) in which to keep your heart
rate during aerobic exercise and a max heart rate.
Now that you know your target heart rate range, you
can check your pulse at regular intervals (every 5 to 10 minutes) during
the workout session and compare your exercise heart rate to your target
heart rate. If your exercise heart rate is below the target range,
increase your pace or effort slightly to achieve the proper intensity.
If your exercise heart rate is above the target range, decrease your
pace or effort slightly to remain with the range.
While this method is widely used in the fitness
industry, it can be inaccurate for many people. Therefore, gauging
intensity using a percentage of predicted maximum heart rate should be
used along with another method to ensure appropriate exercise intensity.
A commonsense method called perceived exertion should always be used in
conjunction with other heart rate-monitoring methods. Perceived exertion
is a technical description of simply paying attention to how you feel
during a workout.
How Do You Feel During A Workout?
Exercising at an appropriate intensity should feel
somewhat challenging, but it should also feel like you could continue on
for a prolonged time period. If you are working at too easy of an
intensity, you will still receive some health benefits but you will not
experience the calorie-burning effect and the aerobic benefit that you
would if you were working at an appropriate intensity. If you are
working too hard, you won’t last very long because you will become
extremely fatigued and run the risk of injuring yourself in the process.
A quick, easy way to evaluate intensity is to check
your ability to breathe and talk. You should be able to breathe
comfortably and rhythmically throughout all phases of a workout to
ensure a safe and comfortable level of exercise, especially if you’re
just beginning an exercise program. You should also be able to talk in
short sentences with no problem. If you can’t carry on a conversation,
you’re working too hard.
Heart Rate Training Zones
Another way to evaluate your aerobic exercise
intensity is to compare how you feel to an established guide, such as a
heart rate training zone. For our purposes, training target zones can be
thought of as a traffic light where the green, yellow, and red lights
correspond to the intensity of exercise. That is, the green training
zone represents an appropriate level of intensity (light to moderate
exercise) that indicates "continue," like a green traffic light. The
yellow training zone indicates an intensity that is moderate to
vigorous, and if performed for too long could result in fatigue. When
training in the yellow zone (moderate to vigorous exercise), an
exerciser should slow down or proceed with caution if the intensity
feels too high, similar to the rules for a yellow traffic light. Lastly,
exercising at a very vigorous pace or very high intensity reflects
training in the red zone, which corresponds to a red traffic light,
which means stop.
Exercise in the red zone may be harmful to beginners or people
with health conditions and should be reserved for those who are
experienced exercisers or under the care of a trained health
professional.
Measuring Heart Rate
The measurement of heart rate, or pulse, is
represented in beats per minute (bpm)To assess heart rate, place your
fingertips on either the Radial or Carotid pulse site. To
determine the number of beats per minute, take the pulse rate, counting
the first pulse beat as zero, for 10 seconds and then multiply by six.
If you choose to take your pulse at the carotid side, avoid putting
heavy pressure on the carotid arteries because they contain receptors
that sense increases in pressure and respond by slowing the heart rate.
Click here for SUM home page
|
|