Stair-climbing: A Sure Way to Burn Calories

2024-10-02

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  • If you are trying to lose weight, climbing stairs as a regular exercise might be for you.
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  • Stairs are available in many places. And research shows stair-climbing is more effective than walking on level ground.
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  • "Overall, it is a fact that stair-climbing gets you fit faster and consumes more calories," said Lauri van Houten, vice president of the International Skyrunning Federation.
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  • The organization oversees a number of activities that involve climbing.
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  • "How many calories will I burn is the question everyone wants to know," van Houten said.
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  • "Here's the good news: The overall energy expenditure of the exercise depends on your weight.
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  • Therefore, the more you weigh, the more you burn," she said.
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  • Research shows you burn about 20 times more calories going up stairs than walking on flat ground.
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  • Even going down stairs, you burn around five times more because your muscles have to work to slow the body.
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  • That might be all you need to know if you are trying to lose weight.
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  • Dr. Alberto Minetti of Italy's University of Milan has done a large amount of research on human movement - including stair-climbing.
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  • It is an exercise everyone can do and does not cost money, he said.
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  • Minetti did the math to explain why going up stairs is so effective for burning calories in a short amount of time.
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  • "To move 1 kilogram of body mass over one horizontal meter, you expend 0.5 calories," he said.
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  • But, he added, "If you move 1 kilogram of body mass vertically on stairs it's 10 calories. So it's 20 times the calories moving vertically rather than horizontally."
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  • Trained as a doctor, Minetti has spent his career as a researcher.
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  • He suggested that older people and beginner stair climbers watch their speed.
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  • Minetti does his own stair-climbing at his home in Milan.
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  • He said he often takes a few deep breaths before going up the many stairs.
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  • In a scientific study, Minetti makes the point that using your arms in stair-climbing adds extra power.
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  • Handrails offer safety, too.
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  • The study notes that handrails are available along most stairs in very tall buildings.
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  • Using them increases "the muscle mass involved..." by getting the arms involved, the study shows.
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  • "They are relatively small muscles in the arms, but better than nothing," Minetti said.
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  • If stair-climbing were an Olympic sport, Australian Suzy Walsham would own gold medals.
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  • She has won 10 races up New York City's Empire State Building - officially 1,576 stairs - and five climbs up the Eiffel Tower.
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  • Overall, Walsham has won more than 100 international stair races, and was once considered the top woman in the sport.
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  • When she was living in Singapore, Walsham climbed up her 29-story building - 37 times straight.
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  • It took over four hours with short breaks for coffee or water.
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  • She covered a vertical distance of 3,200 meters.
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  • Walsham told the Associated Press that stair-climbing is a good form of exercise for many kinds of people.
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  • "Many people struggle to run as they age," she said, noting the exercise is "harder on the joints."
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  • She said stair training is a great substitute for running.
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  • Stairs are everywhere - one flight, two flights at home, inside very large buildings, in stadiums, at work, in shopping malls, in the subway.
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  • Stair-climbing does not take much time.
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  • It is easy to build up, adding a few flights of stairs every day or week.
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  • Stair-climbing can also help improve balance.
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  • And it can easily become part of an exercise plan.
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  • Yuri Yoshizumi won last year's women's division of the Stairclimbing World Championships in her native Osaka, Japan.
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  • She completed the 285-meter climb - 1,610 stairs - in 10 minutes, 20.06 seconds.
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  • "Stair-climbing is an easy sport for beginners and the general public to get into," Yoshizumi told the Associated Press in an email.
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  • She said the exercise helps to "strengthen your muscles and your cardiovascular system in a short amount of time."
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  • Yoshizumi noted that cities usually have many public stairways for people to climb.
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  • "Just using the stairs instead of the escalators at (subway) stations and department stores is a good way to get some exercise," she said.
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  • I'm Ashley Thompson. And I'm John Russell.