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Crunch Franchise Announces New Location in Pittsburgh, PA

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Crunch Franchise Announces New Location in Pittsburgh, PA

PITTSBURGH, Might 31, 2022 /PRNewswire/ — Crunch Franchise as we speak introduced the upcoming October 2022 opening of Crunch McKnight, a spacious, $5 million, 40,000-square-foot health facility, with $1 million in state-of-the-art gear and facilities. Crunch McKnight would be the first Crunch location in Pittsburgh, and shall be situated at 8050 McKnight Street in Pittsburgh, Pa.

Fusing health with leisure to make severe train enjoyable, Crunch McKnight will supply top-quality cardio gear and energy coaching gear, circuit coaching, private coaching, a practical coaching space with indoor turf, a devoted group health studio, a devoted trip studio, Youngsters Crunch, tanning beds and sunless spray choices, HydroMassage® beds, and extra.

Crunch McKnight is owned by companions John Armatas and Brian Hibbard, Chief Government Officer for Health Ventures LLC, which owns and operates Crunch Health areas throughout the U.S. Crunch McKnight shall be Health Ventures’ twenty seventh location nationwide.

“We’re excited to convey the Crunch model to Pittsburgh,” mentioned proprietor Brian Hibbard. “Crunch is for everybody, from the first-time gym-goer to the seasoned athlete. Add in a high-energy and enjoyable setting, and with memberships beginning at $9.99 monthly we now have choices to fulfill everybody’s targets and finances.”

Crunch is understood for its thrilling group health programming and can supply a variety of courses each week, together with BodyWeb with TRX®, Zumba®, Cardio Tai Field, Yoga Physique Sculpt and Fats Burning Pilates. Members in search of further steerage or motivation can make the most of the HIITZone™, a proprietary high-intensity interval group coaching program.

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Potential Crunch McKnight members can go to https://www.crunch.com/areas/mcknight or name (412)-939-7100 to buy memberships.

Crunch is a health club that believes in making severe train enjoyable by fusing health and leisure and pioneering a philosophy of ‘No Judgments.’ Crunch serves a health neighborhood for every kind of individuals, with all sorts of targets, exercising all other ways, working it out on the identical place collectively. As we speak, we’re famend for creating one-of-a-kind group health courses and distinctive programming for our wildly numerous members. Headquartered in New York Metropolis, Crunch serves over 1.9 million members with over 400 gyms worldwide in 34 states and the District of Columbia, Australia, Canada, Costa Rica, Portugal, Puerto Rico, and Spain. Crunch is quickly increasing throughout the U.S. and across the globe.

SOURCE Crunch

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This type of exercise suppresses hunger in women more than men, study proves

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This type of exercise suppresses hunger in women more than men, study proves

Find yourself with a bigger appetite on rest days than after logging your hardest workout of the week? Same. It usually takes me an hour or two to feel hunger after an intense session, and while there are plenty of existing studies that have attributed this to a decrease in the hunger hormone grehlin and an increase in the hormone peptide YY, which helps you feel fuller for longer, new research suggests women are more susceptible to this response than men.

Granted, the study was conducted on only a small sample of participants (eight males and six females), but this is the first review to have included women at all, and the findings were notable.

The method was pretty straightforward: participants were asked to fast overnight, before completing bouts of cycling at varying levels of intensity the next morning. These were then followed up with blood tests (to measure amounts of lactate) and self-reports to analyse appetite levels.

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Science shows that high-intensity exercise suppresses appetite more in women than men

Results showed that the females had higher levels of total ghrelin (the hormone that makes you feel hunger) at baseline compared to the males, while they also had ‘significantly reduced levels’ of acylated (AG) ghrelin after intense exercise compared to males. Ghrelin levels were, in fact, much lower in both males and females after intense exercise compared to moderate exercise, meaning that all participants felt ‘less hungry’ after high-intensity exercise compared to after moderate exercise, but this was even more significant for women.

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‘We found that moderate intensity exercise either did not change ghrelin levels or led to a net increase,’ the study noted. The authors added that exercise above your lactate threshold may be necessary to elicit a suppression in grehlin. Lactate threshold is the point at which lactate builds up in your bloodstream faster than your body can remove it – it occurs during high-intensity exercise.

Why is this useful to know? The author of the study, Kara Anderson, PhD, says: ‘Our research suggests that high-intensity exercise may be important for appetite suppression, which can be particularly useful as part of a weight loss programme. Exercise should be thought of as a “drug”, where the “dose” should be customised based on an individual’s personal goals.’


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Lettermark

Bridie is Fitness Director at Women’s Health UK. She spends her days sweating over new workouts, fitness launches and the best home gym kit so you have all that you need to get fit done. Her work has been published in Stylist, Glamour, Cosmopolitan and more. She’s also a part-time yoga teacher with a habit of nodding off mid savasana (not when she’s teaching, promise).

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Working out but not seeing results? A PT confirms whether 30-minute workouts are top-tier for boosting fitness

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Working out but not seeing results? A PT confirms whether 30-minute workouts are top-tier for boosting fitness

While some of you have your healthy lifestyle down to a tee – balanced nutrition, adequate sleep and a finely tuned workout regime incorporating strength, cardio and flexibility training – others struggle to know where to start when it comes to fitness. And with Google searches for “Is 30 minutes of exercise a day enough?” spiking, it seems that many of you aren’t sure about the length of time or number of workouts to aim for weekly.

And to make matters even more confusing, knowing how often you should workout isn’t always as simple as it should be. You see, your progress will depend on a combination of factors which might seem unconnected to exercise but still have an impact. Sleep, for example, has been shown in various studies (like this one, published in the European Journal of Applied Physiology) to affect physical performance, while research also shows a bi-directional relationship between exercise and stress.

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The overlooked key to fitness? Strengthening your joints and tendons

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The overlooked key to fitness? Strengthening your joints and tendons

Isometric exercises, like planks or lunge holds, require holding a position for an extended period. In these positions, your muscles are firing, but you’re also working on the alignment of the joint and working the tendon to hold that position, says Wulke. Ho adds that while ligaments and joints cannot technically be trained directly like tendons, you can support their health by strengthening the surrounding muscles and encouraging proper movement patterns.

Wulke often programs training days with a mix of goals for her athletes: “high” days for muscle and strength development and “low” days focusing on alignment, isometric holds, and mobility. But most people don’t have enough time to dedicate separate days for joint-specific work. Instead, try integrating these movements into your existing strength training sessions. Consider adding a few sets of isometric holds during your warm-up or as a finisher.

(Is cracking your joints bad for you?)

During your workouts, focus on the eccentric phase of your movements. Slow down and maintain control throughout the exercise to help you ensure proper form. You can also use higher reps and lower weight to reduce the risk of overstressing connective tissues.

Last, Hinson recommends incorporating low-impact exercises such as walking, cycling, Pilates, water aquatics, and yoga. “Taking care of and improving the structures that make the joints stronger and more flexible—it really will pay huge dividends in keeping [people] out of my office and away from injury,” he says.

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