Lady Vol Fan
Cathlete
Hey, thanks for the article. I enjoyed it. However, that isn't one I would use to justify doing a dedicated leg day.
First, while it included men doing resistance training with typical lower body exercises, I did not see it specify there was one resistance training session per week that was a dedicated lower body session (exclusion of working the upper body once a week within the session.)
Second, it held no control group of resistance training that were sessions of total body and no dedicated leg/lower body.
So while you have an EXCELLENT additional reason (your son ) to stay physically active, I'm not sure that your exercise regimen requires you to have dedicated sessions that you dread based on that study.
I think @Debinmi had an excellent suggestion of getting your dexa scan to have additional information and track the difference in a later scan with your resistance training you enjoy.
I personally have not scene any reliable study with middle age women over a year who refused supplements showing that once a week lower body only sessions are significantly effective for bone density over women who perform the same lower body exercises included in a total body sessions multiple times a week.
That's a study that would force me to do a dedicated leg day (if I hated leg day.)
If you still feel like you have to increase your leg exercises then sprinkle the session you would have done over the week in 20 minute intervals.
I congratulate you for taking care of yourself in your journey with your son addressing his needs in as healthy a body as you can. Hit those muscles in a way you can enjoy.
First, while it included men doing resistance training with typical lower body exercises, I did not see it specify there was one resistance training session per week that was a dedicated lower body session (exclusion of working the upper body once a week within the session.)
Second, it held no control group of resistance training that were sessions of total body and no dedicated leg/lower body.
So while you have an EXCELLENT additional reason (your son ) to stay physically active, I'm not sure that your exercise regimen requires you to have dedicated sessions that you dread based on that study.
I think @Debinmi had an excellent suggestion of getting your dexa scan to have additional information and track the difference in a later scan with your resistance training you enjoy.
I personally have not scene any reliable study with middle age women over a year who refused supplements showing that once a week lower body only sessions are significantly effective for bone density over women who perform the same lower body exercises included in a total body sessions multiple times a week.
That's a study that would force me to do a dedicated leg day (if I hated leg day.)
If you still feel like you have to increase your leg exercises then sprinkle the session you would have done over the week in 20 minute intervals.
I congratulate you for taking care of yourself in your journey with your son addressing his needs in as healthy a body as you can. Hit those muscles in a way you can enjoy.