Strength Changes Everything

The Exercise Coach

The Exercise Coach presents: The Strength Changes Everything Podcast. Learn from Exercise Coach Co-Founder Brian Cygan, Franchisee Amy Hudson, and Dr. James Fisher, Chief Science Officer of The Exercise Coach about how to enjoy a strong, healthy lifestyle. The Exercise Coach's unique two 20-minute workouts a week is how thousands across the United States get and stay in great shape. This podcast gives you the facts, from the experts, in easy-to-understand lessons so you can take control of your life.

  1. Resistance Training Reverses Aging: Joint Pain

    5 HR AGO

    Resistance Training Reverses Aging: Joint Pain

    What if the joint pain you’ve been told is “just part of getting older” is actually something you can fix? Amy Hudson and Dr. James Fisher continue the Strength Training Reverses series, and today the focus is joint pain. In this episode, they break down how prevalent joint pain really is, the most common areas it shows up in, and why it tends to get worse with age. They also explore what’s happening inside the joint, how it affects daily movement and quality of life, and what the research actually shows about strength training as a way to reduce pain and improve function. Dr. Fisher explains how to recognize the most common types of joint pain. He points out that while low back pain is often more musculoskeletal, the real hotspots people struggle with daily are the knees, hips, and especially the hands.Learn why joint pain becomes a problem as you get older. Dr. Fisher breaks down osteoarthritis as a degenerative condition where the cartilage that cushions your joints slowly wears down over time. Globally, it affects around 7% of people, but once you hit your 50s and 60s, that number jumps to nearly 25%.Dr. Fisher explains what’s really happening inside your joints as you age. Cartilage does not have its own blood supply, which means it cannot repair itself the way other tissues can. As muscle mass declines and small injuries add up over time, more stress gets placed directly on your joints, which is where the real problem begins.Amy covers why building muscle is one of the most overlooked ways to protect your joints. The stronger the muscles surrounding a joint are, the more support and stability that joint has during everyday movement.Dr. Fisher explains why joint pain affects more than just your body. He describes pain as a lived experience that is difficult to fully understand unless you have gone through it yourself. It can quietly shape your mood, your confidence, and even how willing you are to stay active.Learn what the research actually says about strength training and osteoarthritis.Dr. Fisher walks through a large review study that looks at how resistance training impacts pain, strength, and overall function.According to Dr. Fisher, most people in pain avoid movement because it feels like the wrong thing to do, but not all movement is the same. Unlike repetitive activities like walking or running, resistance training can strengthen your body in ways that reduce stress on the joints.Learn what happens when people with joint pain start resistance training. Within just four to nine weeks, participants in these studies experienced less pain, more strength, and better physical function. That improvement often spills over into better quality of life and more confidence in daily activities.Amy and Dr. Fisher explain why reducing pain changes how you show up in life. As discomfort starts to fade, people naturally feel more energized and more willing to engage with the world again. That spark to move, connect, and enjoy life starts to come back.Dr. Fisher explains how strength training works inside the joint itself. When you avoid movement, your knees stop producing synovial fluid, which leads to more stiffness and discomfort. Resistance training helps release synovial fluid without the repetitive stress that can make conditions like osteoarthritis worse.Learn how stronger muscles take pressure off your joints. When your muscles are weak, your joints absorb more force than they should. As you build strength, your muscles start doing their job properly, which reduces the load on your joints and makes movement feel smoother.Dr. Fisher explains why exercise can reduce pain almost immediately. There is a concept called exercise-induced pain relief where strength training helps lower discomfort across the whole body, not just in one joint. This means the benefit is not only long term but can also be felt right after a session.Learn how to start strength training even if you are dealing with joint pain right now. Dr. Fisher encourages starting with guidance from a coach or a personal trainer who understands your situation and can adjust accordingly. Taking that first step is often the hardest part, but it is also where progress begins.Dr. Fisher explains why getting past the fear barrier changes everything. Once people realize that strength training is not making their condition worse, they begin to build consistency. Over time, the evidence is clear that it reduces pain, improves strength, and supports long term joint health.Why working with a personal trainer can speed up your progress. When you’re dealing with joint pain, guessing your way through workouts often leads to frustration or setbacks. A trainer helps you do the right movements, at the right intensity, so you actually see results without making things worse. Mentioned in This Episode: The Exercise Coach - Get 2 Free Sessions! Submit your questions at StrengthChangesEverything.com This podcast and blog are provided to you for entertainment and informational purposes only. By accessing either, you agree that neither constitute medical advice nor should they be substituted for professional medical advice or care. Use of this podcast or blog to treat any medical condition is strictly prohibited. Consult your physician for any medical condition you may be having. In no event will any podcast or blog hosts, guests, or contributors, Exercise Coach USA, LLC, Gymbot LLC, any subsidiaries or affiliates of same, or any of their respective directors, officers, employees, or agents, be responsible for any injury, loss, or damage to you or others due to any podcast or blog content.

    21 min
  2. Resistance Training Reverses Aging: Sarcopenia

    21 APR

    Resistance Training Reverses Aging: Sarcopenia

    What if the real reason your body feels older isn’t your age, but the muscle you’ve lost along the way? Amy Hudson and Dr. James Fisher continue the series on Strength Training Reverses. In today’s episode, they break down how strength training reverses sarcopenia and why muscle loss is one of the biggest drivers of aging. They dive into what actually happens inside your body as muscle declines, from reduced strength and energy to losing independence in everyday life. Tune in to learn how to take back control of your body, rebuild what’s been lost, and stay capable, strong, and independent for years to come. Dr. Fisher starts by explaining what sarcopenia really is. It’s not just losing muscle mass, it’s losing strength and function too. And it happens gradually until one day you notice you’re not as capable as you used to be.Dr. Fisher explains when sarcopenia begins to show up. For most people, it quietly starts in your 40s and then speeds up into your 50s and 60s. Dr. Fisher covers what actually happens when you lose muscle. Muscle drives your metabolism, helps regulate blood sugar, and protects against chronic disease. When it declines, it affects everything from your energy to your long-term health.Dr. Fisher explains how muscle loss impacts your independence. Simple things like climbing stairs or getting out of a chair start to feel harder. Those small changes are often the first warning signs.Dr. Fisher shares how physical decline starts to affect your daily life. You begin to second guess going out, moving around, or staying active. Over time, that can lead to isolation, fear, and a loss of confidence.Dr. Fisher breaks down a powerful study on resistance training and aging muscle. They chose older adults in their 60s and younger adults in their 20s and 30s. Before resistance training, the older adults were, on average, 59% weaker than the younger adults. After six months of training, the older adults' strength improved significantly, and they were now only 38% weaker than the younger adults.Amy shares something most people don’t realize. You don’t need decades to rebuild lost muscle. With consistent strength training, real progress can happen in a matter of months.According to Dr. Fisher, strength training doesn’t just change how you feel; it also changes how your genes express themselves. In many cases, older muscle starts to behave more like younger muscle again.Dr. Fisher explains how these changes happen at a deeper level. Training impacts your body at both the cellular and genetic level, and those changes flow into better strength and function. What you feel on the outside starts from what’s happening inside.Dr. Fisher breaks down the role of mitochondria in aging. As we get older, our cells produce energy less efficiently. Strength training helps rebuild that system so your body can produce and use energy better again.Dr. Fisher explains how resistance training supports cellular renewal. Your body starts producing healthier mitochondria while clearing out damaged ones. That shift improves energy, recovery, and overall function.Amy shares what makes this so rewarding in real life. People regain abilities they thought were gone for good. Things they gave up on years ago suddenly feel possible again.Amy explains what this really means long term. Strength training is not just about getting stronger; it is about getting your life back. It gives people the confidence and capability to move, live, and engage again. Mentioned in This Episode: The Exercise Coach - Get 2 Free Sessions! Submit your questions at StrengthChangesEverything.com This podcast and blog are provided to you for entertainment and informational purposes only. By accessing either, you agree that neither constitute medical advice nor should they be substituted for professional medical advice or care. Use of this podcast or blog to treat any medical condition is strictly prohibited. Consult your physician for any medical condition you may be having. In no event will any podcast or blog hosts, guests, or contributors, Exercise Coach USA, LLC, Gymbot LLC, any subsidiaries or affiliates of same, or any of their respective directors, officers, employees, or agents, be responsible for any injury, loss, or damage to you or others due to any podcast or blog content.

    24 min
  3. Resistance Training Reverses Aging: Cognitive Function

    14 APR

    Resistance Training Reverses Aging: Cognitive Function

    Could strength training be the key to slowing cognitive decline? Amy Hudson and Dr. James Fisher continue the series on the relationship between strength training and aging. In this episode, they dive into how strength training can actually reverse cognitive decline and protect your brain from the effects of aging. They explore how building and maintaining muscle triggers neurobiological processes, boosts focus, reduces brain fog, and preserves critical neural connections. Tune in to discover why your workouts might be the smartest investment for your long-term brain health, and how simple changes in your strength routine could change the way you age. Dr. Fisher explains why things start to feel a bit slower as we age. It’s not just “getting older,” your brain is slowly losing connections while inflammation builds in the background. You’re still you, but tasks that used to feel automatic take more effort and feel less crisp.Amy shares how aging shows up daily. You walk into a room and forget why you’re there or a word hovers on the tip of your tongue but won’t come out. It’s subtle, but it builds frustration over time.Dr. Fisher covers the surprising relationship between strength and brain function. Stronger muscles and more muscle mass are linked to sharper thinking, faster processing, and better memory.Dr. Fisher breaks down what actually changes in the brain when you strength train. The areas responsible for focus, decision-making, and executive function get stronger while the usual decline slows down. This is the science behind why workouts can feel like a mental reset.Dr. Fisher explains how training your muscles improves brain function. Your muscles don’t just move you, they send powerful signals throughout your body. Those signals reach your brain and help it work more efficiently.Dr. Fisher covers how everything starts to connect better again when you strength train. Brain cells communicate more efficiently, energy flows more smoothly, and mental fog begins to lift. It’s like your brain regains some of its youthful clarity.Amy and Dr. Fisher explain why personal training plays such a key role in keeping your cognitive function sharp. Working with a professional helps you create the kind of consistent, targeted stimulus your brain actually needs. It’s the difference between exercising and truly training for brain health.Dr. Fisher explains why this research is a game changer. Strength training doesn’t just slow aging, it may actually push back against decline. That changes how we think about what’s possible for our later years.Amy explains why high performers make strength training non-negotiable. The benefits go beyond physical goals. Strong muscles feed focus, decision-making, energy, and overall mental performance.Amy and Dr. Fisher cover how to look at aging differently. Instead of waiting for decline, strength training helps you actively push in the other direction. It’s about creating control over your future, not accepting limitations.Amy shares that with strength training we do not have to accept traditional aging. You don’t have to accept memory lapses, brain fog, or slowed thinking. There’s a path to aging better and staying sharp longer.Amy and Dr. Fisher cover how personal training is one of the most effective tools to reverse aspects of aging. The guidance, structure, and consistent stimulus a trainer provides gives your brain the chance to thrive.Amy and Dr. Fisher explain why personal training is not just about fitness, but about protecting how well your mind performs. Strength training done right sends powerful signals that support cognition. That’s what gives you a real opportunity to push back against aging.Amy and Dr. Fisher conclude that strength training is one of the smartest investments you can make for your body and brain. The right training keeps muscles strong and minds sharper. It’s proof that aging does not have to mean slowing down. Mentioned in This Episode: The Exercise Coach - Get 2 Free Sessions! Submit your questions at StrengthChangesEverything.com This podcast and blog are provided to you for entertainment and informational purposes only. By accessing either, you agree that neither constitute medical advice nor should they be substituted for professional medical advice or care. Use of this podcast or blog to treat any medical condition is strictly prohibited. Consult your physician for any medical condition you may be having. In no event will any podcast or blog hosts, guests, or contributors, Exercise Coach USA, LLC, Gymbot LLC, any subsidiaries or affiliates of same, or any of their respective directors, officers, employees, or agents, be responsible for any injury, loss, or damage to you or others due to any podcast or blog content.

    18 min
  4. Resistance Training Reverses Aging: Appearance

    7 APR

    Resistance Training Reverses Aging: Appearance

    Can the way you train change how old you look? In this episode, Amy Hudson and Dr. James Fisher continue their deep dive into aging, focusing on how strength training impacts the body far beyond muscle and strength. They explore how resistance training affects skin elasticity, the biological processes behind skin aging, and why exercise may play a bigger role in appearance than most people realize. Tune in to discover how training can reshape not just performance, but the way you age. Amy shares how aging quietly reshapes your appearance over time. Skin loses its firmness, wrinkles begin to show, and the mirror reflects a different version of you than your twenties. Dr. Fisher explains how strength training does not just build muscle, it directly impacts skin elasticity. That connection alone changes how we should think about exercise and aging.Dr. Fisher covers a key research paper exploring how resistance training can rejuvenate aging skin by reducing inflammation and improving its internal structure.Dr. Fisher explains what the extracellular matrix actually means. He describes it as the framework that gives your skin its strength, shape, and quality. When that structure improves, your skin does not just look better, it functions better.Dr. Fisher points out that the skin is the body’s largest organ and your first line of defense against infection. The way your skin looks can reflect how well your body is holding up internally.Dr. Fisher covers the real reasons skin breaks down over time. He walks through external factors like sun exposure and pollution, alongside internal changes like hormones and inflammation. Amy shares a simple but powerful idea about health and appearance. She explains that when something in the body is functioning well, the skin often looks better too.Amy and Dr. Fisher agree that personal training should go beyond just fat loss and muscle gain. They cover that the real win is how strength training improves overall health. This shifts the goal from looking fit to actually aging healthier.Dr. Fisher reveals how the researchers split participants into aerobic training and resistance training groups to compare outcomes. Dr. Fisher covers how scientists measured skin elasticity. He introduces the cutometer, a tool designed to test how skin responds to movement and pressure.Dr. Fisher reveals how researchers used ultrasound to examine deeper layers of the skin and assess dermal thickness and structure.Dr. Fisher shares the results that stood out. Both aerobic and resistance training improved skin elasticity and overall structure after sixteen weeks.Dr. Fisher reveals where resistance training truly separates itself. Only the resistance group showed improvements in dermal thickness, a key marker of stronger, healthier skin. This suggests lifting weights may play a unique role in how youthful your skin looks.Dr. Fisher covers the internal changes that support these visible results. Both training styles improved blood markers linked to skin health and reduced inflammation. It shows that what is happening beneath the surface is just as important as what you see.According to Amy, strength training does not just make you stronger; it supports healthier, more resilient skin. It reframes exercise as something that upgrades your entire system, not just your physique.Amy shares the real takeaway for anyone investing in personal training. The right program does not just change how your body performs, it also changes how your skin looks and feels. Mentioned in This Episode: The Exercise Coach - Get 2 Free Sessions! Submit your questions at StrengthChangesEverything.com This podcast and blog are provided to you for entertainment and informational purposes only. By accessing either, you agree that neither constitute medical advice nor should they be substituted for professional medical advice or care. Use of this podcast or blog to treat any medical condition is strictly prohibited. Consult your physician for any medical condition you may be having. In no event will any podcast or blog hosts, guests, or contributors, Exercise Coach USA, LLC, Gymbot LLC, any subsidiaries or affiliates of same, or any of their respective directors, officers, employees, or agents, be responsible for any injury, loss, or damage to you or others due to any podcast or blog content.

    19 min
  5. Resistance Training Reverses Aging: Introduction

    31 MAR

    Resistance Training Reverses Aging: Introduction

    How old would your body be if you didn’t know your chronological age? In this episode, Amy Hudson and Dr. James Fisher kick off a new series on aging by unpacking what it actually means to get older. They explore the gap between chronological age and biological age, what aging really looks like in the body, and why strength, independence, and daily function matter far more than the date on your birth certificate. Tune in to rethink aging and learn how to stay stronger, longer. Amy and Dr. Fisher explain how to measure your real age beyond the number on your birth certificate. Most people default to chronological age, but that doesn’t reflect how your body actually feels or performs.Dr. Fisher covers the difference between chronological age and biological age. You can be in your late 40s but function like someone in their 30s if your habits support it. The gap between the two is where lifestyle becomes everything.Why how old you feel might matter more than how old you are. Your internal sense of age shapes how you move, train, and live. That perception alone can either limit you or keep you active and capable.Dr. Fisher explains why aging changes your willingness to take physical risks. In your younger years, you move without hesitation because injury isn’t top of mind. As you age, awareness increases, and that can quietly reduce how much you challenge your body.How personal training builds a body that resists decline over time. Amy and Dr. Fisher agree that consistent, progressive training delays weakness and preserves independence. If it’s done right, it keeps you closer to your physical prime for decades.How to slow biological aging even when chronological aging is unavoidable. You can’t stop time, but you can influence how your body responds to it. Training, movement, and daily habits determine whether you age with strength or decline.Why weakness and frailty are the real signs of aging. For Amy, aging shows up in loss of strength, independence, and energy. Staying capable and self-sufficient is what truly defines youth.How to stay physically independent for as long as possible. According to Dr. Fisher, the goal isn’t just to live longer, it’s to function well until the very end. This means building a body that still allows you to move, explore, and live freely.Amy reveals the real goal most people have about aging. People don’t just want more years, they want better years. The goal is staying sharp, strong, and capable right up until the final stretch.How personal training can extend your physical and mental peak years. Structured guidance helps you maintain strength, mobility, and confidence as you age. The right approach keeps you performing at a higher level for longer.Why working with a personal trainer changes how you experience aging. A good personal coach pushes you safely while adapting to your current ability. This balance helps you avoid both injury and unnecessary decline. Mentioned in This Episode: The Exercise Coach - Get 2 Free Sessions! Submit your questions at StrengthChangesEverything.com This podcast and blog are provided to you for entertainment and informational purposes only. By accessing either, you agree that neither constitute medical advice nor should they be substituted for professional medical advice or care. Use of this podcast or blog to treat any medical condition is strictly prohibited. Consult your physician for any medical condition you may be having. In no event will any podcast or blog hosts, guests, or contributors, Exercise Coach USA, LLC, Gymbot LLC, any subsidiaries or affiliates of same, or any of their respective directors, officers, employees, or agents, be responsible for any injury, loss, or damage to you or others due to any podcast or blog content.

    18 min
  6. Old Food Pyramid Versus New: Rethinking Decades of Diet Advice

    24 MAR

    Old Food Pyramid Versus New: Rethinking Decades of Diet Advice

    Are you still following the old food pyramid? At the start of 2026, the USDA released a new food pyramid that completely flipped the rules on carbs, fats, and protein. Amy Hudson and Dr. James Fisher break down the differences between the old and new food pyramids. They discuss practical ways to apply these changes to your daily meals, why some foods were removed, and how to rethink nutrition for real results. Tune in to learn how to eat smarter, cut out processed foods, and finally follow guidelines that actually support your health. Amy and Dr. Fisher explain the key issues with the old food pyramid. The 1992 model recommended six to eleven servings of carbohydrates per day, making breads, pasta, and rice the largest portion of daily food intake. That structure reflected the belief at the time that carbohydrates should dominate every meal. Amy breaks down how the old food pyramid organized foods. After grains came fruits and vegetables, followed by dairy and fish, then meat in smaller portions. Fats, oils, and sweets were to be consumed sparingly. Dr. Fisher explains why fat was the villain in traditional nutrition advice. The old pyramid taught that carbohydrates were good while fats and oils should be avoided. Even foods like meat had question marks because of their fat content. Amy shares what stands out most about the new food pyramid. Protein-rich foods and vegetables sit at the top, followed by healthy fats, with fruit slightly lower. Whole grains remain, but highly processed breads, cereals, and pastas are noticeably absent. Dr. Fisher explains why the new model prioritizes real, whole foods. Ultra-processed snacks, sugary products, and artificial sweeteners are nowhere to be seen because they are not necessary for a healthy diet. Learn why whole foods are far more satisfying and nutrient-dense. Highly processed grains often deliver calories without meaningful protein, fiber, or fat. Whole foods provide the nutrients that actually help regulate hunger and support health. Amy shares what it was like growing up in the low-fat era. Many recommendations were influenced by research funded by the sugar industry, which encouraged people to fear dietary fat. The result was a wave of low-fat foods that replaced fat with added sugar. Why healthy fats are no longer the enemy. Amy explains that fat itself is not what drives fat storage in the body. Excess sugar intake plays a much larger role in promoting weight gain. How to build a diet around the principles of the modern food pyramid. Focus on whole foods, high-quality proteins, plenty of vegetables, and healthy fats. Keep processed foods and refined grains out of your diet. Dr. Fisher explains how nutrition guidance has shifted in the same way exercise science has evolved. Old training advice like "three sets of ten" once dominated resistance training. Evidence-based approaches now emphasize more efficient, focused strength training methods. Amy shares how combining modern nutrition with strength training can transform your health. Learn why the updated food pyramid represents a meaningful shift in public health guidance. Amy and Dr. Fisher highlight how it reflects a clearer understanding of human nutrition. Dr. Fisher explains why personal training should evolve the same way nutrition advice has. Just like the old food pyramid was built on outdated assumptions about carbohydrates and fat, much of traditional gym advice still follows outdated rules. Evidence-based coaching focuses on what actually improves strength, health, and long-term results. According to Amy, prioritizing protein, whole foods, and resistance training works together to support body composition and long-term health. When nutrition and personal training follow the same evidence-based principles, the results become far more sustainable. Mentioned in This Episode: The Exercise Coach - Get 2 Free Sessions! Submit your questions at StrengthChangesEverything.com This podcast and blog are provided to you for entertainment and informational purposes only. By accessing either, you agree that neither constitute medical advice nor should they be substituted for professional medical advice or care. Use of this podcast or blog to treat any medical condition is strictly prohibited. Consult your physician for any medical condition you may be having. In no event will any podcast or blog hosts, guests, or contributors, Exercise Coach USA, LLC, Gymbot LLC, any subsidiaries or affiliates of same, or any of their respective directors, officers, employees, or agents, be responsible for any injury, loss, or damage to you or others due to any podcast or blog content.

    22 min
  7. The Truth About Functional Strength Training for Sports and Life

    17 MAR

    The Truth About Functional Strength Training for Sports and Life

    Does sport-specific training actually improve your performance? Amy Hudson and Dr. James Fisher break down what really matters when it comes to strength training for athleticism. They discuss the biggest misconceptions about functional training, why mimicking sport movements in the gym may be holding you back, and how building raw strength can actually improve performance across any sport. Tune in to discover science-backed strategies to get stronger, more resilient, and perform better, without unnecessary gimmicks or fancy drills. Amy introduces the big question: Is generalized strength training enough to improve real-world performance? She explores whether we truly need hyper-specific "functional" exercises for specific sports outcomes. Dr. Fisher reveals the biggest benefits of strength training for athletes. It improves sports performance and helps reduce injury risk. Getting stronger isn't just about bigger muscles; it's about durability and longevity in your sport. According to Dr. Fisher, the term "functional training" is redundant because all training is functional if done correctly. Learn the formal definition of functional training agreed upon by leading academics. It's a broad physical intervention designed to enhance performance based on individual goals in sport, daily life, rehab, or fitness. Dr. Fisher clarifies that resistance training itself improves function. That's why labeling something as "functional training" doesn't make it superior. If it makes you stronger and better at what you do, it's already functional. Dr. Fisher explains why mimicking sport-specific skills in the gym isn't necessary. Research on golfers, baseball players, and basketball players shows that copying the movement pattern doesn't improve performance. The weight room builds capacity, and the field or court builds skill. Amy and Dr. Fisher agree that personal training works because it builds a strong foundation of strength. A strong, resilient body performs better no matter the sport. Dr. Fisher breaks down why sport-specific gimmicks often miss the mark. Studies on baseball players swinging weighted bats found that heavier bats actually slowed bat speed. Even lighter or traditional variations didn't outperform simply training for strength and then practicing the skill itself. Dr. Fisher outlines the smartest path to better performance. First, build strength, flexibility, and resilience through proper strength training. Then practice your sport separately to sharpen technique; that combination is what truly improves function. Dr. Fisher explains why strength work and skill work should remain separate. Blending them too much can dilute both. Train strength to increase capacity, then train skill to refine precision. Dr. Fisher explains why personal trainers should never turn gym sessions into sport imitation drills. Your personal training sessions should build strength, not rehearse your game. Amy shares an inspiring story about a client who came to them after surviving cancer. He had lost significant muscle and felt weak, but within months of strength training, he tripled his strength. Without practicing golf, he returned to the course and started outdriving his pro-golfer brother simply because he had gotten stronger. Mentioned in This Episode: The Exercise Coach - Get 2 Free Sessions! Submit your questions at StrengthChangesEverything.com This podcast and blog are provided to you for entertainment and informational purposes only. By accessing either, you agree that neither constitute medical advice nor should they be substituted for professional medical advice or care. Use of this podcast or blog to treat any medical condition is strictly prohibited. Consult your physician for any medical condition you may be having. In no event will any podcast or blog hosts, guests, or contributors, Exercise Coach USA, LLC, Gymbot LLC, any subsidiaries or affiliates of same, or any of their respective directors, officers, employees, or agents, be responsible for any injury, loss, or damage to you or others due to any podcast or blog content.

    20 min
  8. Research Review: Wearable Device Trackers and Exercise Intensity Equivalence

    10 MAR

    Research Review: Wearable Device Trackers and Exercise Intensity Equivalence

    How important is exercise intensity in reducing your risk of chronic disease? Amy Hudson and Dr. James Fisher break down the real science behind intensity, longevity, and disease risk using data from over 73,000 adults tracked for eight years. They discuss why higher intensity training may deliver outsized returns for heart health, metabolic function, and overall mortality risk. Tune in for a deeper, research-driven look at intensity and longevity. Dr. Fisher breaks down a research article about vigorous versus moderate or light cardiovascular activity. The conversation sets the stage for a deeper look at whether intensity changes long-term health outcomes. Dr. Fisher covers what the researchers did. They analyzed fitness tracker data from tens of thousands of individuals and followed them for eight years. Then they examined mortality, cardiovascular disease risk, and other comorbidities to see how exercise intensity related to long-term outcomes. Dr. Fisher explains how we equate exercise intensity using METs, where one MET equals the energy you burn sitting quietly. According to the research findings, one minute of vigorous activity may equal anywhere from 53 to 156 minutes of light activity, depending on the outcome measured. Dr. Fisher explains how this challenges older thinking. Historically, one minute of vigorous activity was considered equal to about two minutes of moderate activity. This research suggests the gap may be much wider, strengthening the case for adding higher-intensity work or strength training that builds muscle and raises resting metabolic rate. Amy and Dr. Fisher cover the question marks in the research paper. Participants wore trackers for three to seven days per week over eight years. We have no insight into changes in exercise habits, illness, nutrition, sleep, substance use, or socioeconomic factors during that time. Dr. Fisher explains a key limitation of fitness trackers. If you hike uphill with a heavy backpack, the device mainly detects wrist movement, not load or incline. That means muscular effort and true intensity can be underestimated, especially during resistance-based or loaded activities. Amy shares why working with a personal trainer can change how you think about intensity. She reveals that not all movement is equal, and a skilled coach can help you focus on vigorous training instead of just exercising longer. Amy asks the bigger question: if someone simply wants to lower overall disease risk, where should they focus? Dr. Fisher explains why movement is foundational. The body is built to contract muscles and move, and without that stimulus, very little functions optimally. He pairs that with practical advice: prioritize whole foods, limit processed options, and focus on fruits, vegetables, and protein in their natural form. Learn why sleep can't be ignored. You can train hard and eat well, but chronic poor sleep undermines everything. Research consistently links low-quality or insufficient sleep to obesity, diabetes, and even certain cancers. Dr. Fisher's closing remarks: Exercise, nutrition, and sleep are the core pillars. If you consistently check those three boxes, you dramatically improve your odds of a longer, healthier life. Why personal training supports long-term health, not just fitness. Strength, cardiovascular health, and metabolic improvements all depend on consistency and proper load. A good strength coach ensures your body moves efficiently, reduces injury risk, and makes every workout count toward longevity. Mentioned in This Episode: The Exercise Coach - Get 2 Free Sessions! Submit your questions at StrengthChangesEverything.com This podcast and blog are provided to you for entertainment and informational purposes only. By accessing either, you agree that neither constitute medical advice nor should they be substituted for professional medical advice or care. Use of this podcast or blog to treat any medical condition is strictly prohibited. Consult your physician for any medical condition you may be having. In no event will any podcast or blog hosts, guests, or contributors, Exercise Coach USA, LLC, Gymbot LLC, any subsidiaries or affiliates of same, or any of their respective directors, officers, employees, or agents, be responsible for any injury, loss, or damage to you or others due to any podcast or blog content.

    26 min

About

The Exercise Coach presents: The Strength Changes Everything Podcast. Learn from Exercise Coach Co-Founder Brian Cygan, Franchisee Amy Hudson, and Dr. James Fisher, Chief Science Officer of The Exercise Coach about how to enjoy a strong, healthy lifestyle. The Exercise Coach's unique two 20-minute workouts a week is how thousands across the United States get and stay in great shape. This podcast gives you the facts, from the experts, in easy-to-understand lessons so you can take control of your life.

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