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High-altitude training in the flatlands


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By CBS News

It looks like any other high-intensity fitness class, but this one elevates exercise to a whole new level.

Once you step inside the AirFit studio at the Quad in the San Francisco Bay Area, you’re suddenly transported to somewhere like Denver, Half Dome or Lake Tahoe — the altitude many pro-athletes successfully train at. A complex air filtration system sucks some of the oxygen out of the room, so you breathe less of it.

While your heart rate goes up, the oxygen in the room goes down. As the air gets thinner, the body adapts to lower levels of oxygen by increasing red blood cells and hemoglobin, which changes muscle metabolism.

“The cool thing about this room is that we’re not obviously at 10,000 feet up in the mountains where we’d have to hike down or drive down like 5 hours to get to sea level,” Carlo Maravilla, director of AirFit, told CBS San Francisco.

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Comments (3)
  1. careaboutthecommunity says - Posted: September 22, 2014

    You would think along with our recreation focus, we would also be capitalizing on our naturally enhanced training environment.

  2. cosa pescado says - Posted: September 22, 2014

    Attempts have been made. Careful with assumptions.

  3. Old Long Skiis says - Posted: September 22, 2014

    Back when I did a little ski racing,(which I was not very good at!), we did what was called dry land training up at the STHS fields. This was during the late summer, early fall. Kickin’ a soccer ball around and running gates in our gym clothes around bamboo poles stuck in the grass, then running the cross country track behind the football field. For the most part it was good fun as we were all looking forward to winter and strappin’ on the skiis.
    Good times indeed, pray for snow! Old Long Skiis