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The Honolulu Advertiser
Posted on: Thursday, March 16, 2006

We've got many ways to better our butts

By Janet Cromley
Los Angeles Times

A recent study on the derriere found that all types of exercises are effective to varying degrees.

RICARDO DEARATANHA | Los Angeles Times

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GLUTE EXERCISES FROM THE EXPERTS

Here are more tips from fitness experts on the best ways to tone your tush.

  • Dana Prieto, group exercise manager at the Sports Club/LA in Beverly Hills, favors traditional squats, walking lunges, step-ups and quadruped hip extensions. She recommends doing them a couple of days a week, leaving time in between to recover.

    A typical regimen for women would be three sets of 15 to 20 repetitions of each exercise, she says.

    For men, she recommends three sets of 10 to 15 repetitions, holding dumbbells.

    Prieto stresses the importance of proper alignment and posture. "Keep your chest up, and make sure your knees don't go over your toes for lunges and squats," she says.

  • David Brainin, a trainer at Crunch Fitness in Los Angeles, recommends a series of multidirectional lunges — lunging ahead and to the left and right. This exercise targets both the gluteus maximus and the gluteus medius.

    But Brainin stresses that all the lunges and squats in the world won't help your derriere if you don't stretch the hip flexor muscles (in the groin area), which offer resistance to the glutes.

    "Hip flexors are tight in most people," he says. "Stretching the hip flexors intensifies glute exercise."

    Want to know if your hip flexors are too tight? Your feet will tend to turn out, duck-like, when performing the glute exercises.

  • John Porcari, of the University of Wisconsin-La Crosse, has a favorite glute workout that he didn't include in his recent study.

    He recommends performing squats with a Swiss ball placed between one's back and the wall, somewhat like a bear rubbing up against a tree. To heighten the effect, he suggests holding dumbbells while doing the exercise.

    All the experts emphasize that, when exercising, you should let pain be your guide. If any of the moves hurt your knees or back, back off.

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    It probably won't snag them a Nobel Prize, but two scientists have fresh data on a weighty question that many Americans care more about than genes, stem cells or nanotechnology: What can I do about my butt?

    Fitness gurus have debated for decades the relative merits of squats, lunges, step-ups, single-leg squats and leg presses in creating the perfectly rendered rear. The one thing they agree on is that better muscle tone will improve your rump, whether it's size or shape you're focused on.

    Now two exercise researchers at the University of Wisconsin-La Crosse, have brought rigorous analysis to the problem of posteriors, aided by 12 volunteers who agreed to have electrodes fastened to their derrieres.

    John Porcari and Blake Ristvedt theorized that they could determine the effectiveness of different exercises by measuring the electrical activity occurring in the buttocks area during the performance of eight common glute drills. Six men and six women participated in the trial.

    Electrodes were placed on three areas of the bare backside, under the subject's loose shorts. Wires traveled under the shorts to a nearby computer for an electromyographic, or EMG, analysis.

    After three days of testing over a three-week period, the scientists had their results. For the gluteus maximus, the large muscle comprising most of the cheek area (and the biggest contributor to overall buttock perkiness and beauty), the researchers found that squats generated more electrical activity than vertical and horizontal leg presses, but not significantly more than any of the other exercises.

    For the gluteus medius, a smaller muscle just below the waist, on the side, quadruped hip extensions (performed on hands and knees while pressing a leg to the ceiling) were significantly more effective than squats. So were step-ups and lunges.

    But be warned: A toned gluteus medius, though it provides nice side shaping, doesn't provide the rear projection favored by fashion-conscious Brazilians and other posterior purists.

    The researchers also tested the hamstrings, not because hamstrings contribute to the appearance of the buttocks, but to ensure that the exercises were being performed consistently among subjects.

    The take-away message: Whether you're trying to puff up a flat rear or perk up a lackluster one, squats, step-ups, lunges and quadruped hip extensions will all get you a better booty. The good news is that if you get tired of squats, you can switch to other glute exercises without having to worry about sagging returns.

    "People think that squats are the best thing," says Porcari, who has written more than 100 scientific fitness articles, including one comparing the efficacy of various sports bras. "This shows that all the exercises do different things, and all are effective to varying degrees."