Sit-up

Seabees conduct their sit-up portion of the Navy Physical Readiness Test

The sit-up (or curl-up) is an abdominal endurance training exercise commonly performed to strengthen and tone the abdominal muscles. It is similar to a crunch (crunches target the rectus abdominus and also work the external and internal obliques), but sit-ups have a fuller range of motion and condition additional muscles. Sit-ups target the hip flexors, rectus abdominus and also work the iliopsoas, tensor fasciae latae, rectus femoris, sartorius, and, to a very small degree, the obliques.

Using a weight to intensify sit-up

Form

It begins with lying with the back on the floor, typically with the arms across the chest or hands behind the head and the knees bent in an attempt to reduce stress on the back muscles and spine, and then elevating both the upper and lower vertebrae from the floor until everything superior to the buttocks is not touching the ground. Some argue that situps can be dangerous due to high compressive lumbar load[1] and may be replaced with the crunch in exercise programs.[2]

Strength exercises such as sit-ups and push-ups do not cause the spot reduction of fat. Gaining a "six pack" requires both abdominal muscle hypertrophy training and fat loss over the abdomen—which can only be done by losing fat from the body as a whole.[3]

Variations

The movement can be made easier by placing the arms further down away from the head. Typical variations to achieve this include crossing the arms to place the palms on the front of the shoulders[4] and extending the arms down to the sides with palms on the floor.[5] The 'arms on shoulders' variation is also used to make the incline sit-up[6] easier.

More intense movement is achieved by doing weighted sit-ups,[7] incline sit-ups with arms behind neck[8] and even harder by doing the weighted incline sit-up.[9]

Health risks

Full sit-ups may cause back pain and arching of the lower back, increasing the risk of back injury.[10][11] Many experts advise against doing sit-ups.[12]

See also

Wikimedia Commons has media related to Sit-ups.

References

  1. McGill, Stuart M. (June 1999). "Stability: from biomechanical concept to chiropractic practice". Journal of the Canadian Chiropractic Association. 43 (2): 75–88. PMC 2485366Freely accessible.
  2. McGill, Stuart. Low Back Disorders: Evidence-based Prevention and Rehabilitation. Human Kinetics Publishers. ISBN 978-0-7360-6692-1.
  3. Katch, Frank I.; Clarkson, P. M.; Kroll, W.; McBride, T.; Wilcox, A. (September 1984). "Effects of sit up exercise training on adipose cell size and adiposity". Research Quarterly for Exercise and Sport. 55 (3): 242–47.
  4. "Sit-up (arms crossed)". Retrieved 20 November 2014.
  5. "Sit-up (arms down)". Retrieved 20 November 2014.
  6. "Incline Sit-up (arms crossed)". Retrieved 20 November 2014.
  7. "Weighted Sit-up". Retrieved 20 November 2014.
  8. "Incline Sit-up". Retrieved 20 November 2014.
  9. "Weighted Incline Sit-up (arms crossed)". Retrieved 20 November 2014.
  10. Abdominal Training
  11. Why sit-ups can be BAD for your body (and that wobbly gym ball won't help either)
  12. Why You Can Stop Doing Sit-Ups, The Wall Street Journal
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