Peter Coe regimen In the 1970s a type of high-intensity interval training with short recovery periods was used by the athletics coach
Peter Coe when setting sessions for his son
Sebastian Coe. Inspired by the principles propounded by the German coach and university professor
Woldemar Gerschler and the Swedish physiologist
Per-Olof Åstrand, Coe set sessions involving repeated fast 200 meter runs with only 30 seconds recovery between each fast run.
Tabata regimen A version of HIIT is based on a 1996 study In the original study, athletes using this method trained 4 times per week, plus another day of steady-state training, for 6 weeks and obtained gains similar to a group of athletes who did
steady state training (70% VO2max) 5 times per week. The steady state group had a higher VO2max at the end (from 52 to 57 mL/(kg•min)). The Tabata group had achieved comparable aerobic improvements but only exercised 4 minutes per day on their 4 HIIT days compared to 60 minutes for the aerobic group. The Tabata group also started lower and gained more overall (from 48 to 55 mL/(kg•min)). Also, only the Tabata group had gained
anaerobic capacity benefits (As Tabata's protocol is "supermaximal", uses 3 minutes for warming up, then 60 seconds of intense exercise (at 95% of VO2max) followed by 75 seconds of rest, repeated for 8–12 cycles (sometimes referred to as "The Little Method"). Subjects using this method training 3 times per week on a stationary bicycle obtained gains similar to what would be expected from subjects who did steady-state (50–70% VO2max) training five times per week. Gibala's group published a less intense version of their regimen in a 2011 paper in
Medicine & Science in Sports & Exercise. This was intended as a gentler option for sedentary people who had done no exercise for over a year. It included 3 minutes of warm-up, 10 repetitions of 60-second bursts at 60% peak power (80–95% of
heart rate reserve) each followed by 60 seconds of recovery, and then a 5-minute cool-down.
Zuniga regimen In 2011 Jorge Zuniga, assistant professor of exercise science at
Creighton University, set out to determine how to fit the highest volume of work and oxygen consumption into the smallest amount of time. He found that intervals of 30 seconds at 90% of power output at VO2 max followed by 30 seconds of rest allowed for the highest VO2 consumption and the longest workout duration at specified intensity. Alternative protocols considered included 100% of maximum power output on the same interval schedule, similar to the Coe regimen, and 90% of maximum power output for three minutes, similar to traditional interval training. Zuniga's protocol has been implemented with great success by students of his who were participating in Creighton's Army
ROTC program. Cadets completing the protocol twice a week saw greater improvements in
APFT scores than in years past. Zuniga's protocol typically consists of 10 repetitions.
Vollaard regimen Dr Niels Vollaard at the
University of Stirling proposed that when high-intensity intervals are done at "all-out" intensities, associated health benefits plateau after performing 2 or 3 sprint repetitions. This led to the development of a 10-minute exercise routine consisting of easy pedalling interspersed with two 20-second "all-out" cycling sprints. In a 2017 meta-analysis, Vollaard indeed showed that common protocols with as many as 6 to 10 repetitions of 30-second "all-out" sprints do not improve aerobic fitness more than the "2×20-s" protocol. He shifted the terminology for his to SIT. It is claimed that this short protocol may remove many of the drawbacks that make other high-intensity interval training protocols unsuitable for the general population. In a BBC
Horizon program in February 2012, Jamie Timmons, professor of systems biology at the
University of Loughborough, led
Michael Mosley through this exercise bike regimen, each time using three sprints instead of two. This protocol was performed three times a week for a total of 30 minutes of exercise per week (3 minutes of intense exercise), plus warm-up and recovery time. ==Regimen comparison==