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Maintaining Energy Balance and a Healthy Weight

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Title: Maintaining Energy Balance and a Healthy Weight


1
Maintaining Energy Balance and a Healthy Weight
2
Obesity Gene
  • http//www.nlm.nih.gov/medlineplus/videos/news/fig
    hting_fat_112211.html
  • Medline Plus

3
Fit vs Fat
  • There is a discussion about fitness and fatness.
  • The fit vs fat argument states that fitness is
    more important than fatness.

4
Fit vs Fat
  • The point is that fatness is a symptom of bad
    nutrition and physical activity.
  • It has been stated that by focusing on the
    obesity epidemic, we are causing people to get
    fatter.

5
Fit vs Fat
  • This occurs because people try to diet away the
    fat and end up getting fatter.
  • Most people who try to lose weight (fat) are
    unsuccessful (98 failure rate).

6
Fit vs Fat
  • The recommendation is that by focusing on the
    behaviors of eating nutritiously and increasing
    physical activity, the person will be healthier
    even if he/she doesnt lose any weight.

7
Fit vs Fat
  • The contention is that a fat person who eats well
    and is physically activity is healthier from a
    disease risk standpoint than a leaner person who
    does not practice these behaviors.

8
Fit vs Fat
  • Additionally, it has been stated that most risk
    factors of disease associated with obesity can be
    reduced by eating better and becoming more active.

9
Fit vs Fat
  • Thoughts?

10
Maintaining Energy Balance and a Healthy Weight
  • Regular physical activity along with a nutritious
    diet is key to maintaining a healthy weight.
  • Balance calories consumed and calories expended.
  • U.S. Department of Health and Human Services

11
Maintaining Energy Balance and a Healthy Weight
  • In most individuals, weight gain results from a
    combination of excess calorie consumption and
    inadequate physical activity.
  • U.S. Department of Health and Human Services

12
Maintaining Energy Balance and a Healthy Weight
  • An individuals physical activities may account
    for as much as 15 to 40 percent of the calories
    burned each day.
  • While vigorous exercise uses calories at a higher
    rate, any physical activity will burn calories.
  • U.S. Department of Health and Human Services

13
Maintaining Energy Balance and a Healthy Weight
  • A 140-pound person can burn 175 calories in 30
    minutes of moderate bicycling, and 322 calories
    in 30 minutes of moderate jogging.
  • The same person can also burn 105 calories by
    vacuuming or raking leaves for the same amount of
    time.
  • U.S. Department of Health and Human Services

14
Body Composition
  • Overweight and obese individuals have
    incorporated patterns of overeating and physical
    inactivity into to their lifestyles, while others
    have developed food and/or exercise addictions.

15
Body Composition
  • Many are lured by fad diets and exercise
    gimmicks, and some resort to extreme behaviors
    such as avoiding food, bingeing and purging, and
    exercising compulsively.

16
Body Composition
  • Since reduction of body fatness is a need or goal
    of many exercise program participants, exercise
    programs should be designed to aid in
    accomplishing this objective, and doing so sanely
    and rationally.

17
Factors Influencing Body Composition
  • Energy intake
  • Energy output
  • Genetics

18
Caloric Balance
  • Body composition is determined by a complex set
    of genetic and behavioral factors.

19
Caloric Balance
  • Though the contributing variables are many, the
    fundamental determinant of body weight and body
    composition is caloric balance.

20
Caloric Balance
  • Caloric balance refers to the difference between
    caloric intake and caloric expenditure.

21
Caloric Balance
  • The First Law of Thermodynamics states that
    energy is neither created nor destroyed
  • therefore, body weight is lost when caloric
    expenditure exceeds caloric intake (negative
    balance)
  • and weight is gained when the opposite situation
    exists.

22
Fat Management
  • Energy in energy out no change in fatness
  • Energy in gt energy out get fatter
  • Energy in lt energy out lose fat

23
Caloric Balance
  • One pound of fat is equivalent to approximately
    3500 kcal of energy.

24
Caloric Balance
  • Shifts in caloric balance will be accompanied by
    changes in body weight.
  • The nature of the weight change varies markedly
    with the specific behaviors that lead to the
    caloric imbalance.

25
Caloric Balance
  • Fasting and extreme caloric restriction
    (starvation and semi-starvation diets) cause
    substantial losses of water and fat-free tissue.

26
Caloric Balance
  • An exercise-induced negative caloric balance
    results in weight loss consisting primarily of
    fat.

27
Caloric Balance
  • High resistance exercise programs may lead to a
    gain in fat-free weight.
  • Cardiorespiratory endurance training usually
    results in a maintenance of fat-free weight.

28
Caloric Balance
  • Both types of programs can contribute to a loss
    of body fat, although aerobic activity is more
    efficient because it involves a sustained, high
    rate of energy expenditure.

29
Body Composition
  • It is recommended that both an increase in
    caloric expenditure through exercise and a
    decrease in caloric intake be used to accomplish
    this goal.

30
Body Composition
  • Exercise also helps maintain resting metabolic
    rate and thus the rate of weight loss.

31
Body Composition Programs
  • Adoption of a physically active lifestyle.
  • Adoption of dietary guidelines.

32
Dietary Guidelines
  • Eat a variety of foods.
  • Balance the food you eat with physical activity.
  • Choose a diet with plenty of grain products,
    vegetables, and fruits.

33
Dietary Guidelines
  • Choose a diet low in fat, saturated fat, and
    cholesterol.
  • Choose a diet moderate in sugars.
  • Choose a diet moderate in salt and sodium.

34
Dietary Guidelines
  • If you drink alcoholic beverages, do so in
    moderation.

35
Body Composition Programs
  • Behavior modification techniques can help people
    make these lifestyle changes.

36
Behavior Modification
  • Exercise specialists, nutritionists, and
    psychologists need to work together to help their
    clients, especially obesity prone individuals,
    modify their physical activity and eating
    attitudes and behaviors.

37
Physical Activity
  • The initial exercise program should be based on
    low intensity and progressively longer duration
    physical activity.

38
Physical Activity
  • Work toward increasing the intensity to bring the
    person into a target heart rate range suitable
    for cardiorespiratory conditioning.

39
Physical Activity
  • The higher intensity will allow for a shorter
    duration per session, or fewer sessions per week
    for the same weekly energy expenditure.

40
Physical Activity
  • The transition to higher intensity exercise will
    increase the number of opportunities to
    incorporate activities that naturally require a
    high rate of energy expenditure.

41
Physical Activity
  • For many (especially older) obese subjects, a
    walking or other low intensity exercise program
    may be all they desire, and movement toward a
    more intense program may not be warranted.

42
Recommendations
  • The first step is to gain an understanding of why
    the person is overfat/obese.
  • Consider genetics, social factors, psychological
    factors, nutrition patterns, hormones, and
    activity levels.

43
Recommendations
  • Attempt to determine if you are dealing with
    hypertrophic obesity or hyperplasic obesity.

44
Recommendations
  • Once you understand the potential causes of the
    problem, then focus on behaviors which can be
    changed
  • Better nutritional patterns
  • Increased physical activity
  • Incidental PA
  • Aerobic exercise
  • Resistance training

45
Recommendations
  • The optimal approach to fat loss combines a mild
    caloric restriction with regular endurance
    exercise and avoids nutritional deficiencies.
  • To maintain LBM, resistive training should also
    be included.

46
Recommendations
  • A desirable fat loss program is one that meets
    the following criteria

47
Recommendations
  • 1. Provides intake not lower than 1220 kcal/day
    for normal adults and ensures a proper blend of
    foods to meet nutritional requirements.
  • (Note this requirement may not be appropriate
    for children, older individuals, and athletes).

48
Recommendations
  • 2. Includes foods acceptable to the dieter in
    terms of socio-cultural background, usual habits,
    taste, costs, and ease in acquisition and
    preparation.

49
Recommendations
  • 3. Provides a negative caloric balance (not to
    exceed 500 to 1000 kcal/day), resulting in
    gradual weight loss without metabolic
    derangement, such as ketosis.

50
Recommendations
  • 4. Results in a maximal weight loss of 1 kg/week.

51
Recommendations
  • 5. Includes the use of behavior modification
    techniques to identify and eliminate diet habits
    that contribute to malnutrition or
    overconsumption.

52
Recommendations
  • 6. Includes an exercise program that promotes a
    daily caloric expenditure of 300 or more kcal.
  • For many participants, this may be best
    accomplished with low intensity, long duration
    exercise, such as walking.

53
Recommendations
  • 7. Provides that new eating and physical activity
    habits can be continued for life in order to
    maintain the achieved lower body weight.
  • Portion control, low fat diet, minimize simple
    CHO and increase PA

54
Caution
  • The balance between intensity and duration of
    exercise should be manipulated to promote a high
    total caloric expenditure (300 to 500 kcal per
    session and 1000 to 2000 kcal per week for
    adults).

55
Caution
  • Obese individuals are at an increased relative
    risk for orthopedic injury, and this may require
    that the intensity recommended for improvement of
    cardiorespiratory endurance.

56
Caution
  • Non-weight bearing activities (and/or rotation of
    exercise modalities) may be necessary and
    frequent modifications in frequency and duration
    may also be required.

57
Setting Goals
  • A healthy body weight is based on the clients
    present FFM and BF goal.

58
Computing Target Wt assuming all wt. Loss is
fat Fill in boxes with double lines and compute
others
1
minus
Goal Fat
Current Fat
Goal LBM
?by
X
Current Body Wt
Current Fat Wt
Current LBM
Target Body Wt
minus
is expressed as a decimal. Divide by 100
before entering the data.
59
Reminder
  • Data by Blair (1999) demonstrates that fitness
    level counteracts many of the negative impacts of
    obesity.

60
Reminder
  • Those obese individuals who are active may have
    greater protection against disease than those of
    normal fatness who are inactive.
  • 1/3 of the obese will not have other risk factors
    for early death.

61
Reminder
  • Fat can be fit (at least from a cardiovascular
    standpoint)
  • However, that does not mean that it is OK
    (medically) to be fat.

62
ACSM recommends
  • eat 250 less per day
  • expend 250 more per day
  • (walk 2.5 miles)
  • 500 kcal per day reduction

63
ACSM recommends
  • do this 7 days a week
  • 3500 kcal in a week
  • 52 lbs in a year
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