1 / 15

Strategies for Success in Weight Management By: James J. Messina, Ph.D.

Metabolism Going for the 3 Increases: Increase in Health, Increase in Happiness & Increase in Energy. Strategies for Success in Weight Management By: James J. Messina, Ph.D. What is your metabolism. Metabolism is the process of energy expenditure

swann
Télécharger la présentation

Strategies for Success in Weight Management By: James J. Messina, Ph.D.

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. MetabolismGoing for the 3 Increases: Increase in Health, Increase in Happiness & Increase in Energy Strategies for Success in Weight Management By: James J. Messina, Ph.D.

  2. What is your metabolism • Metabolism is the process of energy expenditure • Calories are units of energy that our body burns in many ways • Our body uses energy to perform each & every function: breathing, rejuvenating of cells, digesting of food, brain functioning • Every unit of energy “consumed” “ingested” “digested from food we eat” and NOT SPENT is stored as BODY FAT!

  3. What is your metabolism • 3 components of metabolism • Basal metabolic rate • Activity • Digestion

  4. Basal Metabolic Rate • BMR = number of calories would need daily simply to stay alive if were totally inactive, in bed, awake for 16 hours & slept for 8 hours • Harris-Benedict Equation: • Women: 661+(4.38 x weight in pounds)+(4.38 x height in inches)-(4.7 x age)=BMR • Men: 67+(6.24 x weight in pounds)+(12.7 x height in inches)- (6.9 x age)=BMR

  5. Activity Level and Metabolism • Activity can account for 20-30% of metabolism • Sedentary = Multiplier 1.15 x BMR • Light activity (Normal Every day activities) = Multiplier 1.3 x BMR • Moderately Active(exercise 3-4 x’s week) = Multiplier 1.4 x BMR • Very Active (exercise more than 4 x’s week) = Multiplier 1.5 x BMR • Extremely Active (exercise 6-7 x’s week) = Multiplier 1.6 x BMR

  6. Activity Level and Metabolism • If you change Light activity (Normal Every day activities) to Moderately Active(exercise 3-4 x’s week) daily caloric burning goes up 7.7% • If you change Light activity (Normal Every day activities) to Very Active (exercise more than 4 x’s week) daily caloric burning goes up 23% • If you change Light activity (Normal Every day activities) to Extremely Active (exercise 6-7 x’s week) daily caloric burning goes up 38.5%

  7. Body Weight and Metabolism • Higher body weight the higher the Basal Metabolic Rate • Therefore overweight persons require more calories daily to maintain overweight status than a thinner person • Overeating therefore increases metabolism • If overweight you must consistently overeat to maintain your metabolism and keep your weight on & if you stop overeating you will lose weight

  8. Digestion’s Part in Metabolism • Digestion is 7-13% of your metabolism • Overeating speeds up metabolism • Our bodies have to work harder to digest the food we take in when we overeat • Our bodies metabolism have to work harder to digest that which will make us heavier • Overweight people overeat so much that they override the body’s natural defense mechanism of the increased digestion rate

  9. Basal Metabolic Rate Example • Use the Harris-Benedict Calculator at www. businessplanforthebody.com At 56 and 5’10 and 210 lbs my BMR for • Resting = 1879 • Sedentary (multiplier 1.15)=2162 • Lightly Active (x 1.3) (normal daily activities)= 2444 • Moderately Active (x 1.4)(exercise 2-3 x’s a week) = 2632 • Very Active (x 1.5) (exercise 3-4 x’s a week) = 3008 • Extremely Active (x 1.6) (6-7 x’s a week) = 3384

  10. What are you eating • Carbohydrates –fruits and vegetables are good carbohydrates, don’t eliminate them and burn as quick as fats do • Proteins – most complex and most difficult to digest or burn, stays in stomach longer than other two, feel fuller longer when consumed • Fats – carbohydrates and fats are burned about the same rate, protein definitely burns the slowest

  11. Carbohydrates • All starches and sugars • Main source of energy for body • Each gram = 4 calories • Most foods contain carbohydrates • Sugar: sucrose=white & brown sugars; lactose in milk & fructose in fruits & vegs • Starches: complex carbohydrates in beans, breads, cereals, pasta, potatoes

  12. Protein • The body’s building material for muscle, skin, bone, & hair • Made up of chains of amino acids • Each gram = 4 calories • Used to make antibodies, disease fighting chemicals and hormones like insulin which are messengers in body • Proteins include: meat, fish, poultry, dairy products, eggs, legumes, & nuts

  13. Fat – 3 Categories of Fat • Saturates: “bad” fat • Monosaturated fat • Polyunsaturated fat Each gram of fat provides 9 calories Fat packs lots of energy If not expended will become body fat

  14. When are you eating? • Time between meals is significant • Space your food throughout the day to keep your metabolic rate up • Do not put your body in a starvation mode by only eating once or twice in 24 hour period

  15. Variables affecting Metabolism • Genes: only 25% of body weight is determined by genes • Predisposition and predetermined are not the same, predisposition gives you freedom of choice • Thyroid function problems: slow down results in weight gain, 11 million Americans have it. • Lean muscle tissue require more calories to stay strong it is created through strength & resistance training

More Related