1 / 12

Maintaining a healthy body weight

Maintaining a healthy body weight. Chapter 6. Physical Health Risks. Excessive weight disabilities-diseases linked or resulting directly from long term overweight or obesity Breathing difficulties Sleep apnea Sleep Apnea Bone and joint problems

bruno
Télécharger la présentation

Maintaining a healthy body weight

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. Maintaining a healthy body weight Chapter 6

  2. Physical Health Risks • Excessive weight disabilities-diseases linked or resulting directly from long term overweight or obesity • Breathing difficulties • Sleep apnea • Sleep Apnea • Bone and joint problems • Being over fat increases the risk of the following diseases: • High blood pressure • High cholesterol • Heart disease • Some cancers

  3. Impaired glucose tolerance and diabetes • Impaired Glucose Tolerance (IGT)-This is a disorder in which blood glucose levels become elevated. • IGT is a major risk factor for type 2 diabetes • IGT and type 2 diabetes are increasing in teens and youth • Insulin- a hormone produced by the pancreas that converts sugar to energy.

  4. underweight • Underweight- having a BMI that is below the fifth percentile for ones age • Increase risk of colds and pathogens • Undernourished, causes: • Fatigue • Irritability • Anemia- disease associated with lack of iron • Underweight teens should eat 3-4 nutrient dense, high calorie foods meals per day

  5. Teen Body mass index • <5th percentile- may be underweight • Above 5th to 84th percentile range of appropriate weight • 85th to 94th percentile may be at risk of overweight • >95th percentile may be overweight

  6. Eating Disorders • Eating disorders- psychological illnesses that cause people to under eat, overeat, or practice other dangerous nutrition-related behaviors. • Typically driven by metal or emotional factors • Poor body image • Social or family pressures • Perfectionism • Depression • Substance abuse

  7. Anorexia Nervosa • Anorexia nervosa- an eating disorder in which a person abnormally restricts calorie intake. • Can result in: • serious malnutrition • Stop menstruating • Sterility • Low bone density • Heart problems • death • Common indicators: sudden massive weight loss, lying about eating, denying hunger, preoccupation with food or calories, exercise addiction, believing he/she is overweight • Male Anorexia

  8. Bulimia Nervosa • Bulimia Nervosa- an eating disorder in which people overeat and the force themselves to purge. • Exercise Bulimia- purging calories though exercise • Miss important events to exercise • Do not allow for recovery • Can cause: • Dehydration • Osteoporosis • Kidney damage • Irregular heart beat • Tissue damage from purging • Nutrition deficiencies

  9. Nutrition Myths and Fad Diets • Myth: consuming large amounts of protein and lifting weights are the best ways to increase the size of your muscles • Fact: EXTRA protein in your diet is not needed to increase muscle size and strength • Myth: Vegetarianism is much healthier and better for exercise performance than a diet that includes animal protein • Fact: It can be a healthy lifestyle, but you have to know how to combine foods for complete proteins • Myth: it is easy to lose one pound of fat by burning 3,500 calories through exercise alone • Fact: best to use a combination of exercise and diet • Through exercise alone to burn 1000 calories you must run 8-10 miles in one hour

  10. Fad Diets • Fad diets- center on eating one type of food, claims eating whatever you want, requires purchase of special pills or equipment • High-Protein Diets- eliminating carbohydrates from your diet. • Increase risk of dehydration (stress on kidneys) • Risk of calcium loss • Digestive issue due to lack of fiber • Diet Pills • Baseball Story

  11. Weight Cycle

  12. Diet and Physical Activity for Weight Control • Adjust calorie intake and expenditure based on your needs • Work 30-60 minutes per day or 225 minutes per week • Allow plenty of time for results • Reward yourself in a positive way (other than food) • Continue to update short term goals along the way

More Related