1 / 20

CONTROLLING WEIGHT – STAYING FIT

CONTROLLING WEIGHT – STAYING FIT. NO MAGIC BULLET NO SPECIAL SUPPLEMENTS REQUIRES UNDERSTANDING OF PROCESSES, DILIGENCE AND MOTIVATION LIFE STYLE ALTERATIONS PREVENTION IS BEST. CALORIES DO COUNT – CALORIE BALANCE. CALORIE BALANCE = CALORIE INTAKE – CALORIES BURNED

maia
Télécharger la présentation

CONTROLLING WEIGHT – STAYING FIT

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. CONTROLLING WEIGHT – STAYING FIT • NO MAGIC BULLET • NO SPECIAL SUPPLEMENTS • REQUIRES UNDERSTANDING OF PROCESSES, DILIGENCE AND MOTIVATION • LIFE STYLE ALTERATIONS • PREVENTION IS BEST

  2. CALORIES DO COUNT – CALORIE BALANCE • CALORIE BALANCE = CALORIE INTAKE – CALORIES BURNED • CALORIE INTAKE FROM FOOD AND DRINK • CALORIES BURNED FOR WORK AND HEAT • CALORIE INTAKE = CALORIES BURNED = WT. MAINTENANCE • CALORIE INTAKE > CALORIES BURNED = WT. GAIN • CALORIE INTAKE < CALORIES BURNED = WT. LOSS • (-3500 CALORIES = 1 LB OF FAT LOSS, -500 CALORIES/DAY = -1 LB/WK, -1000 CALORIES/DAY = -2 LB/WK • EASY TO UNDERSTAND AND TRUE – HARD TO ACCOMPLISH

  3. SOURCES OF CALORIES • Calories are a measure of energy • Most food and drinks contain calories • Calories come from the protein, fat and carbohydrate found in food and drink • Carbohydrate = 4 calories per gram • Protein = 4 calories per gram • Fat = 9 calories per gram • Vitamins, minerals and water do not contain calories

  4. CALORIC DENSITY • Caloric density refers to the number of calories contained in a certain weight (grams) of food • Foods can be loosely placed into groups: Calorically dense = contain a high number of calories per weight Calorically dilute = Contain few or fewer calories per weight

  5. CALORICALLY DENSE FOODS • Foods high in fat (butter, margarine, oils, salad dressings, shortening, fatty meat and nuts) are considered calorically dense • Foods high in sugar (sweet drinks, snack foods, candies, pies, cakes) are considered calorically dense • Americans have easy access to a large number of calorically dense foods

  6. CALORICALLY DILUTE FOODS • Foods high in water content and fiber would be considered calorically dilute • Fresh vegetables and fruits, cooked pasta, lean fresh meats, whole grain breads, skim milk and high fiber cereals are examples of calorically dilute foods • Americans need to eat more of these types of food

  7. 1500 CALORIES: DENSE VS DILUTE CALORIE FOODS • Calorically Dense • 1 ¼ lb hamburger 400 cal • 1 tsp mayonnaise 50 • 1 hamburger bun 150 • 1 biggie fries 400 • 1 16 oz soda 200 • 1 apple pie 300 • TOTAL (1500)

  8. CALORICALLY DILUTE • 3 whole peaches 180 cal • 3 whole apples 300 • 2 C sliced carrots 100 • 3 C chopped broccoli 150 • 1 C lima beans 200 • 3 ears of corn 250 • 1 C cooked spaghetti 200 • 2 C cooked mushrooms 85 • ½ head of lettuce 35 • TOTAL (1500)

  9. REASONS FOR EATING EXCESS CALORIES • Portion sizes – portion sizes have increased in the last 15 years (supersizing, etc). This is an easy way to consume excess calories • Eating fast – eating rapidly contributes to extra calories before your body/brain can catch up • Easily consumed foods – sweet drinks, snack foods, french fries all can be easily and quickly consumed. Little or no chewing • Not paying attention to your eating. Eating while watching TV, etc.

  10. BURNING (EXPENDING) CALORIES • Calories are burned by your body to produce work and heat • Two major components: • Basal (resting) metabolic rate • Voluntary physical activity

  11. BASAL METABOLIC RATE • Basal metabolic rate (BMR) is the number of calories burned while at rest to support basic life processes • Heart rate, breathing, temperature regulation, cellular processes • Major caloric expenditure for most people

  12. BASAL METABOLIC RATE (CONT) • BMR ranges from about 1000 calories a day for a small woman to about 2500 calories a day for a large man • Average values are 1100-1400 calories a day for women and 1400-1800 calories a day for men • The BMR for muscle tissue is much higher than the BMR for fat tissue

  13. EXERCISE-PHYSICAL ACTIVITY • Types: Aerobic and Strength • Aerobic examples – walking, running, biking, swimming • Strength examples – weightlifting, push-ups, pull-ups

  14. CALORIES BURNED WITH PHYSICAL ACTIVITY • The number of calories burned with exercise is a function of the duration and intensity of the exercise • More calories are burned with higher intensities and longer durations • Example: • Walking 1 hour = 350-400 cal • Running 1 hour = 650-700 cal • Walking 2 hours= 700-800 cal • Weightlifting/strength exercises also build or maintain muscle which leads to higher BMRs

  15. CALORIES EXPENDED BY A 150 POUND PERSON IN ONE HOUR PER EACH ACTIVITY • Sitting (TV, eating, computer) 100 cal • Standing quietly 110 • Housework 270 • Weightlifting 360 • Walking (18 min/mile) 370 • Dancing 420 • Soccer 560 • Basketball 560 • Running (10 min/mile) 700

  16. BURNING CALORIES (CONT) • Substitute one hour/day of walking for one hour/day of sitting (TV) and you would burn an additional 270 calories for the day. • Do this everyday and it could result in a 10-20 pound weight difference over a year’s time. • Burning 3500 calories theoretically equals one pound of fat tissue (weight)

  17. HOW MUCH EXERCISE? • Minimum aerobic: • 3 times/week, moderate intensity, 30 min • Better aerobic: • 5-6 times/week, moderate intensity with some vigorous intensity, 60-90 minutes • Recommended strength • 3 times/week, 30 minutes • Work primarily large muscle groups (legs, back) • Some abdominal work

  18. MEETING PHYSICAL ACTIVITY GOALS • Planned exercise activities (going for a walk, working out in gym, etc) • Everyday movement (moving at work, around home, parking, climbing stairs, etc) • Increasing your everyday movement a +100 calories a day could result in a weight reduction of 10-11 pounds/year • Fidget – people would fidget a lot weigh less than people who don’t fidget

  19. WEIGHT LOSS SUPPLEMENTS • Currently, there are NO EFFECTIVE weight loss supplements available on the commercial market (herbs, pills, powders, fat burners, metabolic boosters, hormones, etc) • Some new drugs in the research process • Caffeine – some mild effects • Calcium/dairy – some mild effects • Do not count on supplements for significant weight loss or weight maintenance

  20. CALORIE BALANCE SEMINAR • CALORIE BALANCE – TWO SIDES TO THE EQUATION • Written and developed by • Dr. Bob Keith, Professor, Department of Nutrition and Food Science, Auburn University and Nutrition Specialist, Alabama Cooperative Extension System

More Related