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The Athlete's Kitchen - EXERCISE & WEIGHT CONTROL: Myths, Truths, and Gender Differences
Copyright: Nancy Clark, MS, RD March 2006 RUNOHIO
"For all the exercise I do, I should be pencil thin!""Am I the only runner who has ever gained weight training for a marathon???""Why does my husband shed pounds when he exercises and I don't???"
"For all the exercise I do, I should be pencil thin!""Am I
the only runner who has ever gained weight training for a
marathon???""Why does my husband shed pounds when he exercises
and I don't???"
When I listen to athletes complain about their lack of
success with losing body fat, I hear abundant
frustration: "Why can't I do something as simple as lose a few
pounds!!!" Why? Because weight loss is not simple and often
includes debunking a few diet and exercise myths. Perhaps this
article will offer some insights that lead you to success with
your weight loss efforts.
Myth: You must exercise in order to lose body fat.
To lose body fat, you must create a calorie deficit. You can
create that deficit by adding on exercise (which improves your
overall health and fitness) or by simply eating fewer
calories. Sick people commonly lose body fat but they do not
exercise; they create a calorie deficit. Similarly, injured
athletes can also lose fat despite lack of exercise. The
story "I gained weight when I was injured because I couldn't
exercise" could more correctly be stated "I gained weight when
I was injured because I was bored and depressed. I overate for
comfort and entertainment..."
Myth: The more you exercise, the more fat you
lose.
Often, the more you exercise, the hungrier you get and-
- the more you eat, or
- the more your believe you "deserve" to eat, or
-the more you want to eat as a reward for having both gotten
to the gym and survivedthe exercise session.
But if you spend 60 minutes in a spin class and burn off 600
calories, only to reward yourself with twelve Oreos (600
calories), you quickly wipe out your weight loss efforts in
less than 3 minutes...
The effects of exercise on weight loss are complex and
unclear. We know among older people (56-78 years) who
participated in a vigorous walking program, daily calorie
needs remained about the same (2,400 without exercise, 2,480
with exercise). How could that be? Well, the participants
napped more and were 62% less active throughout the rest of
their day.(1)
Another study with post-menopausal women found the same
results from 8 weeks of moderate exercise training. Their 24-
hour energy expenditure remained similar from the start to the
end of the program. (2) The bottom line: You have to eat
according to your whole day's activity level, not according to
how hard your trained that day.
Myth: If you train for a marathon, your body fat will
melt away.
Wishful thinking. I commonly hear marathoners, triathletes
and other highly competitive endurance athletes complain "For
all the exercise I do, I should be pencil thin..." They fail
to lose fat because, like the fitness exercisers described
above, they put all of their energy into exercising, but then
tend to be quite sedentary the rest of the day as they recover
from their tough workouts. A study with male endurance
athletes who reported a seemingly low calorie intake found
they did less spontaneous activity than their peers in the non-
exercise parts of their day. (3) The bottom line: you need to
keep taking the stairs instead of the elevators, no matter how
much you train!
Alternatively, athletes who complain they eat like a bird
but fail to lose body fat may simply be under-reporting their
food intake. A survey of female marathoners indicated the
fatter runners under-report their food intake moreso than
their leaner peers. (4) Remember: calories mindlessly eaten
standing up or on-the-run count just as much as calories from
meals.
Myth: Couples who exercise together, lose fat
together.
In a 16-month study looking at exercise for weight loss, men
and women completed an identical amount of exercise. The men
lost 11.5 pounds; the women maintained weight! (5) In another
study with previously sedentary, normal weight men and women
who participated in an 18 month marathon training program, the
men increased their calorie intake by about 500 per day; the
women increased by only 60 calories-despite having added on 50
miles per week of running. The men lost about five pounds of
fat; the women two pounds. (6)
What's going on here??? Well, a husband who adds on
exercise is likely to lose more weight than his wife because
he's likely heftier and thereby burns more calories during the
same workout. But, speaking in terms of evolution, Nature
seems protective of women's role as childbearer, and wants
women to maintain adequate body fat for nourishing healthy
babies. Hence, women are more energy efficient. Obesity
researchers at NY's Columbia University suggest a pound of
weight loss in men equates to a deficit of about 2,500
calories, while women need a 3,500 calorie deficit!!! (7) No
wonder women have a tougher time losing weight then do
men....
The bottom line
If you are exercising to lose weight, I encourage you to
separate exercise and weight. Yes, you should exercise for
health, fitness, stress relief and, most importantly, for
enjoyment. (After all, the E in exercise stands for
enjoyment!) I discourage you from exercising to burn off
calories; that makes exercise feels like punishment for having
excess body fat. When exercise is something you do to your
body, rather than do for your body, you'll eventually quit
exercising. Bad idea.
Instead of focusing on exercise to lose body fat, pay
attention to your calorie intake. Knocking off just 100
calories a day from your evening snacks can theoretically
result in 10 pounds a year of fat loss. Seems simpler than
hours of sweating...?
References:
1. Goran, Am J Physiol 263:E950, 1992
2. Keytel, Int J Sport Nutr 11:226, 2001
3. Thompson, Med Sci Sports Exerc 27::347, 1995
4. Edwards, Med Sci Sports Exer 25:1398, 1993
5. Donnelly, Arch Intern Med 163:1343, 2003
6. Janssen, Int J Sports Med, 10:S1,1989
7. Pietrobelli Int J Obes Relat Metab Disord 26:1339,
2002
Sports dietitian Nancy Clark MS, RD counsels casual and
competitive athletes in her private practice at Healthworks
(617-383-6100), the premier fitness center in Chestnut Hill
MA. Her Sports Nutrition Guidebook ($23), Food Guide
for Marathoners ($20) and Cyclist's Food Guide ($20)
all offer additional weight management information. The books
are available via www.nancyclarkrd.com or by sending a
check to Sports Nutrition Services, PO Box 650124, W Newton MA
02465.
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