Posts Tagged Calorie Burn

Areas Nutrition and Exercise Science Could Improve In the Future

Someone asked me recently how they think nutrition science and practice will change in the future.  Outside of the ‘let’s try a diet’ like we may try a new fashion choice or hairstyle and other non-science based nutrition diets of the year (keto and vegan are in right now as this is written, two completely polarized diets), there are some areas nutrition practice could improve from an evidence-based standpoint.

And I’m not talking nutrigenomics.  That has a long way to go before it will be evidence based for clinical practice.  I’m talking the basics: how we determine calorie needs of people.  That is an area of practice that scientists and grants should go toward investigating.  I’m saying this 4 years into my private practice.

We cannot accurately estimate exercise expenditure (EEE), excess post exercise oxygen consumption (EPOC), non exercise activity thermogenesis (NEAT), and the thermic effect of food (TEF) in clinical practice.  These, along with the RMR or resting metabolic rate, represent total energy expenditure (TEE).

The most accurate way to do so is to measure RMR with indirect calorimetry, which, while the gold standard, is still indirect because it measures oxygen consumption and infers caloric expenditure rather than directly measuring caloric expenditure.  Then using the RMR, we use an activity factor to estimate activity.

Unfortunately, the activity factors create an estimate of an estimate.  We really don’t know how many calories, with accuracy, someone burns during exercise and how that affects the rest of the equation.

There are probably interrelations between each of the above factors (EEE, EPOC, TEF, RMR, NEAT) based on how much the other contributes to TEE.  Without indirect calorimetry, the Mifflin-St. Jeor predictive equation is often used in adults, which is an estimate of RMR, which adds another layer of estimates to our assessment methods for determining caloric needs.

The current paradigm for weight management involves the clinician assessing estimated caloric needs and creating a deficit for desired weight loss.  As many dietitians and other weight management professionals realize, it isn’t as simple as calories in = calories out because the body has its own thermostats that determine what rate of consumption of calories happens.

We don’t know how much metabolic compensation occurs, let alone behavioral compensation we can assess via questionnaire/discussion.  Examples of possible metabolic compensation that could occur include changes in thyroid production, resulting in hypo- or hypermetabolism: the RMR can go up or down with or without various levels of activity.

Another example is when dietary caloric intake changes, RMR can change, such as go up or down.  There also seems to be a prioritization of conservation of energy toward fueling exercise metabolism (movement and recovery from movement or EEE and EPOC, respectively) than there seems to be to fueling RMR.

This happens in both men and women, but notably in women when hormone function supporting the menstrual cycle is disrupted with excessive exercise relative to caloric intake; however, it is recognized as RED-S now, relative energy deficiency syndrome in sport and exercise, inclusive of men, as it was formerly just referred to as the female athlete triad.

Then, there are behavioral compensation patterns: does someone sit around more, nap, or do any other energy conservation processes when engaging in a dietary caloric deficit and exercising.  How much metabolic adaptation or adaptive thermogenesis occurs, and how can we measure that more accurately than just looking at how it affects weight or energy levels to exercise?

How much does reducing calorie intake impact the intensity and volume of someone’s exercise sessions?  People start to conserve energy during exercise both behaviorally and metabolically.

Current guidelines suggest exercise is ALWAYS a good thing to do throughout all stages of weight gain/loss/maintenance, but considering how many confounding, immeasurable factors exercise throws into the TEE equation, perhaps they will revise the equation in the future and change policy or guidelines to streamline interventions.

That is, maybe guidelines will reflect a better understanding of goal setting for prioritization of exercise or weight management, rather than the current guideline to do more of both at the same time, ie diet and exercise more.

Perhaps guidelines will change to describe what kind of exercise and how much is recommended during various stages of weight management.  Current guidelines are vague and recommend the more the better when it comes to aerobic activity.

It is basically considered sacrilege to not recommend exercise as part of a weight loss program, since it is part of all official guidelines.

Don’t get me wrong, exercise is one of the healthiest things you can do for your body, but it really throws a twist into predicting energy needs and, along with just general activity (NEAT), exercise is the biggest reason for changes in energy needs.

Age doesn’t seem to affect energy needs as much as changes in energy needs occur with changes in volume of movement.  If you look at the Mifflin-St. Jeor Equation and plug in various ages vs various activity levels, the activity level changes are the biggest component to inaccurate estimates of energy needs.

Currently, all we have are simple guidelines like “sedentary, 1-3 times per week exercise, 3-5 times per week exercise,” etc., without a definition of how long that exercise is, how intense that is, who the reference person is for those activity factors (150 lb man, 120 lb woman, or 315 lb man?), whether they are walking, swimming, lifting light weights, or heavy weights.  The activity factor is an overly simplistic estimate of energy expenditure as it stands now.

Don’t get me started on the accuracy of tech devices that claim to measure your calorie burn from exercise.  Unless they are measuring your total body heat production constantly throughout the day, they are not accurate.

I had a cyclist heatedly argue with me that her device was EXACTLY measuring her exercise expenditure.  I feel sorry for anyone who purchased an expensive exercise expenditure measuring device.  You were marketed to.  We don’t have accurate technology for this.

Even a physics-proven mechanical energy estimate will not prove true from a physiological energy cost standpoint due to the aforementioned factors of how the body can conserve energy internally when it needs to by upregulation and downregulation of various metabolic pathways.

It happens all the time when the hypothalamus detects low energy availability and shuts down less important processes, such as reproduction in women, due to all the energy expenditure from exercise.  This lowers RMR to conserve energy.  It also leads to low bone density due to lack of hormone production.

Your heat production can change as a result of exercise the rest of the day.  Is the device measuring you at one part of your body, or all over?  What is that device missing?  How does it determine how many molecules of ATP are produced aerobically vs anaerobically in your body, and how much protein breakdown and buildup must be done as a result of activity, which requires energy itself?

Aside from those issues, then there are issues on the food intake side.  There is a trendy argument on if a calorie is a calorie in terms of food.

The idea is that processed food calories take less effort in absorption than whole foods take, so using a bomb calorimeter isn’t the most accurate way to measure caloric intake from food.

Then there are issues with gut bacteria: certain gut bacteria are more efficient in salvaging energy from fiber that reaches the colon whereas other strains are less efficient.

We don’t know the extent of how much these contribute to significantly varying levels of caloric intake or if they are trivial and academic.

Hopefully, science investigates and develops a better tool for clinical practice so we can have better answers to these questions in the future.  For now, we are left with clinical judgment, theory, and more indirect measures and estimates of metabolism.



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Women’s Body Image: Calorie Restriction, Strength Training, & Weight Loss

I get to work with a lot of women who want to lose weight on the fitness side as a personal trainer and on the nutrition side as a registered dietitian.  Most women who come in to “lose weight” really just want to change their body composition, and it is interesting to see whether people think it is their eating habits or their exercise program that will do that for them.

While I do assess whether they are actually overweight or not through a variety of different assessment parameters, weight loss often tends to reinforce a body image that is inaccurate for women in society, especially if they are not truly overweight.  That gets us to the methodology.

Restricting to maintain a light frame is not healthy because it is an unrealistic healthy body.  It is really just nutrient deprived and fitness deprived, especially as you age and are no longer able to maintain an idealized adolescent and thin teenage body that many women think is healthy.

Colleagues who work in eating disorders have found out that letting these women who really aren’t overweight or have health issues due to their weight actually attempt to lose weight is not helpful even if done in “a healthy way” because it reinforces anorexic psychology and behaviors.

I find this valuable information because often times, my belief has been that “hey, you can try it, but you won’t like the outcome when you get there because it won’t be the body type you are looking for anyway and are probably going to gain the weight back again without any change in overall fitness ability.”  Unfortunately, people are going to do what they want.

If they try to diet and weight comes back, I figure it is a learning experience because many men and women are determined to do what they’re going to do anyway.  Why be resistant?  Why not teach them to do it in a healthier way to reduce the risk of malnutrition and let them learn from the experience?

This is only for women who are slightly overweight according to some of the traditional weight assessments.  If they are clearly underweight or normal weight, I don’t help them on that restriction.  It is unethical.

What I find many women are often saying, is something like “I don’t like my body” or “I don’t feel sexy in my body,” and they are focusing on WEIGHT only as the only measure of that.
 
First of all, feeling sexy has to do with a lot of things, including having self esteem.  It is not just physiology and body composition.  Working with a qualified psychotherapist (I know a few good ones) often helps you figure out what to focus on and what is important.  Sometimes, a weight obsession is really tangent to something deeper.
 
Having worked with many women who come to me as a personal trainer to “lose weight” (even though physically training for a few hours a week results in mild, if any, weight loss, which is frustrating for them when it is explained to them on the first day), many women come out of it with a more positive body image, feel sexier, fit into their clothes better, have a tighter body, and they weigh MORE or the SAME while eating MORE or the SAME amount of food.
 
It is also obvious to me as a trainer which clients are restricting or under eating when working out because they never improve and are hungry working out on low calorie diets, among many other signs and symptoms I will not go into detail in a blog post.  They are stuck on the light weights.  They never fully recover.
 
While some women want to maintain an image of being small and frail, I do not support it when training because it isn’t healthy.  Osteoporosis, or lean mass?
 
Getting women to buy a healthier body image, ie one that is strong, can lift more than pink 5 lb dumbbells, and consume over 2000-2400 Calories is what I try to do.  It is difficult.  It is its own area of eating disorder work, not even recognized by the old school eating disorder specialists.  Of course, they don’t even lift or train people! 🙂
 
The summary of what I’m trying to say is that while some women are focused on body image, teaching women what a healthy body image is with strength training and eating more is probably what is most helpful for them long term due to the relapse rate of women who just try to modify their body with diet alone.
 
Many women will likely be focused on their body image either way, so why not give tangible feedback through fitness parameters they are not able to meet when restricting?
 
To clarify, strength training is NOT bodybuilding, as that is an ENTIRELY different concept.  Strength training produces results with very little time in the gym and very little loss of fitness in weeks of not doing it with strength goals rather than calorie burn and aesthetic goals.  Bodybuilding is aesthetics focused.
 
The problem is that when some women go to do a workout program, it is circuit training, non-specific, non-goal oriented resistance training, “go-for-the-burn spinning classes or CrossFit,” pink weights with dance music and air crunches (about as hard as it sounds), stretching, pilates, yoga, and a small percentage go with bodybuilding, which is also not what I would recommend for a positive body image because the focus is on aesthetics/weight/body fat% rather than fitness parameters you can improve with goal-oriented training programs.
 
Goal oriented training programs focus on overall increase in functional capacity like weight lifted, repetitions (reps), and sets with moderate progressive overload.  They focus on attaining better coordination, balance, agility, strength, REASONABLE muscular and cardiovascular endurance, flexibility, and body composition.  However, I’m not promoting the concept of mainstream “functional training” programs, as that is not standardized either.  Those programs sometimes make no sense to me either as to the purpose of some of their exercises.
 
In comparison to bodybuilding, strength training focuses not just on body composition but also other important and more readily testable exercises that show you are actually more adept at moving your body in space in time rather than just lifting weights till your muscles are broken down to the maximum for no purpose other than to build them.
 
Sometimes it is amazing to me how much exercise people do that is not doing anything for their bodies in terms of aesthetics, yet they are focused entirely on aesthetics for exercise.
 
I’m sure many of us have heard others say they walk 8 miles a day “to burn calories,” while simultaneously complaining they have no butt, or they adopt a running program for the sole purpose of calorie burn and again wonder why their butt isn’t getting nicer (it doesn’t overload the gluteal muscles and is not high intensity).  These are not fitness goals that are healthy, and frankly, it is an abuse of the purpose of exercise.
 
The problem is trying to get women to strength train, something that may make them fit into clothes better independent of calorie restriction (or even by eating more food!).  Some do not want to do it because of this unhealthy body image that women are supposed to be thin, skinny (more like skinny-fat), frail, and if they lift anything over 5 lbs they may start to look like a man.  This is an irrational, but all too common a belief.
 
Being frail is not cool!  If more women strength trained, I think it would cut down the number of women who are dissatisfied with their bodies significantly.  Bodies are made to move and be strong.
 
Strength training also can give realistic negative feedback on your physical condition as a result of cutting calories, thus giving negative reinforcement to the restrictive and thin mentality.  Use “that butt” as a reason to actually eat more food because you won’t get “that butt” if you don’t eat more and lift heavy.
 
Big guys train hardcore, sometimes have chemical help, and lift more than 50 lbs.  Most lift more than 100 lbs.  Getting to the 30 lb dumbbells as a woman and squatting your body weight should be seen as an accomplishment, not that you are manly.  Furthermore, male testosterone levels are much higher than women’s, so even if lifting the same amount as a man, you will not look like a man.  Times change, and so should women’s body image evolve to a healthier one that strength trains.
 


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Calorie Burn Estimates for Foods, on Fitbit, and Exercise Equipment are Deceptive

I would just like to say that I find calorie burn information deceptive and ineffective, bordering on misinformation, considering it is an estimate off an equation even if you are hooked up to a VO2/CO2 analyzer.

It’s like telling everyone to get on a 2000 calorie diet–assigning a specific number to a generic, abstract idea.  These ‘burn’ numbers aren’t exact at all.  For example, in this National Heart Lung and Blood Institute slide show, it says you can “walk leisurely for 1 hour and 10 minutes to burn 400 calories based on a 160 lb person.”

Does that differentiate between what you would have used in an hour and 10 minutes without exercising at all? Does this 160 lb person have 130 lbs of lean mass (18.75% body fat) or 145 lbs of lean mass (9.4% body fat)?

The leaner person can use more calories during exercise because they can exercise more intensely.  At a given pace though, they may burn fewer calories than the not-so-lean person because they are more efficient at that given pace.

Different people use calories differently, nor does exercise “burn calories” as much as it “increases caloric needs,” and is highly dependent on the amount of muscle mass and intensity the person can perform said exercise efficiently.  As I have blogged about before (Diet or Exercise posts), exercise alone is NOT an effective way to lose weight.  Great for maintaining weight though.

I’ve worked with people on the physical training side of things long enough to know that people don’t lose any weight (actually they gain weight) with exercise alone independent of diet changes, especially when people are struggling to reach the recommended 150 minutes a week goal for aerobic exercise, based on the Physical Activity Guidelines for Americans.

Is the take home from this sort of message: “Heck, I guess I can’t eat that because I sure won’t ever exercise that much!”?  If that’s the message they are trying to give, then ok, but I think many RDs give out the message of “How does this food fit in your overall eating plan?”  I think bringing in the exercise component based on wishy-washy calorie numbers just confuses people nor is it accurate.



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