Tag Archives: exercise

Confused about Exercise? Ask our Expert

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Exercise physiology strength & conditioning Townsville #exercise #health #ageing


**For Townsville residents, pop in any time between 8am to 2pm with your list of questions. 

This free public event is aimed at helping and supporting the people of Townsville understand why exercise is so important for healthy ageing and our mental health. Learn how to ”Exercise Right” 🏃🏽‍♀️🚴🏽‍♂️🏊🏼‍♂️🏋🏽‍♂️💃

Have you got a questions about exercise? What type? How often? How much? How hard? When? How long? 🤔

Injured? Overweight? Depressed? Pain? Unfit? Poor memory? Tired? Insomnia? Anxiety? Breathless? Ageing? Feeling weak? Chronic illness? 🙁

Want to learn more? 😃

Come along and ask our local Townsville expert, Exercise Physiologist and Scientist, Sean Wilson.

Please share with family and friends.

For more information, please contact FitGreyStrong@outlook.com or phone 0499 846 955

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Is Resistance Training Better Than Aerobic Exercise For Improving Body Composition?

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It is often assumed that the best type of exercise – for treating obesity and therefore reducing current widespread levels of societal adiposity – is to preferentially increase aerobic or cardiorespiratory physical activity rather than resistance exercise or training. This assumption is based on the premise that aerobic-based exercise substantially increases total daily energy expenditure (TDEE) compared to the energy cost of resistance training. The argument goes that for the same amount of time invested (aerobic vs resistance exercise), significantly greater energy expenditure will occur in the former.

In fact, a good solid hour of ‘cardio’ can yield a net caloric expenditure of over 500 kcal. This of course varies depending on things like body mass, fitness level, the type of cardio exercise performed, exercise intensity and exercise efficiency. Nonetheless, it makes sense that an increase in TDEE would make it essentially easier to create an energy deficit which would thereby translate into improved body composition and decreased fat mass.

is strength training better than cardio for weight loss
Is Aerobic Exercise The Best For Fat Loss?

However, there are several caveats that must be mentioned which could affect just how successful weight loss and weight loss maintenance is if doing aerobic-only exercise. They include:

  1. Overestimating the energy expenditure of an activity therefore stifling weight loss with erroneous values assigned to a cardio session.
  2. Compensatory adaptation whereby weight loss is curtailed in some individuals with changes to Resting Metabolic Rate (RMR), non-exercise activity thermogenesis (NEAT), fasting appetite, satiety and increased fat consumption (see here for further information). Professor Neil King, currently based at Brisbane’s QUT Faculty of Health in Australia, has been instrumental in bringing these issues to light (see here).
  3. Recent evidence (see here) also suggests that TDEE may be constrained as aerobic activity levels increase. In other words, it has been shown that a plateauing effect on total energy expenditure occurs in those performing high amounts of aerobic-based physical activity. This lends support to the notion that metabolic adaptation constrains energy expenditure with increased physical activity. Theoretically, it is proposed that this would have probably helped facilitate survival during our evolution.
  4. Research demonstrates that nutritional manipulation combined with aerobic exercise so that an energy deficit exists (a prerequisite for fat loss), causes a loss of lean body mass (LBM) with such loss causing decreases to RMR (see Villareal et al). It is very common to see exercisers lose significant amounts of LBM when only aerobic exercise is undertaken while in an energy deficit state.
  5. The loss of LBM is not desirable for 2 key reasons. Firstly, functional physical capacity could be affected in both the short and long term (see Villreal et al). Secondly, resting metabolic rate will be reduced thereby making weight loss more difficult and weight regain more likely (see here for further discussion). Such alterations would make continued fat loss increasingly more difficult as energy intake would have to adjust to allow for the decrease in TDEE that would occur concomitantly with decreased LBM.
  6. Some research has shown that appetite is suppressed more so with resistance versus aerobic exercise. Appetite attenuation would help facilitate the likelihood of achieving sustainable weight loss.
is strength training better than cardio for weight loss
Resistance Exercise Is Effective At Reducing Body Fat

Recently Clemens Drenowatz from the Department of Exercise Science, University of South Carolina, headed up a study to examine the effect of different exercise types on measures of adiposity across different fat categories i.e. healthy, overfat and obese.

The term overfat was probably used instead of overweight so that a distinction could be made between high adiposity, low LBM versus low adiposity, high LBM. By that I mean, measuring body weight alone does not discern the proportionate breakdown of fat mass and lean body mass. As an example, you could have 2 men, same height, same weight, but with totally different body compositions in terms of percentage body fat. Increased chances of premature death and health morbidism are correlated not to LBM but to increasingly high levels of adipose tissue, in particular, visceral adiposity (internal fat rather than subcutaneous fat).

The key difference noted for this study was that the researchers did not prescribe an exercise program but rather allowed those involved in the study to self-select what activities to partake in and then assessed what effect those choices had on subsequent measures of body composition.

Three-hundred and forty-eight young adults (n=348) provided valid data over a 12 month period. Body composition, fat mass (FM) and lean mass (LM) were measured via a procedure known as dual x-ray absorptiometry every 3 months. Following this, percent body fat was calculated and then used to distinguish normal-fat, overfat and obese. Specifically, percent body fat ranges were less than 20% and 33% for normal fat, 20%-25% and 33%-39% for overfat, and equal to greater than 33% and 39% for obese in men and women, respectively.

Every 3 months participants reported engagement in aerobic exercise, resistance exercise and other forms of exercise such as tennis or football. Time per week spent engaged in endurance exercise, resistance exercise and other exercise was calculated. TDEE, RMR, physical activity level, and energy intake were also ascertained.

The majority of participants (93%) reported some exercise in the observation period. Surprisingly, differences existed as to what type of exercise showed the greatest benefit – for those either classified as normal-fat, overfat and obese – on reducing fat mass, increasing lean body mass and improving overall body composition.

For normal-fat participants, any type of exercise positively affected lean body mass; however fat mass was unaffected by any type of exercise. BMI and percentage body fat in normal-fat participants held steady. It was not an explicit aim of the study to bring about weight or fat reduction so this demonstrates that in those that are relatively lean, homeostasis for fat mass is robust.

Contrastingly, in overfat and obese participants, fat mass was reduced with increasing resistance exercise but not with aerobic exercise. Even adjusting for objectively assessed physical activity did not alter these results thereby suggesting that the real-world effectiveness of resistance exercise is particularly more potent than aerobic exercise to induce a decrease of fat mass in obesity.

is strength training better than cardio for weight loss
Resistive Exercise Is Beneficial for Men and Women

The findings of this study have some important implications for exercise program design aimed at achieving body fat loss and reducing adiposity. With reliance on aerobic exercise continuing to dominant most weight/loss programs, we now have a growing body of evidence that is questioning this approach despite the fact that there is a greater ‘per-minute’ energy expenditure associated with aerobic compared to resistive exercise.

As mentioned above there are several factors that may constrain just how effective aerobic exercise is for altering body composition. Resistive but not aerobic exercise has also recently been shown to increase non-exercise physical activity (Hunter et al. 2015). Furthermore, resistive exercise was shown recently in a 12-year cohort study to have the strongest association with less waist circumference increase compared to aerobic exercise (Mekary et al. 2015). Taken together, these novel findings suggest that resistive exercise should always be included with aerobic exercise in those considered overfat or obese if the primary objective is to reduce fat mass.

is strength training better than cardio for weight loss
You Don’t Have To Go To A Gym To Find Resistance

FitGreyStrong’s recommendation: To optimise the effectiveness of exercise interventions in bringing about positive body compositional changes in those carrying excessive body fat, resistive exercise should be a pivotal component of any exercise program undertaken. Aerobic exercise remains a critically important component of any intervention for improving health and should still be incorporated on a daily basis if possible or for a minimum total period of 150 minutes/week at a moderate intensity. However, it is important to be mindful that a ‘Goldilocks’ or sweet spot may exist for some people whereby over-doing aerobic exercise may be counterproductive in terms of maximising fat loss due to factors that have been outlined above.

Basic weekly recommendations for a older beginners-to-intermediate resistance exercise intervention designed to reduce obesity would look something like this:

  • Two sessions per week
  • 30-40 minutes in duration not including warm-up
  • Focus on working all major muscle groups primarily based on compound, multi-jointed non-machine orientated movements.
  • 1-2 work sets
  • 6-30 repetitions. The load is not important, the effort is. All loads in older adults have shown to be effective and produce comparable changes in muscle strength and hypertrophy, muscle endurance, bone density and physical function.
  • Controlled tempo (3-4 seconds on the eccentric, 0-2 seconds on transition, 1-2 seconds concentric, 1 seconds pause then repeat; if you are not sure what this mean please contact me)
  • 60-180 seconds rest between sets. If stronger or more experienced, try longer rests on high effort sets.
  • At least 48 hours between sessions for recovery
  • Consume 40 g whey protein post-exercise to maximise muscle protein synthesis rates (see here for an outline on the research supporting post-exercise protein).

References

Blundell J. et al. (2010) “Appetite control: methodological aspects of the evaluation of foods.” Obe Rev 11(3): 251-270

Broom, D.R. (2008) “Influence of resistance and aerobic exercise on hunger, circulating levels of acylated ghrelin, and peptide YY in healthy males” American Journal of Physiology. 296(1): R29-R35.

Drenowatz, C. et al. (2015) “The prospective association between different types of exercise and body composition” Medicine & Science in Sports & Exercise 47(12): 2535-2541.

Hunter, GR. Et al. (2015) “Exercise training and energy expenditure following weight loss” Medicine & Science in Sports & Exercise 47(9): 1950-1957

King, N.A. et al (2012) “Exercise, appetite and weight management: understanding the compensatory responses in eating behaviour and how they contribute to variability in exercise-induced weight loss.”British Journal of Sports Medicine 46(5):315-22.

King N.A. et al. (2008) “Individual variability following 12 weeks of supervised exercise: identification and characterization of compensation for exercise-induced weight loss.” International Journal of Obesity. 32: 177-184

King N.A. et al. (2009) “Dual-process action of exercise on appetite control: increase in orexigenic drive but improvement in meal-induced satiety.” Am J Clin Nutr. 90: 921-927

Mekary RA et al. (2015) “Weight training, aerobic physical activities, and long-term waist circumference change in men” Obesity 23(2): 461-476

Melanson, E.L. et al. (2013) “Resistance to exercise-induced weight loss: compensatory behavioural adaptations” Med Sci Sports Exerc.August; 45(8): 1600-1609.

Peterson N.D. et al. (2014) “Dietary Self-Monitoring and Long-Term Success with Weight Management”. Obesity 22, 1962–1967

Villareal D.T. et al. (2011) “Weight Loss, Exercise, or Both and Physical Function in Obese Older Adults.” N Engl J Med 364(13): 1218-1229


For local Townsville residents interested in FitGreyStrong’s Exercise Physiology services or exercise programs designed to improve body composition, reduce body fat, increase fitness and strength or to enhance athletic performance, contact FitGreyStrong@outlook.com or phone 0499 846 955 for a confidential discussion.

For other Australian residents or oversees readers interested in our services, please see here.


Disclaimer: All contents of the FitGreyStrong website/blog are provided for information and education purposes only. Those interested in making changes to their exercise, lifestyle, dietary, supplement or medication regimens should consult a relevantly qualified and competent health care professional. Those who decide to apply or implement any of the information, advice, and/or recommendations on this website do so knowingly and at their own risk. The owner and any contributors to this site accept no responsibility or liability whatsoever for any harm caused, real or imagined, from the use or distribution of information found at FitGreyStrong. Please leave this site immediately if you, the reader, find any of these conditions not acceptable.
© FitGreyStrong

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How exercise helped save me from a very dark place

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As I lay on my sister-in-law’s rug in our temporary rental house after losing so much in the 2019 Townsville flood, I had a light-bulb moment following an intense road cycling ride. The insight was, basically, that it is extremely difficult for the neurocircuitry of the brain to remain “mood altered” towards a “depressive state” embodied by stress and anxiety immediately following very hard exercise. In other words, challenging exercise profoundly affects our emotional state and as I lay on that rug, my heart still pounding, my muscles still aching and my body still sweating, try as I might, I could “find” no trace of the trauma, stress, anxiety or depressive symptoms that were there 60 minutes beforehand. Of course, I knew that these feelings had not magically disappeared and would rear their ugly head again, but the temporary relief was pure bliss and, if anything, had injected some well needed hope where there had been very little before. The experience spurred me on to seek “treatment” through exercise.

Apart from losing a loved one, there is perhaps no greater tragedy than losing one’s home. The home for all intents and purposes is the foundation and place where your life is lived with those you cherish and love most dearly. It is where your goals and dreams are made. It is where you feel most secure and safe. It is where you laugh, cry, shout and smile. Your home is literally an extension of who your are as a person, who your family is. It is where you watch and participate in the most astonishing journey of change and development in each person, in each relationship and in the family as a whole. It is where you nurture and reaffirm old friendships and where you forge new ones. It is where you celebrate birthdays, Christmas and Easter. It is where we have great dinner parties and where we watch great movies and squirm through tactless reality TV shows. Home is so many things to us that it is difficult to describe them all but it certainly was where I was most comfortable and where I could be “myself”.  Now it is gone and that’s very difficult to believe, deal with, accept. It leaves you feeling lost, displaced, uncertain, angry, sad, frustrated. It makes you wonder why? The effects of such an experience are so overwhelming, surreal almost and take a significant toll on your physical and mental health. It can leave you in a very dark place and I can honestly say that after the initial massive rush of adrenaline that comes when the waters recede and the clean up starts and comes to an end, I was heading toward that very dark place.

(Going in to our house hours before the major flood; it was to rise another 40 cm)

Post-flood heartache

As an Exercise Physiologist and Scientist, and having worked extensively in the neuroscience, Psychiatry and mental health field for 15 years, I was acutely aware of the importance and significant positive effect exercise and a physically active lifestyle can have on mental health. There are many studies now to demonstrate that, no matter what the problem, exercise has a critical role to play and should……no, must be included in an overall treatment plan. In fact, a recent book published titled “Exercise based interventions for mental illness: Physical activity as part of clinical treatment” which reviewed 100s of studies in this area, lays out how exercise and a non-sedentary lifestyle helps dramatically improve treatment outcomes, physically, emotionally and mentally. Those suffering from depression, anxiety- and stress-related disorders, including generalised anxiety disorder (GAD), social anxiety disorder (SAD), obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD), panic disorder (PD), posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD), bipolar disorder (BD), schizophrenia and alcohol use disorders all have so much to gain from exercise and increased general physical activity.

All that knowledge and experience in this field was finally put to the quintessential test. After waking one morning, several weeks after our home was devastated, our lives shattered, I lay in bed and just couldn’t get up. What was there to get up for? I had disengaged from everything, wasn’t exercising, was having a couple of glasses of wine every night, was eating crap and wasn’t sleeping very well. I was pretty much at a point that if something didn’t change, I was in big trouble. I struggled out of bed and sat dejected in the lounge room of our rental and looked at my wife, Sandy, and just shook my head and said: “I can’t do this, it’s too hard”. I realised that I would need to take some control back and made the decision, then and there, to put in place what I knew was instrumental for good overall health. That meant, what is in my opinion so important for all of us, getting to bed early and focusing, prioritising on getting a good night’s sleep. It meant no more reaching for the bottle of red to numb the pain. It meant focusing on eating well. It meant reaching out and seeking some counselling. And, what I believe now helped me no end, ensuring I regularly exercised and on occasion, very intensely.

Using exercise as key component of mental health treatment

On that fateful morning after sitting on the lounge totally despondent and in despair, and deciding that I needed to change because I couldn’t change what had happened, I “coerced” my way into my cycling kit, put my socks and cycling shoes on, my helmet, had my coffee, pumped the tyres up, dusted off my road bike, clicked my feet into the pedals and headed down the road. For the next 10 minutes, I battled with the urge to turn around, go home and go back to bed. But what would that achieve? I’d been there, done that. It wasn’t helping in any way – getting “more rest” – so I pushed on. It was in the next 15 minutes that I realised that it was the first time since the flood that I felt “released” from all the shit, the heartache, the frustration, the anger, the lethargy, the anguish. There was a feeling of dissipation of all of the negativity which makes you feel so awful. The exercise had quite literally expunged the very essence of all that was bad.

The day I decided to make these changes was the day my whole attitude changed. Once I made the change, had a plan, followed it and acted on it, I now gained some control. It is the loss of control over our circumstances that many of us struggle with. Recovery requires that we have control over something. Whatever that something is, I would implore that it be something that you perceive is helping you move forward and preferably, something that is going to enhance your overall health and wellbeing rather than detract from it. Exercise certainly qualifies as one such thing and I would indeed strongly contend, is one of the most important lifestyle behaviours that can dramatically influence overall health, particularly our mental health.

To find out more contact FitGreyStrong@outlook.com or phone 0499 846 955 for a confidential discussion. Act now and take back control.   


Disclaimer: All contents of the FitGreyStrong website/blog are provided for information and education purposes only. Those interested in making changes to their exercise, lifestyle, dietary, supplement or medication regimens should consult a relevantly qualified and competent health care professional. Those who decide to apply or implement any of the information, advice, and/or recommendations on this website do so knowingly and at their own risk. The owner and any contributors to this site accept no responsibility or liability whatsoever for any harm caused, real or imagined, from the use or distribution of information found at FitGreyStrong. Please leave this site immediately if you, the reader, find any of these conditions not acceptable.
© FitGreyStrong

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Weight Loss Advice: Be Very Careful Who You Trust

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FitGreyStrong observation:

The mass media and ‘rogue’ researchers are confusing the public by suggesting that exercise does not facilitate weight loss. Sensationalised, poorly researched and inaccurate media presentations have misled consumers because a thorough assessment of the evidence wasn’t undertaken. Some sports scientists and doctors have further exacerbated the problem by claiming that physical inactivity does not contribute nor is associated with becoming overweight or obese.

FitGreyStrong Advice:

Be extremely careful about making any changes to your exercise, lifestyle, dietary, supplement or medication regimens based on information produced through the media. Consult competent health care experts with recognised qualifications and good reputations, do your own research, talk to those you trust and use some good old commonsense before making any changes.

For those interested in wanting to know more on this topic please continue reading see below.


For local Townsville residents interested in FitGreyStrong’s Exercise Physiology services or exercise programs designed to achieve the above-mentioned benefits or to enhance athletic performance, contact FitGreyStrong@outlook.com or phone 0499 846 955 for a confidential discussion.

For other Australian residents or oversees readers interested in our services, please see here.


Exercise, weight loss and why it doesn’t work for everybody

The following article represents the first of a series of blogs that will explore the reasons behind why exercise may fail as a weight loss strategy. It is often assumed that when someone starts an exercise program, weight or body fat loss will happen naturally and almost by accident. However, recent research demonstrates that the magnitude of individual weight loss varies dramatically, with some losing a substantial amount of weight, others maintaining weight and a few actually gaining weight. The question is, how is this possible? What compensatory mechanisms are at play to negate the effectiveness of exercise?

In this first installment I want to discuss how the mass media and ‘rogue’ researchers have contributed to the unfortunate situation where the message about the efficacy of exercise has been obfuscated and distorted. As a result the general public have received mixed messages as to whether exercise has any role to play in weight loss at all. Some sections of the media have done a pretty good job at cherry-picking research or commentators that promote the idea that exercise is largely ineffective when it comes to weight loss. This has contributed to the public perception, then, that exercise may have limited usefulness as a method to facilitate weight loss.

One of the best examples of this occurred when the Australian Broadcasting Corporation’s (ABC) TV show, Catalyst, aired a segment called “Toxic Sugar” (see here) claiming that:

“The studies show that exercise has virtually no effect on weight loss. One thing exercise does is it makes people hungry.”

weight loss and the media
Are the media trustworthy?

Such sweeping claims – that are not based on the actual scientific evidence – are particularly worrisome given the impact that such high-rating TV shows may have on the lifestyle choices and behaviour of their viewers. Why such organisations would besmirch the value of exercise is an interesting conundrum that has no easy answers.

There are a few possible reasons why this has happened and they are by no means based on any evidence I have been able to dig up and for this I apologise. The speed of the 24/7 news cycle, nevertheless, in conjunction with the need to sensationalise stories and news segments in an effort to gain viewer attention and watchership, have more than likely played a part. Media outlets do not undergo any critical assessment from any independent body – either internally or externally – to corroborate the accuracy of their program’s content. They can therefore function with relative impunity and little accountability. Media outlets are consequently free to make – without fear or retribution – poorly researched and misleading radio or TV shows that may not be in the public’s best interests.

Another reason why the media may produce content that is inaccurate and misleading is a simple one. Basically, the research that has gone into producing a show or print article has been hasty and superficial without a thorough review of the scientific evidence. If you consider the Catalyst segment mentioned above it was so lopsided because of one key component that was missing from the show – an opposing voice. The report ended up being totally biased because it did not present – in an objective manner – robust and contradictory scientific evidence. It also failed to interview any expert commentators that hold serious doubts about many of the claims that were aired.

The public’s confusion regarding the role of exercise in facilitating weight loss was further compounded, after well respected, credentialed doctors and sports scientists suggested in the British Journal of Sports Medicine that physical inactivity and obesity was a myth. Authors Malhotra and co in their editorial titled “It is time to bust the myth of physical inactivity and obesity: you cannot outrun a bad diet” (see here) made one of the most contentious claims in decades by suggesting that increasing obesity rates were not related to changes in physical activity levels. To put it another way, what they were essentially saying is this:

Doing no physical activity and sitting on your arse all day does not contribute to your risk of putting weight on or becoming obese!!

Here’s an interview on ABC’s Lateline with one of the authors, Dr Aseem Malhotra, discussing this publication (see here) if you are interested in listening to some of the commentary on this.

Let’s now just take a look at exactly what was put to print, so you the reader, can judge whether or not I am justified in being perplexed by their editorial. In it they state:

“Regular physical activity reduces the risk of developing cardiovascular disease, type 2 diabetes, dementia and some cancers by at least 30%.”

Fine, that’s dandy, I’m definitely happy with that! They continue:

However, physical activity does not promote weight loss (my emphasis). In the past 30 years, as obesity has rocketed, there has been little change in physical activity levels in the Western population” (p. 1).

Criterium racing
Exercise and physical activity doesn’t promote weight loss?

This claim was based on one paper (see here) published in 2013 by Amy Luke and Richard S Coope (Department of Public Health Sciences, Stritch School of Medicine, Loyola University Chicago, Chicago, USA) which theorised that energy expenditure changes over the 20th century could not explain the increased obesity levels that now exist in the West and increasingly so in developing countries.

Such assertions fail to take much notice of a hefty amount of research that has shown that for many, exercise is a very effective method for assisting weight loss (see here and here). So it is rather puzzling why a more balanced and nuanced account of our current understanding of exercise and weight loss was not undertaken by these authors. So just what did they ascribe the increasing rates of obesity to? Answer: Excessive carbohydrates and sugar. Now this is certainly an interesting hypothesis and one that will unfortunately require another blog to give this topic justice so you’ll have to wait for that one. What I will say though is that such examples truly exemplify the problems of intelligent, educated researchers entrenching themselves in a paradigm of thinking so deeply that any evidence to the contrary is either dismissed or diminished.

Anyway, following publication of this editorial the global media jumped on it. If you Google the title of their article you’ll notice the massive media coverage it received across all forms – print, broadcast and the internet. Social media like Facebook and Twitter picked up on it and the core message – that physical activity and exercise does not promote weight loss – was repeated ad nauseam. There was a harsh backlash from many corners – sports scientists, researchers, public health advocates and the like – but suffice it to say these criticisms and feedback did not generate any traction in the media nor were any corrective statements issued. The genie was out of the bottle and the message that exercise did not work for weight loss was left hanging in the air, slowly seeping and diffusing into the public’s consciousness. This just reinforces my earlier comments where the media over-sensationalise stories and news segments in an effort to gain viewer attention, watchership and market share. What seems apparent in my view, then, is that these organisations have expunged themselves of their ethical obligations to ensure that the public’s best interests are kept front and centre.

Perhaps not surprisingly there is research that contradicts the central plank of their argument which hinges on the notion that activity levels have remained static over the last 30 years. Church  and colleagues (2011) (see here) found that:

“since 1960 the estimated mean daily energy expenditure due to work related physical activity has dropped by more than 100 calories in both women and men. Energy balance model predicted weights based on change in occupation-related daily energy expenditure since 1960 for each NHANES (U.S. National Health and Nutrition Examination Surveys) examination period closely matched the actual change in weight for 40–50 year old men and women. For example from 1960–62 to 2003–06 we estimated that the occupation-related daily energy expenditure decreased by 142 calories in men. Given a baseline weight of 76.9 kg in 1960–02, we estimated that a 142 calories reduction would result in an increase in mean weight to 89.7 kg, which closely matched the mean NHANES weight of 91.8 kg in 2003–06. The results were similar for women.”

Based on these findings the increase in obesity levels – in the US at least – can be largely attributed to changes in energy expenditure via reductions in occupation-related physical activity rather than solely due to the over-consumption of carbohydrates and sugar as postulated by the editorial discussed above. The debate will probably continue to rage as to what the culprit is but logically it seems quite obvious that the answer lies between these two opposing explanations. So instead of it being purely diet-related or activity-related, the current obesity problem has probably come about because of simultaneous changes to both.

why doesn't exercise work for fat loss in everybody
Do your own research

To bring this to a close I would like to conclude by saying that certain sections of the mass media and ‘rogue’ researchers have undeniably contributed to the public’s confusion regarding the role of exercise for weight loss. Until such a time that all forms of media are more closely scrutinised and held accountable for the veracity of their productions, the advice from FitGreyStrong is to be very careful about making any changes to your exercise, lifestyle, dietary, supplement or medication regimens based on information accessed via the media. Consult competent health care experts with recognised qualifications and good reputations, do your own research, talk to those you trust and use some good old commonsense before making any changes.

To read the next installment of this series that summarizes some of the evidence supporting the idea that physical activity and exercise are important modulators of body fatness see Regular Exercise Doesn’t Promote Weight Loss: Fact or Fiction?


Disclaimer: All contents of the FitGreyStrong or FGS website/blog are provided for information and education purposes only. Those interested in making changes to their exercise, lifestyle, dietary, supplement or medication regimens should consult a relevantly qualified and competent health care professional. Those who decide to apply or implement any of the information, advice, and/or recommendations on this website do so knowingly and at their own risk. The owner and any contributors to this site accept no responsibility or liability whatsoever for any harm caused, real or imagined, from the use or distribution of information found at FitGreyStrong. Please leave this site immediately if you, the reader, find any of these conditions not acceptable.
©FitGreyStrong

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