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The Effects Of Diet And Metabolism On
The Body
by Rich Amber
(NewsTarget) It doesnt matter
whether you are male or female, low calorie dieting
slows your metabolism, making it progressively more
difficult to lose weight and keep it off. The failure
rate of most diets is astronomical, yet people continue
to try one after another, always hoping that each new
scheme will provide the solution. If youre a veteran
of the diet wars, the one word answer to your dilemma
should be muscle. Lets take a look at why diets
often fail and how strength training (exercise) can
rev up your metabolism.
Dieting fails due to a combination of
hormonal changes, muscle loss, and flat out frustration.
When faced with a shortage of calories, your bodys
natural response is to conserve fat. This mechanism
might have come in handy for our distant ancestors trying
to survive a famine, but the starvation response
and its associated hormonal changes make life difficult
for many a dieter.
If a dieter persists long enough with
the self-imposed famine, the body begins to break down
muscle tissue for fuel. When that protein is broken
down, it releases nitrogen. Your body will quickly wash
away the nitrogen by releasing water from tissue cells,
causing an immediate reduction in water weight and a
noticeable drop on the scale. However, water and muscle
loss is nothing to celebrate. The water weight will
be quickly regained as soon as you have something to
drink, and the missing muscle can wreak havoc on your
metabolism for a good long time.
Muscle is a metabolically active tissue.
It requires a certain number of calories each day to
maintain it. Therefore, the more muscle you have, the
more calories you burn even when youre just sitting
around. As your muscle mass drops, so does your daily
calorie requirement. Suppose, for example, that a dieter
loses 10 pounds of muscle (along with maybe 20 lbs.
of fat) on a strict diet. Now suppose that each pound
of muscle had been burning 50 calories a day just sitting
there. Together, those 10 pounds of muscle had been
burning 500 calories a day. With this muscle tissue
gone, the dieter must now consume 500 fewer calories
a day in order to maintain that weight-loss.
However, we know that most dieters wont
keep up the starvation routine for long. Theyll
eventually return to their old eating habits. When this
happens, the weight inevitably comes piling back on.
The kicker is that while they lost both muscle and fat
during the diet, what they put back was all fat. So,
even though they might weigh the same as they did when
they started, they now have a lot more fat and a lot
less muscle than they did before the diet. This means
that their metabolisms are slower and their calorie
requirements are lower. Even if they return to their
pre-diet eating habits, they still require 500 fewer
calories a day due to the muscle loss. Thats one
reason dieters are prone to regaining all of the lost
weight and then some.
The solution to this dilemma is an active
lifestyle that includes aerobic exercise, a weight-training
program (pushing that lawnmower or digging that garden
works as well as those bowflex machines), and a healthy
diet. A healthy diet keeps your metabolism in high gear
with 4 to 6 small meals a day. No food (as long as it
isnt full of mycotoxins) is truly off-limits,
but sweets and high-fat junk food should be eaten less
often and in smaller quantities. A healthy diet is realistic
and permanent; not something you suffer through for
a week or two and then quit.
The goal is to consume as many calories
as you can while still losing body fat and maintaining
or gaining lean muscle. If your calories are already
below normal, dont restrict them further. Instead,
stick with your current amount and focus on becoming
stronger and more active, so you can gradually increase
your calories to a normal healthy level. If your calorie
intake is already in a healthy range, decrease it only
slightly, and only if necessary. A small reduction of
about 250 calories a day, or 10-15 percent less than
usual, is more likely to protect your lean muscle and
less likely to trigger a slow-down in your metabolism.
Following this type of routine, its
possible to gain about one pound of muscle per week
and lose about one pound of fat per week. The end result
is that the number on the scale might not move much
at all, but your clothes will get loser and your self-esteem
will skyrocket. Its at this point that a lot of
people will chuck the weight training because they dont
understand the physiology of whats happening.
The truth is that when youre strength
training, its possible to get smaller and heavier
at the same time. Muscle is a much denser tissue than
fat. A pound of muscle is like a little chunk of gold,
while a pound of fat is like a big fluffy bunch of feathers.
The pound of fat takes up more space on your body. At
this point, its best to toss out the bathroom
scale and rely on the way you look and the way your
clothes fit. The scale can be misleading and discourage
you when youre actually doing great.
The bottom line is that you want to
make strong, healthy, positive changes rather than punishing
your body and your spirit with starvation. Your goal
is the sleek healthy body of a naturally lean person
who can enjoy what they eat. You want to avoid, at all
costs, the frail sagging body of a chronic dieter who
has to measure every morsel.
Source: The
Effects Of Diet And Metabolism On The Body (NewsTarget.com)
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