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Chapter 15: Weight Management and Disordered Eating

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Chapter 15: Weight Management and Disordered Eating The Status of Obesity in America In the early 1960s, fewer than 32% of Americans were overweight Today, 67% of ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Chapter 15: Weight Management and Disordered Eating


1
Chapter 15 Weight Management and Disordered
Eating
2
The Status of Obesity in America
  • In the early 1960s, fewer than 32 of Americans
    were overweight
  • Today, 67 of Americans are overweight
  • More than 33 of adults and 16 of children are
    obese
  • Americans spend over 45 billion annually on
    weight-loss solutions
  • Medical complications associated with overweight
    cost the U.S. health care system 92 billion
    annually

3
What Is Weight Management and Why Is It Important?
  • Weight management is maintaining body weight in a
    healthy range
  • BMI 18.524.9
  • Underweight and overweight can both be of concern

4
What Is Weight Management and Why Is It Important?
  • Underweight increases risk for
  • Low body protein and fat stores
  • Depressed immune system
  • Overweight and obesity
  • Can increase risk of numerous health problems
  • Can expose individuals to increased social,
    educational, and economic disadvantages
  • Healthy People 2010 aims to reduce overweight and
    obesity in adults to less than 15 and to 5 in
    children and adolescents

5
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6
Quick Review
  • Weight management means maintaining a healthy
    weight (BMI 18.524.9) to reduce risk of certain
    health problems
  • Both underweight and overweight are associated
    with increased health risks
  • Obesity and underweight are associated with
    negative social and psychological effects
    including discrimination, low self-esteem,
    depression, suicide, and alcohol and drug
    problems
  • Reducing overweight and obesity are two of the
    Healthy People 2010 national health objectives

7
How Do Fat Cells Form and Expand?
  • Growth of fat cells (adipocytes) occur in two
    ways
  • Can expand to store more fat (hypertrophy)
  • Once filled to capacity, stimulate the production
    of more fat cells (hyperplasia)

8
How Do Fat Cells Form and Expand?
  • Average adult has 3050 billion adipocytes which
    hold 0.40.5 micrograms of fat each
  • Adipocytes of obese individuals store 0.61.2
    micrograms of fat per cell
  • Weight loss leads to shrinking the size of
    adipocytes, but no change in the number of cells
  • Hyperplasia slows with age, but growth and
    production of fat cells continues throughout life

9
The Formation of Adipocytes
Figure 15.1
10
How Do Fat Cells Form and Expand?
  • Enzymes control the size of fat cells
  • Lipoprotein lipase (LPL) increases lipogenesis
  • Hormone-sensitive lipase (HSL) stimulates
    lipolysis
  • Heavier people have increased activity of LPL
  • Men LPL more active in visceral, abdominal fat
    cells
  • Women LPL activity higher in hips and thighs

11
Quick Review
  • The average adult body contains 3050 billion
    adipocytes
  • When adipocytes reach their maximum capacity to
    store fat, new cells form
  • Obese individuals have more fat cells storing a
    greater quantity of fat
  • LPL and hormone-sensitive lipase are enzymes that
    influence the balance between lipogenesis and
    lipolysis
  • The activity of these enzymes differs in overfat
    and lean individuals and in men and women

12
How Is Food Intake Regulated?
  • Hunger and satiation are controlled by hormones
    that are produced in the brain and
    gastrointestinal tract
  • Appetite is the desire to eat food whether or not
    there is physical hunger may be triggered by
    factors such as time of day, social occasions,
    emotions, or the sight or smell of food

13
How Is Food Intake Regulated?
  • Two regions within the hypothalamusof the brain
    control hunger and satiety
  • Ventromedial nucleus
  • Lateral hypothalamus

Figure 15.2
14
How Is Food Intake Regulated?
  • After a meal, satiety is triggered in the
    ventromedial nucleus
  • Stretch receptors in the stomach signal fullness
  • Cholecystokinin and peptide YY send feedback to
    the hypothalamus to increase satiety and decrease
    hunger
  • Nutrient absorption triggers insulin release
    which also decreases hunger
  • Leptin, produced by adipose tissue, both
    suppresses hunger and promotes energy expenditure

15
How Is Food Intake Regulated?
  • The lateral hypothalamus controls hunger
  • Ghrelin, produced by the stomach, stimulates
    hunger during fasting or on a low-kilocalorie
    diet
  • Neuropeptide Y is produced in the hypothalamus
    and activated by ghrelin it stimulates hunger
    and LPL activity
  • In addition to hormones, certain macronutrients,
    especially protein, promote satiety and reduce
    food intake

16
Quick Review
  • Food intake is controlled by hunger, satiety, and
    appetite
  • Within the brain, the ventromedial nucleus
    controls satiety and the lateral hypothalamus
    controls hunger
  • Neuropeptides, hormones, and neural signals from
    the gastrointestinal tract and adipocytes
    communicate hunger and satiety to the
    hypothalamus
  • Leptin and ghrelin play key roles in triggering
    hunger and satiety, with ghrelin triggering
    hunger and leptin triggering satiation

17
Genetics in Obesity and Weight Management
  • Genetics can make the body more susceptible to
    weight gain or weight loss
  • Genetic differences in the level or functioning
    of some hormones such as leptin and ghrelin
  • Differing responses to environment and
    availability of food
  • Different rates of nonexercise activity
    thermogenesis (NEAT)
  • Genetic set point theory that individuals have
    a genetically established body weight and
    deviation from this point will stimulate changes
    in metabolism to reestablish the normal weight

18
Environment in Obesity and Weight Management
  • Environmental factors can increase appetite and
    decrease physical activity
  • Gene-environment interaction the interaction of
    genes and the environment increases risk of
    obesity in susceptible individuals
  • Lack of time results in Americans turning to
    high-calorie convenience foods or dining out
  • An abundant food supply and portion distortion
    result in people eating more
  • Decreased physical activity and increased
    sedentary behavior means Americans are burning
    fewer calories

19
Quick Review
  • Genetic influences play a role in weight
    management including influencing the levels of
    the hormones leptin and ghrelin
  • Environmental factors, including lack of time, an
    abundant food supply, portion distortion, and
    lack of physical activity, encourage obesity

20
How Can You Lose Weight Healthfully?
  • Overweight individuals should aim to lose 10 of
    their body weight over 6 months
  • The keys to long-term weight management

Figure 15.3
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22
The Volume of Food
Figure 15.5
23
How Can You Lose Weight Healthfully?
  • Devote 60 to 90 minutes daily to
    moderate-intensity physical activity to aid in
    weight loss, prevent weight gain

24
Quick Review
  • The keys to successful long-term weight loss
    include reducing daily kilocalorie intake,
    increasing physical activity, and changing
    behaviors
  • Meals of low-energy density, high-volume
    vegetables, fruits, and fiber along with lean
    protein and healthy oils promote satiety and
    reduce unplanned snacking
  • Daily physical activity facilitates weight loss
  • Changing unhealthy habits by removing certain
    environmental cues supports healthy eating habits

25
How Can Weight Loss Be Maintained?
  • Setting realistic weight goals is essential to
    prevent false hope syndrome and risk of dropping
    a weight-loss program
  • Weight cycling is thought to lead to problems
    such as hypertension, gallbladder disease, and
    elevated cholesterol
  • After weight loss, a person will have lower
    energy needs because there is less body weight to
    maintain this is known as the energy gap
    phenomenon
  • Increasing daily physical activity is the easiest
    way to close the energy gap and overcome weight
    loss plateaus
  • Some individuals with a BMI gt 40 are candidates
    for extreme treatments to lose weight

26
Extreme Measures for Extreme Obesity
  • A very low-kilocalorie diet
  • Is a short-term solution for individuals at high
    risk of disease related to obesity
  • Requires vitamin and mineral supplementation and
    medical supervision
  • Weight-loss medications
  • Sibutramine (Meredia) suppresses appetite
  • Orlistat (Xenical) inhibits fat absorption

27
Extreme Measures for Extreme Obesity
  • Surgery
  • Gastric bypass
  • Gastric banding
  • Liposuction

28
Quick Review
  • Setting realistic weight-loss goals will prevent
    the false hope syndrome associated with trying to
    achieve goal weight too quickly
  • Exercise improves muscle mass, prevents a decline
    in basal metabolism, and helps overcome weight
    loss plateaus
  • Eating less or exercising more helps close the
    energy gap following weight loss
  • For individuals with a BMI greater than 40, more
    extreme weight loss treatments may be indicated

29
What Is the Healthiest Way to Gain Weight?
  • Eat sufficient energy to meet basal needs plus
    fuel for the exercise needed to stimulate muscle
    synthesis
  • Focus on a variety of energy-dense, nutritious
    food choices
  • Eat larger portions at meals and energy-dense
    snacks during the day
  • Add at least 500 kilocalories daily for weight
    gain of about one pound per week
  • Regular exercise and resistance training
    stimulate muscle growth and help to avoid excess
    fat storage

30
More- and Less-Energy-Dense Food Choices
Figure 15.7
31
Quick Review
  • Weight gain can be as challenging and frustrating
    as trying to lose weight
  • People who want to gain weight need to consume
    additional kilocalories through energy-dense food
    to take in more energy than they expend
  • Increasing portion sizes and adding
    nutrient-dense snacks helps to increase total
    intake
  • Add resistance exercise to build muscle mass

32
What Is Disordered Eating?
  • Disordered eating describes abnormal and
    potentially harmful eating patterns
  • Eating disorders are psychological illnesses
    diagnosed by meeting specific criteria that
    include disordered eating behaviors and other
    factors
  • Eating disorders affect over 1 million U.S.
    individuals

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34
Health Consequences of Disordered Eating
  • Health consequences of anorexia nervosa include
  • Electrolyte imbalances
  • Drop in heart rate and blood pressure, weakness
    and fatigue, hair loss
  • Slowing of the digestive process
  • Inadequate nutrient intake and possible
    deficiencies

35
Health Consequences of Disordered Eating
  • Health consequences of bulimia nervosa include
  • Tears in the esophagus
  • Tooth decay and gum disease from stomach acid
  • Electrolyte imbalances
  • Dehydration and constipation
  • Impaired normal bowel function through laxative
    use

36
Eating Disorders Not Otherwise Specified
  • Binge eating disorder
  • Characterized by recurrent episodes of binge
    eating without regard to physiological cues
  • May eat for emotional reasons resulting in
    out-of-control feeling while eating and physical
    and psychological discomfort after eating
  • May eat in secret and feel ashamed about their
    behavior
  • Negative health effects are those associated with
    obesity such as high blood pressure, high
    cholesterol, heart disease, type 2 diabetes, and
    gallbladder disease

37
Eating Disorders Not Otherwise Specified
  • Night eating syndrome
  • A person consumes a majority of daily
    kilocalories after the evening meal and wakes up
    during the night to eat
  • Typically does not have an appetite during
    morning hours
  • Is a unique combination of disordered eating, a
    sleep disorder, and a mood disorder
  • Stress is a contributing factor to the
    development and continuation of the disorder
  • May feel guilty, ashamed, or embarrassed while
    eating at night as well as the next morning
  • Most often in young adults 1830 years old

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39
How Are Eating Disorders Treated?
  • Effective treatment requires a multidisciplinary
    team approach including
  • Psychological professionals
  • Medical professionals
  • Nutrition professionals
  • As some eating disorders can be life-threatening,
    a physician should closely monitor treatment

40
How Are Eating Disorders Treated?
  • A Registered Dietitian can help someone with an
    eating disorder establish normal eating behaviors
  • Nutritional approaches include
  • Meal planning
  • Using food journals
  • Identifying binge triggers, safe and unsafe foods
  • Recognizing hunger and fullness cues
  • Full recovery from eating disorders is possible
    and most successful when the disorder is treated
    in the early stages

41
Quick Review
  • Disordered eating is characterized by an abnormal
    eating pattern
  • Eating disorders include disordered eating and
    other diagnostic criteria
  • Over 11 million Americans struggle with eating
    disorders
  • Eating disorders include anorexia nervosa,
    bulimia nervosa, binge eating or compulsive
    overeating, and night eating syndrome
  • Recovery is possible, particularly if treatment
    is sought in the early stages of the disorder

42
Putting It All Together
  • Maintaining a healthy body weight reduces the
    negative physical and psychological effects of
    obesity
  • Hunger and satiety are regulated by the
    hypothalamus of the brain through neuropeptides,
    hormones, and neural signals from the
    gastrointestinal tract and adipocytes
  • Both genetic and environmental factors influence
    obesity and weight management
  • Diet, physical activity, behavior modification
    are the keys to long-term weight management
  • Eating disorders include anorexia nervosa,
    bulimia nervosa, binge eating or compulsive
    overeating, and night eating syndrome
  • Treatment of eating disorders requires a
    multidisciplinary team approach
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