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Obesity, Diabetes, and Physical Activity

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Title: Obesity, Diabetes, and Physical Activity


1
Chapter 22
  • Obesity, Diabetes, and Physical Activity

2
Chapter 22 Overview
  • Obesity
  • Terminology
  • Prevalence
  • Control of body weight
  • Etiology
  • Health problems
  • Treatment
  • Physical activity
  • Diabetes
  • Terminology
  • Prevalence
  • Etiology
  • Health problems
  • Treatment
  • Physical activity

3
ObesityTerminology and Classification
  • Overweight
  • Body weight exceeds standard weight for given
    height and frame size
  • Not precise terminology
  • Does not account for body composition
  • Obesity
  • Excessive body fat (men gt25, women gt35)
  • Borderline obese men 20 to 25, women 30 to 35

4
ObesityTerminology and Classification
  • Body mass index (BMI)
  • Body weight in kilograms/(height in m)2
  • Most widely used standard for obesity
    classification
  • Does not account for body composition
  • Overweight 25.0 to 29.9 kg/m2
  • Obese 30.0 kg/m2
  • BMI classification cut points change for
    difference races and ethnicities

5
Table 22.2
6
ObesityPrevalence in the United States
  • Prevalence ? dramatically since 1980
  • Prevalence of overweight has not changed much
  • Obesity continues to increase
  • More prevalent in some races and ethnicities
  • Mexican-American men
  • Black women
  • Increasing prevalence in children and teens

7
Figure 22.1a
8
Figure 22.1b
9
Figure 22.1c
10
Figure 22.2
11
Figure 22.3
12
ObesityPrevalence in the United States
  • With age fat mass ?, lean body mass ?
  • Over age 25, average person gains 0.7 to 1 lb
    per year
  • Up to 33 extra lb by age 55
  • Will have significant effect on health care
  • Earlier onset of obesity
  • Increasing rates of obesity
  • Earlier onset of obesity-related diseases

13
Obesity Worldwide Prevalence
  • Increases in obesity not unique to United States
  • Canada, Australia, Europe have seen increases to
    a lesser degree
  • Available data vary
  • Most recent studies show obesity spreading to all
    regions of the world

14
Table 22.3
15
ObesityControl of Body Weight
  • Body usually carefully balances kilocalorie
    intake and expenditure
  • Gain of 1 lb/year represents imbalance of 3,111
    kcal per year
  • Body can balance to within 9 kcal per day
  • Body may regulate around set point using
  • Resting metabolic rate (RMR)
  • Thermal effect of meals (TEM)
  • Thermal effect of activity (TEA)

16
ObesityControl of Body Weight
  • RMR
  • Bodys metabolic rate in the early morning
  • 60 to 75 of total energy expenditure
  • TEM
  • Energy expended to digest, store nutrients, etc.
  • 10 of total energy expenditure
  • May be defective in obese individuals

17
ObesityControl of Body Weight
  • TEA
  • Energy expended to accomplish activities
  • 15 to 30 of total energy expenditure
  • Balance of RMR, TEM, TEA
  • Helps body adapt to ? or ? kilocalorie intake
  • Controlled by sympathetic nervous system
  • Key for maintaining weight around set point

18
Figure 22.4
19
ObesityControl of Body Weight
  • Set point regulation versus weight gain
  • Diet composition alters set point
  • Physical activity alters set point
  • High-fat diets usually ? overfeeding
  • Other factors
  • Larger portions/restaurant supersizing
  • Higher fat consumption
  • More eating away from home

20
ObesityEtiology
  • Physiological factors
  • Heredity/genetics
  • Hormonal imbalances
  • Altered basic homeostatic mechanisms
  • Lifestyle factors
  • Cultural habits
  • Inadequate physical activity
  • Improper diets

21
Figure 22.5
22
ObesityHealth Problems
  • Morbidity presence or rate of disease
  • Mortality death from disease
  • Obesity and overweight ? ? mortality
  • Major increased risk BMI gt35

23
Figure 22.6
24
ObesityHealth Problems
  • Obesity and overweight associated with
  • Cardiovascular disease
  • Type 2 diabetes
  • Cancer (endometrial, breast, colon)
  • Liver, gallbladder disease
  • Osteoarthritis
  • Sleep apnea
  • Metabolic syndrome rate parallels obesity

25
Obesity Genetic Versus Lifestyle Effects
  • Pima Indians study in genetics versus lifestyle
  • Native lifestyle ? lean and healthy
  • Western diet/lifestyle ? high rates of obesity
  • Men 64
  • Women 75
  • Obesity often accompanied by diabetes
  • Men 34
  • Women 41

26
Obesity Genetic Versus Lifestyle Effects
27
ObesityHealth Problems
  • Changes in normal body function
  • Vary with individual
  • Vary with degree of obesity
  • Lethargy
  • Polycythemia
  • Low blood O2/high blood CO2
  • Clotting, heart failure

28
ObesityHealth Problems
  • Body fat distribution disease risk factor
  • Upper-body (android) obesity (men)
  • Lower-body (gynoid) obesity (women)
  • Waisthip girth ratio and visceral fat index
    identify fat distribution
  • Android obesity ? higher risk for
  • Cardiovascular disease
  • Elevated blood lipids
  • Diabetes

29
Figure 22.7
30
Figure 22.8a
31
Figure 22.8b-c
32
ObesityHealth Problems
  • Exacerbates existing diseases
  • Weight loss reduces severity of
  • Angina pectoris
  • Hypertension
  • Congestive heart disease
  • Heart attack recurrence
  • Varicose veins
  • Diabetes
  • Orthopedic problems

33
ObesityHealth Problems
  • Emotional and psychological factors
  • Can help cause obesity
  • Can be exacerbated by obesity
  • Obesity social stigma
  • Media glamorize thin people
  • But norms may shift as obesity becomes more common

34
ObesityGeneral Treatment
  • Weight loss kilocalorie intake lt kilocalorie
    expenditure
  • Oversimplification
  • Weight loss treatment multifactorial
  • Loss not to exceed 1 to 2 lb per week
  • Weight loss a long-term project
  • Maintain balanced diet with caloric deficit
  • Reduce intake of fat and simple sugars

35
ObesityGeneral Treatment
  • Hormone treatments
  • Decrease appetite
  • Increase RMR
  • Serious side effects, life threatening
  • Surgical treatments
  • Intestinal bypass
  • Gastric banding or bypass
  • Reserved for most extreme, serious cases

36
ObesityGeneral Treatment
  • Behavior modification change in eating patterns
    or habits. Examples
  • Can only eat in one location
  • No snacking
  • No second helpings
  • Appealing, simple weight loss approach

37
Obesity Role of Physical Activity in Weight
Control
  • Overeating and inactivity major causes of
    obesity
  • Kilocalorie restriction and exercise best
    treatments
  • Exercise alters body composition
  • Significant long-term kilocalorie deficit
  • Significant long-term fat loss
  • EPOC ? ? postexercise metabolism

38
Obesity Role of Physical Activity in Weight
Control
  • Body mass and composition changes with exercise
  • ? Total weight
  • ? Fat mass, percent body fat
  • Maintained or ? FFM
  • Changes long term (6-12 months)

39
Table 22.4
40
Obesity Role of Physical Activity in Weight
Control
  • Both aerobic and resistance training ? weight
    loss
  • Exercise important aspect of weight loss
  • Must combine exercise kilocalorie restriction
  • Decrease rate of visceral fat accumulation
  • Energy balance equation
  • Kilocalorie intake kilocalories excreted (RMR
    TEM TEA)
  • Helps clarify weight loss mechanisms

41
Obesity Role of Physical Activity in Weight
Control
  • Exercise effects on appetite
  • Leads to appetite suppression in male animals
  • Leads to no change or ? intake in female animals
  • Less activity ? less food intake
  • Causes for appetite suppression
  • Higher circulating catecholamines
  • Higher body temperature

42
Obesity Role of Physical Activity in Weight
Control
  • Exercise effects on RMR
  • May increase with training
  • Resistance training of interest (RMR related to
    FFM)
  • Exercise effects on TEM
  • Pre- and postmeal exercise ? ? TEM
  • Chronic exercise training ? inconclusive
  • Exercise effects on fat mobilization
  • During exercise, FFA mobilization ?
  • Possible causes hGH, sympathetic stimulation,
    catecholamines

43
Obesity Role of Physical Activity in Weight
Control
  • Spot reduction a myth
  • Local exercise ? local fat loss
  • Exercise draws on all fat stores
  • Local exercise ? local muscle development
  • Spot reduction studies
  • Tennis dominant versus nondominant arms
  • Intense sit-up training program

44
Obesity Role of Physical Activity in Weight
Control
  • Low-intensity aerobics and weight loss
  • High intensity ? ? percent energy from CHO
    oxidation
  • Low intensity ? ? percent energy from fat
    oxidation
  • Low intensity ? no change in total fat
    kilocalories expended
  • Low intensity ? ? in total kilocalories expended
  • Fatmax zone
  • Zone where fat oxidation rates near peak
  • 55 to 72 VO2max

45
Table 22.5
46
Figure 22.9
47
Obesity Role of Physical Activity in Weight
Control
  • Exercise gimmicks ineffective. Examples
  • Mark II Bust Developer
  • Astro-Trimmer Exercise Belt
  • Slim-Skins Vacuum Pants
  • Reality exercise and weight loss require work

48
Obesity Physical Activity and Health Risk
Reduction
  • Exercise ? ? risk of disease mortality
  • Irrespective of weight loss
  • Good news for those who struggle with weight loss
  • Active lifestyle and fitness more important

49
DiabetesTerminology and Classification
  • Diabetes mellitus
  • Hyperglycemia
  • Insulin insufficiency and/or resistance
  • Type 1
  • Type 2
  • Gestational
  • Prediabetes

50
DiabetesTerminology and Classification
  • Type 1 diabetes
  • Autoimmune (b-cells destroyed, no insulin)
  • Insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus (IDDM)
  • 5 to 10 of all diabetes cases
  • Type 2 diabetes
  • Loss of insulin sensitivity (insulin resistance)
  • Non-insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus (NIDDM)
  • 90 to 95 of all diabetes cases
  • Term adult onset no longer correct

51
DiabetesTerminology and Classification
  • Gestational diabetes
  • Develops in pregnant women
  • 4 of pregnancies, causes complications
  • Prediabetes
  • Predictor of full-blown diabetes
  • Impaired fasting glucose or glucose tolerance
  • Glucose tolerance test diagnostic test
  • Oral
  • Intravenous

52
DiabetesTerminology and Classification
  • Signs of type 1 diabetes
  • Excessive urination, thirst
  • Weight loss, extreme hunger
  • Fatigue, irritability
  • Signs of type 2 diabetes
  • Any type 1 symptom
  • Persistent infections, sores
  • Vision changes
  • Tingling, numbness in limbs

53
DiabetesPrevalence
  • 17 million people diagnosed
  • 7 million people undiagnosed
  • 57 million people prediabetic
  • 50 increase from 1990 to 2005
  • Prevalence (diagnosed) varies by group Black
    11.8, Hispanic 10.4, Asian American 7.5, White
    6.6

54
DiabetesEtiology
  • Type 1 diabetes
  • Pancreatic b-cells destroyed
  • Cause may be autoimmune, viral infection,
    degeneration
  • Sudden onset in childhood, young adulthood
  • Type 2 diabetes
  • Gradual onset (children and adults)
  • Impaired insulin secretion, action,
    responsiveness
  • Obesity major factor
  • b-cells, target cells less responsive

55
DiabetesHealth Problems
  • Cardiovascular disease (all forms)
  • Kidney disease
  • Neural disease
  • Eye disorders (blindness)
  • Dental disease
  • Amputations

56
DiabetesGeneral Treatment
  • Type 1 diabetes
  • Insulin administration
  • Diet
  • Exercise
  • Type 2 diabetes
  • Weight loss
  • Diet
  • Exercise
  • Recently developed drugs

57
Type 1 DiabetesRole of Physical Activity
  • Exercise complicates glycemic control
  • Hypoglycemia a risk
  • Can lead to unacceptable plasma glucose
    fluctuations
  • Requires careful monitoring
  • Monitor foot sensation, healing
  • Helps reduce risk of coronary, cerebral, and
    peripheral arterial diseases

58
Type 2 DiabetesRole of Physical Activity
  • Exercise enhances insulin sensitivity
  • Muscle contraction mimics insulin action
  • Lowers blood glucose
  • Decreases insulin requirement
  • Short-term (72 h) effect
  • Combination of resistance and aerobic training
    may be optimal
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