Title: Energy%20Balance%20and%20Weight%20Management:%20Finding%20Your%20Equilibrium
1Energy Balance and Weight Management Finding
Your Equilibrium
2Todays Topics
- Energy In
- Energy Out
- Body Composition Understanding Fatness and
Weight - Overweight and Obesity
- Weight management
- Underweight
3Energy Balance
- Energy Intake vs. Energy Output
4Energy Balance
- Energy equilibrium
- Intake output
- ______________ weight
- Positive energy balance
- Intake ___ Output
- Gain weight
- Negative energy balance
- Intake ____ Output
- Lose weight
5Energy In
- Key concept Food intake is regulated by
sensations of - Hunger a physiological drive to eat
- Satiation feelings of satisfaction that lead to
ending a meal - Satiety continued feelings of fullness that
delay that start of the next meal - Appetite the psychological urge to eat and often
as no relation to ___________________. - Question
- Are your internal cues regulated by physiological
drive or psychological drive?
6Internal Cues that Regulate Energy Intake
7Why does our stomach growl?
- Stomach growling can happen any time, but with
food, it becomes quieter. - Empty stomach ? stomach produce hormones that
stimulate local nerves to send a message to the
brain ? brain signals digestive muscles to
restart the process of peristalsis ? contractions
occur to sweep up any remaining food AND
vibrations in your stomach occur to make you feel
hungry.
8What stimulates our internal/external cues?
- Control by committee
- What factors stimulates our cues?
- Internal __________________________________
- Examples in our GI tract, central nervous
system, general circulation - External __________________________________
- Examples where we are eating, what we are
eating, who we are eating with
9Internal Factors
- Gastrointestinal sensations
- Sense of fullness as the ingested food stretches
your stomach/intestine - Ex sushi and water
- Neurological and hormonal factors
- Neuropeptide Y
- Neuropeptide Y activity can be affected by
signals from ghrelin and leptin ? affects daily
feeding pattern - Ghrelin _______________ hormone from stomach
- Leptin _______________ hormone by adipose cells
10External Factors that affect your Energy Intake
- Diet composition
- Energy density (kcal/g of food)
- Balance of energy sources (carbs, fat, proteins)
- Form (liquid vs. solid)
- Sensory properties
- Taste, texture, color, temperature, presentation
11External Factors
- Portion size
- Super-size culture, McDonalds value meals
- never ending bowl of soup
- Environmental and social factors
- Eat more in cold weather, eat less in hot weather
- Why?
- Hypothalamus
- More people in the group
- Emotional factors
- Eating to cope with stress, low self-esteem,
boredom, low energy levels
12Energy In Regulatory Factors
13How does our bodies use energy?
- Resting energy expenditure or (REE)
- Thermic effect of food (TEF)
- Physical activity (PA)
- REE TEF PA Total Energy Expenditure
14Energy Out Fuel Uses
- Major components of Energy Expenditure
- Resting Energy Expenditure (REE)
- Energy for basic body functions
- Affected by body size, composition, age, and
gender - Physical Activity (PA)
- Highly variable
- Affected by body size, fitness level, and type of
activity - Thermic Effect of Food (TEF)
- Energy to digest, absorb, metabolize food
15How to Calculate your TEE
- Estimating total energy expenditure
- Resting energy expenditure (REE)
- Males 1.0 kcal/kg/hr
- Females 0.9 kcal/kg/hr
- REE weight (kg) x ______ kcal/kg x 24hr/day
- Physical activity
- Estimated by how much an individual with a
certain amount of body weight exercised in a
given time - Refer to Table 8.2
- Thermic effect of food
- 0.1 x (REE physical activity)
16Estimating Energy Expenditure
- Just as there are DRIs for nutrients, there are
also DRIs for energy, called Estimated Energy
Requirement (EER) - Definition energy intake predicted to maintain
energy balance in a healthy person of normal
weight - Equations for males and females
- Factors for age, weight, height, and physical
activity - Predicts total energy expenditure (TEE)
- See Table 8.4 for more details
17Body Composition Understanding Fatness and Weight
- Body composition
- Is the relative amount of fat and lean muscle
mass - Muscle is ________________ than fat
- Assessing body weight
- Body mass index (BMI) Weight (lb) x Height2
(in) - BMI 18.5 kg/m2 underweight
- BMI 18.5 to 25 kg/m2 normal weight
- BMI 25 to 30kg/m2 overweight
- BMI 30 kg/m2 obese
- Q Does BMI indicate how much fat you have?
18Problem Set 8, Question 3
- BMI 704.5 x weight (lb)/height (in2)
- REE for women (weight in kg) x 0.9 x 24
- REE for men (weight in kg) x 1.0 x 24
- TEF 0.1 x (energy from physical activity REE)
- TEE REE energy from physical activity TEF
19How to measure body fatness?
- Can do this because fat and lean tissues have
different densities - DXA Dual Energy X-ray Absorptiometry
- Underwater weighing
- Q If 2 people with the same weight but different
levels of fat were weighed in water, who would
weigh less? - BodPod
- Skinfold measurements
- Bioelectrical impedance
20Overweight and Obesity
- Overweight/Obesity is a major public health
problem - A global problem
- US _________ of American adults are
overweight/obese - Affects adults and youth
- Healthy People 2020 goal to reduce (by 10) the
proportion of adults, adolescents, and children
who are obese
21Factors in Development of Obesity
- Biological
- Genetic/heredity
- Race and Ethnicity
- Fat cell development number and size of fat
cells help determine how easily a person gains or
loses fat. - Hypertrophic obesity
- Hyperplastic obesity
22Hyperplastic vs. Hypertrophic
- Biological, continued
- Sex and Age
- As children boys are less likely than girls to
consider themselves overweight - As adults
- Men men see themselves as overweight at higher
weights - Women women see themselves as overweight at
healthy weight - Men/Women tend to gain most weight between 25-34
years of age
23Factors in Development of Obesity
- Social and environmental
- Socioeconomic status
- Built environment
- Social factors
- Lifestyle and behavior
- Physical activity (ex lack of exercise)
- Psychological factors (ex restrained eaters,
binge eaters)
24Overweight and Obesity
- Health risks of overweight and obesity
- Weight cycling or yo-yo dieting
- Associated with negative effects on health
risks, body composition, body fat distribution,
and energy expenditure. - Prone to future weight gain
25Weight Management
- Weight management is the adoption of healthful
and sustainable eating and exercise behaviors
indicated for reduced disease risk and improved
feelings of energy and well-being.
26Weight Management
- The perception of weight
- 1960s thin was in
- Multiple factors contribute to obesity genetic,
psychological, metabolic, hormonal,
environmental, behavioral, sociocultural - Health professionals emphasize _________________
and f_________________
27Weight Management
- What goals should I set?
- Set realistic and attainable goals
- Aim for metabolic fitness than a specific weight
- Metabolic fitness the absence of all metabolic
and biochemical risk factors associated with
obesity
28The Perception of Weight
29Diet and Eating Habits
- Total calories
- Limiting portion sizes or reducing total calories
intake - Crash diets dont work
- Highly restrictive diet not long-term
- Starving a meal can actually make you hungrier ?
eat more!
30Diet and Eating Habits
- Balancing energy sources fat, carbs, and protein
- Fat 20-25 of total calories
- Eat healthy sources of fat (PUFA) and fiber to
delay satiation - Carbs 45-65 of total calories
- Low sugar foods (ex fresh fruits)
- Protein 10-35 of total calories
- Eating habits
- Regular Physical Activity
31Thinking and Emotions
- Balancing Acceptance and Change
- Initial weight loss ___________ loss
- Weight loss then can slow down to a plateau of
____________ lb/week - Initial loss fluid loss
- Later loss fat loss
32Weight Management Approaches
- Self-help books
- Watch out for signs of a fat diet
- Warnings quick and easy, scientific
breakthrough - Meal replacements
- Slim-fast diet
- Self-help groups
- Help cope with weight
33Weight Management Approaches
- Commercial programs
- 1970s Very-low calorie diet
- Professional counselors
- FDA-approved weight-loss medications
- Appetite suppressants
- Lipase inhibitor
- Effect is modest still encourage exercise low
fat food.
34Weight Management Approaches
- Over-the-counter drugs and dietary supplements
- Does not need FDA approval before marketing
- Pills of caffeine, fiber (dehydration),
benzocaine (numbs tongue to reduce taste
sensations) - Surgery (BMI gt40)
- Last-ditch effort
- Gastric banding (stomach stapling)
- Gastric bypass
35Gastric Bypass Banding
36Weight Management Approaches
- Surgery, cont.
- Liposuction not highly effective because body
still has visceral fat, ready to store extra fat - Risks blood clots, perforation injuries, skin,
nerve damage, etc. - Surgery should be complemented with exercise and
a healthy diet. - Maintaining healthy eating habits is very
important!
37Underweight
- Causes and Assessment
- Altered responses
- Eating disorders factors
- Metabolic and heredity factors
- Prolonged physical and emotional stress
- Addiction to alcohol and street drugs
- Bizarre diet patterns
38Underweight
- Weight gain strategies
- Small, frequent meals
- Fluids between meals
- High-calorie foods and beverages
- Timers or other cues
- similar to ABC model
- Vitamin/mineral supplements