This article originally posted 20 February, 2007 and appeared in Issue 352
Shedding Pounds from Diet or Exercise—Take Your Pick
People looking to lose those extra pounds have been told for decades that dieting together with exercise will bring about the best results. Not so, says new research.
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New research revealed that dieting alone is as effective as dieting plus exercise.
The key is in the calories and the study shows that calories can be lost effectively
by either dietary restrictions or exercise.
“For weight loss to occur, an individual needs to maintain a difference
between the number of calories they consume everyday and the number of calories
they burn through metabolism and physical activity,” says Leanne Redman,
Ph.D., first author of the study and clinical research fellow at the Pennington
Biomedical Research Center in Baton Rouge, La. “What we found was that
it did not matter whether a reduction in calories was achieved through diet
or burned everyday through exercise.”
The researchers conducted a randomized, controlled trial to examine the effects
of diet alone or diet plus exercise in overweight but otherwise healthy study
participants. The participants were divided into three groups. One group only
reduced caloric intake. A second group reduced caloric intake by a smaller amount,
but included exercise as part of their program, and a third set of participants
served as a control group. They were all followed for a six-month period.
At the end of the study, the reduced caloric intake group and the group that
combined a smaller amount of reduced calories with exercise had similar results.
Members of both groups lost roughly 10 percent of their body weight, 24 percent
of their fat mass and 27 percent of their abdominal visceral fat, which is fat
buried deep in the abdomen and linked to heart disease risk.
The shape of a person’s body, as well as their body weight can be indicators
of their risk for cardiovascular disease. Some studies have shown that people
with “apple shaped” bodies, or more fat distributed at the waistline
may have a higher risk of heart disease than people with “pear shaped”
bodies, or more fat at the thigh or hips.
“Researchers are working to understand how abdominal fat and subcutaneous
fat, which is fat located closer to the surface just beneath the skin, differ
in response to the body’s need to use fat for energy,” says Sherry
Marts, Ph.D., vice president of scientific affairs for the Society for Women’s
Health Research in Washington, D.C. “It is known that, on the whole, pre-menopausal
women who gain fat add it to the subcutaneous fat, mostly on the hips and thighs.
Men and women after menopause, tend to add fat to the deeper reserves in the
abdominal area.”
Increased levels of fat in the abdomen are linked to a higher risk of cardiovascular
disease, but the precise influence of this visceral fat is not yet understood.
Despite the fact that weight loss can be achieved equally through diet or
fitness, according to the study, both are important for a person’s overall
health. Weight loss isn’t the only reason to diet and exercise. Regular
exercise has been shown to lower your risk for many diseases including: heart
disease, type 2 diabetes and certain types of cancer. In addition, many experts
recommend that permanent weight loss should be achieved with consistent dietary
restrictions, low-caloric and low-fat foods, and regular exercise.
But if you’re looking to tone certain areas of your body with exercise,
think again! The researchers also discovered that fat distribution was not affected
by either approach. The exercise group was not able to eliminate fat in certain
parts of the body: so much for sit ups!
“We found that fat is reduced consistently across the whole body and
not more in any one part,” says Redman. “We found some evidence
in other studies that suggested the way in which we store fat is linked to our
genetics and our study then would indicate that weight loss cannot override
the way in which any individual stores fat. Perhaps an apple will always be
an apple, and a pear, a pear!”
Researchers are now trying to determine how sex hormones and being a man or
a woman affect fat distribution. “The roles of hormones,” Marts
said, “such as estrogen, progesterone and testosterone in fat deposition
and loss are not yet understood, but research in this field is advancing rapidly.”
The answers to those questions may hold the keys to a healthier life for everyone.
Redman, L, Ravussin E. Effect of calorie restriction with or without exercise
on body composition and fat distribution. Journal of Clinical Endocrinology
& Metabolism, doi:10.1210/jc.2006-2184.
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Dr. Bernstein will be doing another live teleconference on February
27, 2007. If you would like to ask a question or just register for
the free teleconference call, just go to http://www.diabetes911.net/askdrb/index.php
and register. There were over 600 people on the last call. More info at http://www.diabetes911.net/askdrb/index.php
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