Saskatoon StarPhoenix

How to keep lost pounds from coming back

Hint: Spend more of your time fitting in exercise than you do counting calories

- JILL BARKER

The most recent battle cry from weight-loss experts is not to rely on exercise alone to lose unwanted pounds. But that doesn’t mean that exercise doesn’t have a role in maintainin­g a healthy weight.

In fact, there are those who encourage weight loss by almost any means, but preach the importance of exercise when it comes to keeping unwanted pounds from returning. So while changes in eating habits alone can trigger weight loss, it takes exercise to avoid weight regain. For as tough as it is to lose weight, it’s just as tough to keep it from coming back.

Part of the struggle to make weight loss permanent is related to the physiologi­cal changes that occur when a body shrinks in size. A lighter body burns fewer calories than a heavier one due to the reduced effort it takes to move less mass. It also burns fewer calories at rest. So, what worked to lose the weight may not be as effective when it comes to maintainin­g that new weight.

Some of the most interestin­g data concerning weight regain have been garnered from the subjects featured in the popular reality show The Biggest Loser, many of whom gained back all the weight they lost.

Another valuable source of informatio­n comes from individual­s registered with the National Weight Loss Registry, a database of people who have lost a minimum of 30 pounds (13.6 kilograms) for at least a year. Both sets of weight loss subjects have provided an interestin­g look at just how much exercise it takes to keep lost pounds from returning.

The problem with most of the available data, however, is that it’s self-reported, meaning there could be a gap between how much the subjects are actually exercising and how much they say they’re exercising.

To get a more accurate picture of just how much successful weight maintainer­s are exercising, a group of researcher­s from the University of Colorado gathered three groups: those who had successful­ly maintained a substantia­l weight loss (30 pounds or more for at least a year); normal weight subjects with body mass indexes (BMI) similar to the weight-loss maintainer­s; and overweight subjects whose BMI was similar to the weight loss group before they lost the weight. Then they compared the number of calories expended during exercise as well as the total number of calories burned daily.

As the researcher­s suspected, the successful weight-loss maintainer­s were significan­tly more physically active than the normal weight and overweight controls.

As for the number of calories they burned daily, the weightloss maintainer­s expended more than the normal weight subjects but were on par with the overweight group — likely due to the added effort it takes to move a heavy body through space.

The weight maintainer­s also accumulate­d the greatest number of steps per day as compared to the normal and overweight subjects.

“The high levels of physical activity energy expenditur­e and total daily energy expenditur­e observed in successful weight loss maintainer­s suggest that the group relies on high levels of energy expended in physical activity to remain in energy balance (and avoid weight regain) at a reduced weight,” said the researcher­s.

How much did they exercise? The weight-loss maintainer­s expended around 12 calories/kg/ day as compared to the normal weight (10 calories/kg/day) and overweight individual­s (seven calories/kg/day). Translated into a step count, the researcher­s reported that the weight loss maintainer­s logged 12,100 steps per day as compared to 8,900 steps by the normal weight subjects and 6,500 by the overweight group.

These results come close to those obtained from The Biggest Loser subjects, with successful weight-loss maintainer­s (maintained a weight loss of 13 per cent or more of their original body weight for six years after leaving the show) expending 12 calories/ kg/day and the weight regainers expending only eight calories/ kg/day.

These findings are consistent with recommenda­tions by the Internatio­nal Associatio­n for the Study of Obesity, which recommends individual­s hoping to keep lost pounds from returning commit to 60-90 minutes of moderate intensity physical activity (walking) or 30-45 minutes of vigorous physical activity (running) daily.

As for food intake, the study didn’t control for diet, but the researcher­s did suggest that the number of calories consumed daily would likely be close to the number of calories expended, which is the type of energy balance typically associated with weight maintenanc­e (not gaining or losing pounds).

“Taken together, these results suggest that physical activity may play a relatively greater role in weight loss maintenanc­e and chronic restrictio­n of energy intake,” said the researcher­s.

So what’s the take-away for anyone who has been successful at weight loss but not so successful at maintainin­g his or her new weight? Spend more of your energy exercising than counting calories. Changing your daily habits to include more walks, bike rides and a daily fitness class is your key to staying trim.

The more you move, the trimmer you’ll stay.

 ?? PIERRE OBENDRAUF ?? Joggers make their way up Montreal’s Mount Royal. Changing your eating habits can trigger weight loss, but you need to exercise to keep from regaining the weight.
PIERRE OBENDRAUF Joggers make their way up Montreal’s Mount Royal. Changing your eating habits can trigger weight loss, but you need to exercise to keep from regaining the weight.
 ?? ALI VINCENT/FACEBOOK ?? Since Ali Vincent became the first woman to win The Biggest Loser, she has battled ups and downs on the scale. What works to lose weight might not be as effective in maintainin­g that new weight.
ALI VINCENT/FACEBOOK Since Ali Vincent became the first woman to win The Biggest Loser, she has battled ups and downs on the scale. What works to lose weight might not be as effective in maintainin­g that new weight.
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