Regaining Weight Bad For The Health
Editor's ChoiceAcademic Journal
Main Category: Obesity / Weight Loss / Fitness
Article Date: 29 Dec 2011 - 0:00 PST
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2.96 (23 votes) |
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3.88 (16 votes) |
| Article Opinions: | 12 posts |
Recent research has shown that even after dieting and losing weight, the body tends to try its best to regain the lost fat stores. Holiday times tend to be tough for those trying to stay trim, and New Year resolutions often don't stick.
Perhaps an article published in the American Journal of Clinical Nutrition will provide some extra incentive. The study shows that older women who lose weight tend to gain it back again as fat not muscle.
Barbara Nicklas, Ph.D., a gerontologist at the J. Paul Sticht Center on Aging and Rehabilitation at Wake Forest Baptist and principal investigator for the study put it rather frankly :
"The body composition of some of the women was worse than before their weight loss ... When older women lose weight, they also lose lean mass. Most women will gain a lot of the weight back, but the majority of the weight regained is fat."
Dr. Nicklas and her colleagues evaluated 78 postmenopausal women with an average age of 58. The women were chosen with a criteria of having lost around twelve percent of their body weight as part of a study from a dieting program. Their change in body mass composition was recorded at the end of the weight loss program, comparing muscle with fat components. It was then measured again six and 12 months later. During the year of study the women did not follow any further weight loss program.
The aim of gathering the data was to establish whether women who regained weight did so in accordance with their original body mass ratios. At the end of the study, 53 of 78 (68 percent) of the women at the six-month follow-up and 52 of 68 (76 percent) the women at the 12-month follow-up had regained some of their lost weight. Eleven women (16 percent) weighed more at the 12-month follow-up than they did at baseline, and 16 (24 percent) women continued losing weight after the intervention.
Of those who regained weight, three quarters gained more than four pounds in the following six months and this number increased to nearly 85% at the twelve month mark. The so called "regainers" were then used to evaluate the type of body mass that constituted their weight gain.
Unfortunately for dieters everywhere, it appears that fat was regained far faster than muscle. At the beginning of the study it was assessed that the weight loss consisted of one third muscle (33%) and two thirds fat (67%), whereas the weight regain showed 81 percent fat and only 19 percent muscle.
As Dr. Nicklas points out :
"Most people will regain their weight after they lose it ... Young people tend to regain weight in the proportion that they lost it. But the older women in our study did not appear to be regaining the muscle that they lost during initial weight loss in the same way."
Post menopausal women already have it tough with hormonal changes and loss of bone density already known to occur, so losing muscle mass, and worse still, replacing it with fat, is probably the last thing they should be doing. It puts the issue of dieting at this age into a certain perspective and might even make those who need to lose weight for health reasons, more likely to consider surgical options with more reliable outcomes. As Dr. Nicklas puts it :
"There are certainly a lot of health benefits to weight loss, if you can keep the weight off ... For older women who lose weight, however, it is particularly important that they keep the weight off and continue to eat protein and stay physically active so that, if the weight does come back, it will be regained as muscle instead of fat."
The researchers cautioned that their study involved only sedentary abdominally obese, postmenopausal women, and the findings may differ in men or in younger populations - obviously future studies are needed to look at other sectors of the population. None the less, it's an interesting and useful study that will help doctors and patients alike to choose weight loss options more wisely. The researchers concluded that :
"Many health complications associated with overweight and obesity are improved with weight loss ... However, negative consequences (such as loss of muscle mass and bone density) are also associated with weight loss and are detrimental for older adults, which results in a reluctance to recommend intentional weight loss in this population...Because lean mass loss in older adults may be associated with the development of adverse health events and disability, it is important to examine whether the benefits of weight loss outweigh the risks in this population."
Nicklas' co-authors are: Kristen M. Beavers, Ph.D., Mary F. Lyles, M.D., Cralen C. Davis, M.S., and Daniel P. Beavers, Ph.D., all of Wake Forest Baptist; and Xuewen Wang, Ph.D., of Washington University School of Medicine, in St. Louis, MO.
Written by Rupert Shepherd
Copyright: Medical News Today
Not to be reproduced without permission of Medical News Today
MLA
23 Feb. 2012. <http://www.medicalnewstoday.com/articles/239740.php>
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http://www.medicalnewstoday.com/articles/239740.php.
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Visitor Opinions In Chronological Order (12)
Stop Smoking
posted by sam on 28 Dec 2011 at 3:25 pmPut on 500 lbs..makes sense
faulty conclusions
posted by Josh Papworth on 28 Dec 2011 at 4:05 pmThis article sure seems to draw some faulty conclusions. While it mentions in one line that "their study involved only sedentary abdominally obese, postmenopausal women", it doesn't seem to highlight the major factor, sedentary. Clearly, these women lost weight by cutting calories, not increasing physical activity. If there is no physical activity during or after the weight loss, of course muscle mass will be lost. And when they end the weight loss program, they begin eating more calories, with no increase in calories burned! Because of this, you cannot draw any sort of reliable conlusion from this study.
Also, the lead-in sentence, "the body tends to try its best to regain the lost fat stores" is not substantiated anywhere in this article. By attempting to infer that the body is actively trying to restore it's fat stores because of a difference in fat/lean ration after weight gain shows a complete lack of understanding of how the body actually functions, and what factors affect weight gain and loss. Lastly, the author seems to have a preference for surgical options, suggesting several times that this study somehow shows surgery to be a better and/or healthier option than proper diet and physical activity.
true health - begin at the beginning
posted by Dot Alexander on 28 Dec 2011 at 4:33 pmThis piece of information is especially valuable for the young, including those caring for children. Once the body has been 'let go' and the molecules have made their home as our physical form, they are resistant to change, just as so many of our attitudes, beliefs, behaviors, and life-styles become a part of us. It's a cautionary tale for anyone who takes our holistic health seriously. Begin at the beginning and the ending will benefit from the commitment to a happier life! It's all a package deal, and we can help ourselves greatly to understand how to stay on the 'healthy and wise track' - as much as possible throughout life, especially those young ones!!!
Vitamin D triggers permanent weight loss
posted by Christina Hare on 28 Dec 2011 at 6:12 pmHigh daily doses of Vitamin D3 (5,000 iu) together with calcium (1000 mg), magnesium (500 mg) and zinc (10 mg) supplements often trigger significant weight loss, especially in individuals with auto-immune conditions such as high blood pressure, type 2 diabetes, rheumatoid arthritis, multiple sclerosis. The weight loss appears to be long-term. It occurs without dieting.
Another way of stating this relationship of weight loss to Vitamin D3 is that individuals lose weight when their 25(OH)D vitamin D test results move higher. Most people are Vitamin D deficient. Optimal levels on the 25(OH)D test for D3 are around 50 ng/ml (also expressed as 125 nanomoles/L). You can ask your doctor for this test. Normal range, according to Kaiser HMO is 30-100 ng/ml. If you want permanent weight loss, try supplementing with Vitamin D3 and a "Calcium-Magnesium-Zinc" supplement. These supplements are inexpensive and available in the dosages indicated above at any big retailer like Walmart, Costco, Target, CVS pharmacies. God bless.
The criminal duplicity of the FDA
posted by cher on 28 Dec 2011 at 6:24 pmThis is terrible news, to allow the FDA the authority to ban the use of HCG for weight loss regimens. There is no evidence to support the negative and stupid errors made about this pharmacopeia item. HCG is not and NEVER was a hormone, since it's basic discovery in endocrine medicine 100 years ago. To adversely cite "hormone" - an inflammatory word as a prohibitive factor and as a "basis" for allowing FDA's unilateral assumption of authority in regulation and basis for denying the sale of HCG rests on a total lie; so it is a toss up between ignorance, wilful pimping for alternative weight loss"programs," and duplicity on the part of spokesman, FDA's Elizabeth Miller
The discoverer and researcher who perfected the HCG weight loss regimen and wrote a definitive textbook on the administration of this weight loss method was an Italian -the famous A.T.W. Simeon, internist working in his Rome, Italy clinic, with tens of thousands of patients on HCG while he standardized the dosage and diet plans for this medically sound weight loss program standards.
They have been duplicated by the 100's of thousands in this country alone. Where in the text of the "banning" and the news stories issued threatening distributors of HCG, is there any mention of the previous worldwide use and standardization of this method? The lies just get bigger and the FDA just looks putrid with outside ties to companies that we the public can only imagine. The payoff there must be great.
Article perpetuating false information.
posted by Frank Truth on 28 Dec 2011 at 6:29 pm"There are certainly a lot of health benefits to weight loss, if you can keep the weight off ... For older women who lose weight, however, it is particularly important that they keep the weight off and continue to eat protein and stay physically active so that, if the weight does come back, it will be regained as muscle instead of fat."
Every study ever done shows dieters can't maintain weight loss. 98% of dieters will regain all their weight and more within two years of starting their diet. The assumption that overweight people can control their weight by voluntarily eating less has been disproven. This article leads obese people to believe that permanment weight loss is possible if only they exercise enough self-discipline. This is simply not true.
A medical program with a 97 percent failure rate
posted by Pan Skeptic on 28 Dec 2011 at 7:21 pmDieting has a 97% failure rate, yet we blame this failure on the patients.
That's bad logic. Obviously the prescription and science underlying it is faulty. Yet the medical field remains clueless. If a doctor doesn't know what to say to a patient, he says "You should probably lose 15 pounds."
Resistance is futile. So is dieting.
what a shocker!
posted by KenLindquist on 29 Dec 2011 at 4:59 amWhen the study involves only"sedentary abdominally obese,postmenopausal women",the fact that after weight loss the re-gained weight is fat!Well,shocking that if you don't exercise and eat right,that your going to gain"fat" again. Boy that's a new idea.......geez!
Good article - regaining lost weight
posted by Diane on 29 Dec 2011 at 5:46 amI'm 55 (women) and lost 35 pounds in 2011. My mom died in October...then my birthday...the holidays...up 15 pounds...with all the emotional eating. This is a great reminder to stick with my weight loss in 2012 eat protein, I also love salmon and sardines...good for omega 3 :) and exersize a little every day so I build muscle. Thanks for the great article. As far as surgery...probably will need a "face lift" because everythings dropping (giggle...)
No exercise?
posted by Dr. J on 29 Dec 2011 at 10:15 amI am not familiar with the study protocol, but I find it disturbing that the study participants were not strongly advised as to the importance of exercise, and specifically strengthening exercises such as using weights or at least body weight to prevent this.
Don't we have more of a mission than just gathering data?
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