Saturday, 12 March 2016

Exercising 'better than dieting for cutting calories

A new study has shed light on the effects of dieting in relation to losing weight.

Researchers at Loughborough University have found that exercising is more effective than dieting in limiting how many calories a person eats.

The pilot study set out to investigate how exercising and restricting diet changed a woman’s physical and behavioral responses to food.

12 women were first asked to restrict their diet by 3,500 kilojoules, or around 836 calories, for 8 hours. They were then invited to eat as much as they liked at a buffet, where researchers secretly measured what they consumed.

Following this, the researchers then asked the women to burn the same amount of calories they had previously removed from their diet with exercise lasting 90 minutes.

After exercising, the women Health and Fitness were then again invited to eat freely at a buffet.

The results showed that women ate 944 calories on average at the buffet when they restricted their diets, compared with 660 after exercising.

This is thought to be because limiting food intake causes a spike in the hunger hormone ghrelin and a drop in levels petitide YY, which suppresses hunger.

Dr Stensel, a Reader in Exercise Metabolism in Lough borough’s School of Sport, Exercise and Health Sciences, said: “We’ve shown that exercise does not make you hungrier or encourage you to eat more - at least not in the hours immediately following it. Our next step is to see whether this benefit continues beyond the first day of exercise.”

The amount of exercise you need to do to lose weight is beyond most people. This study highlights the level of self-motivation needed to lose weight, you are fighting physiology by eating less.

[Source: http://www.standard.co.uk/lifestyle/health/exercising-better-than-dieting-for-cutting-calories-suggests-study-a3201596.html]

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