Interactions between energy intake and expenditure in the development and treatment of obesity.
Contribuinte(s) |
Medeiros-Neto, Geraldo Halpern, Alfredo Bouchard, Claude |
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Data(s) |
2003
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Resumo |
Summary There are four interactions to consider between energy intake (EI) and energy expenditure (EE) in the development and treatment of obesity. (1) Does sedentariness alter levels of EI or subsequent EE? and (2) Do high levels of EI alter physical activity or exercise? (3) Do exercise-induced increases in EE drive EI upwards and undermine dietary approaches to weight management and (4) Do low levels of EI elevate or decrease EE? There is little evidence that sedentariness alters levels of EI. This lack of cross-talk between altered EE and EI appears to promote a positive EB. Lifestyle studies also suggest that a sedentary routine actually offers the opportunity for over-consumption. Substantive changes in non exercise activity thermogenesis are feasible, but not clearly demonstrated. Cross talk between elevated EE and EI is initially too weak and takes too long to activate, to seriously threaten dietary approaches to weight management. It appears that substantial fat loss is possible before intake begins to track a sustained elevation of EE. There is more evidence that low levels of EI does lower physical activity levels, in relatively lean men under conditions of acute or prolonged semi-starvation and in dieting obese subjects. During altered EB there are a number of small but significant changes in the components of EE, including (i) sleeping and basal metabolic rate, (ii) energy cost of weight change alters as weight is gained or lost, (iii) exercise efficiency, (iv) energy cost of weight bearing activities, (v) during substantive overfeeding diet composition (fat versus carbohydrate) will influence the energy cost of nutrient storage by ~ 15%. The responses (i-v) above are all “obligatory” responses. Altered EB can also stimulate facultative behavioural responses, as a consequence of cross-talk between EI and EE. Altered EB will lead to changes in the mode duration and intensity of physical activities. Feeding behaviour can also change. The degree of inter-individual variability in these responses will define the scope within which various mechanisms of EB compensation can operate. The relative importance of “obligatory” versus facultative, behavioural responses -as components of EB control- need to be defined. |
Formato |
application/msword |
Identificador | |
Publicador |
John Libbey & Co. Ltd. |
Relação |
http://eprints.qut.edu.au/35653/1/ICO_2002_paper._submit.doc http://books.google.com.au/books?hl=en&lr=&id=SD_QX7x366MC&oi=fnd&pg=PA418&dq=Interactions+between+energy+intake+and+expenditure+in+the+development+and+treatment+of+obesity.&ots=42wAJ0DORj&sig=PUktTlWJwGxEez7dcywGN8GmcsQ#v=onepage&q=Interactions%20between Stubbs, R. James, Hughes, Darren A., Johnstone, Alexandra M., Horgen, Graham, King, Neil A., Elia, Marinos, & Blundell, John E. (2003) Interactions between energy intake and expenditure in the development and treatment of obesity. In Medeiros-Neto, Geraldo, Halpern, Alfredo, & Bouchard, Claude (Eds.) Progress in Obesity Research:9. John Libbey & Co. Ltd., United Kingdom, Surrey, pp. 418-425. |
Direitos |
Copyright © 2007 John Libbey Eurotext All rights reserved. Unauthorised duplication contravenes applicable laws |
Fonte |
Faculty of Health; Institute of Health and Biomedical Innovation; School of Exercise & Nutrition Sciences |
Palavras-Chave | #110600 HUMAN MOVEMENT AND SPORTS SCIENCE #111100 NUTRITION AND DIETETICS #Energy Intake #Sedantary Lifestyle |
Tipo |
Book Chapter |