As with so many other
things in life, exercise may work best if you follow the Goldilocks rule:
exercise neither too little nor too much, if your goal is to shed extra weight,
a new study finds.
Previous research has shown
that exercise alone doesn’t reliably lead to weight loss — without accompanying
restrictions in diet — a dismaying fact that many hopeful weight-losers know
firsthand. But a recent Danish study suggests that physical activity can indeed
help shrink your pants size, so long as you hit the sweet spot — perhaps
somewhere around a half-hour a day, at least for young men.
For the study,
researchers at the University of Copenhagen recruited 61 sedentary and
moderately overweight men, mostly in their 20s and early 30s, and randomly
assigned them to one of three groups: a control group that remained sedentary
with no changes to diet or activity; another group that took up a
30-minutes-a-day routine of moderate exercise like jogging or biking (each
participant worked out for either half an hour or until he burned 300
calories); or a third group that exercised more vigorously, for an hour a day
or until they burned 600 calories.
Before launching into the
13-week exercise regimen, all the men underwent a baseline checkup to gauge
their overall health and fitness: all were overweight but not obese, and they
were metabolically healthy. During the 13 weeks, the men were instructed not to
make any purposeful changes to their eating habits; they also kept food diaries
that the researchers checked later, and on certain days they wore motion
sensors to track how much activity they were engaging in outside of their
exercise routines.
By the end of the 13
weeks, the results were both expected and unexpected, the researchers reported.
Not surprisingly, the sedentary group saw no changes in their weight. The men
in the high-intensity exercise group lost an average of 5 lbs., but while
weight loss was expected, the researchers said these men lost about 20% less
than they would have anticipated, given how many extra calories they were
burning. Even more surprising were the results from the moderate exercise
group: these men lost an average of 7 lbs. each, 83% more than what the
researchers would have guessed based on calorie expenditure alone.
So, what happened? It’s
not entirely clear from the study, but lead researcher Mads Rosenkilde had some
theories, according to the New York Times. First, the intense exercisers
were probably compensating for their extra activity by eating more food.
Although the added consumption noted in their food diaries wasn’t enough to
explain their smaller-than-expected weight loss, Rosenkilde thinks they were
likely eating more food than they jotted down. In addition, data from the
motion sensors showed that the men who exercised the most were sedentary when
they weren’t working out; they spent most of their free time sitting, probably
because they were tired, Rosenkilde said.
In contrast, the men who
exercised for 30 minutes at at time became more active throughout the
day, probably opting to take the stairs instead of the elevator, for instance,
and moving more in general, Rosenkilde said. “It was little things, but they
add up,” Rosenkilde told the
Times.
Overall, Rosenkilde
concluded, people who exercise less may end up burning just enough calories to
lose weight, but not enough to feel compelled to replace them, either by eating
more or remaining sedentary otherwise. Those who exercise a lot, on the other
hand, may feel more drained, which prompts them to compensate.
The findings are
intriguing, but it’s hard to say how generalizable they are to groups other
than young, healthy men. It’s also not known how exercise may impact weight
loss over the long term. The Times reports:
The study also was short-term, and the results might
shift over the course of, say, a year of continued exercise, Mr. Rosenkilde
says. The men working out for 60 minutes were, after all, packing on some
muscle, while the 30-minute exercisers were not. That extra muscle offset some
of the vigorous exercisers’ weight loss in the short term — they sloughed off
fat but added muscle, decreasing their net loss — but over the longer term it
could amp up their metabolism, aiding in weight control.
Health Land
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