Low BMR?
Replies
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Also - the reason I don't go to the doctor to get evaluated for thyroid, blood glucose, PCOS, Cushing's or any other underlying cause .... is that the response I get is ....
"You need to eat less and exercise more. You're taking too much in. If you were eating as little as you say, you wouldn't be so big, etc."
One of the many reasons I'd like to lose weight is so that medical professionals will take my health concerns seriously. When my mother complained of back pain, they told her to "eat less and exercise more". Unfortunately, that advice didn't help her with the actual cause of her back pain: metastatic breast cancer that went undiagnosed because they wouldn't look past her weight for disease.0 -
What's your age? Are you in pre-menopause? Hormones have an effect on metabolism. Also, I find when I'm more active, the weight comes off easier/faster at the same net calories.
I am at 1200 and losing about a pound a week. 5 years ago when I was younger, and had better hormone balance, I lost 2-3 pounds a week at 1200.
I don't want to go lower because I won't be able to sustain that type of low calorie intake for very long. 1200 is a challenge.
I'm 38 now and having some unusual hormone flux under stress. (ovarian cysts and irregular menstrual cycles.)
Feel free to add me.0 -
It really doesn't matter what your BMR is or really even how accurately you log, as long as you're fairly consistent in your mis-estimating. If you're logging 1400 and not losing, you need to eat less.
The issue comes from people thinking the starvation mode and undereating messages apply to all of us and to all our estimates. In either case you fall into, under-estimating or under-burning, you're not going to hurt anything at 1200.0 -
Also - the reason I don't go to the doctor to get evaluated for thyroid, blood glucose, PCOS, Cushing's or any other underlying cause .... is that the response I get is ....
"You need to eat less and exercise more. You're taking too much in. If you were eating as little as you say, you wouldn't be so big, etc."
One of the many reasons I'd like to lose weight is so that medical professionals will take my health concerns seriously. When my mother complained of back pain, they told her to "eat less and exercise more". Unfortunately, that advice didn't help her with the actual cause of her back pain: metastatic breast cancer that went undiagnosed because they wouldn't look past her weight for disease.
Not all doctors are like that though. My mom (who is obese) and my aunt (who is also obese) were both diagnosed with hypothyroidism and lupus. If a doctor isn't listening to your concerns/can't see past your weight, than you should try and find one that will. My mom was actually told that taking meds for her thyroid would help her lose weight.0 -
Mr Knight - you really can't know what % of people are 30% below the stated "average" BMR unless you know the standard deviation of the distribution.Sorry to be picky here, but bad statistics makes my head hurtYou also don't know my body composition.
Yes, I do. You have very high body fat percentage at that weight/height. No two ways about it. At that high level, being within 10 percentage points doesn't matter much.
There's no reason to be confused - the number you need is 1300-1400. This is also consistent with your claimed food intake, whcih is great, because we don't have to assume any violation of the laws of physics. That's always a plus.
Now go forth and be successful - good luck!0 -
One thing you might look into is Calorie Restriction with Optimal Nutrition (CRON). It is a longevity diet based on taking in between 10% to 30% fewer calories than your BMR, but you have to really track all your nutrients because if you are at or below 1200, as you know, it's tough to get in all the micronutrients you need. There's an online tool, the cronometer (www.cronometer.com) that calculates this for you. I have been doing it to a modest extent and found it very helpful to ensure that all the calories I was getting were quality calories. Since you are already tracking using MFP, it is another way of tracking. Unlike some posters on MFP, I don't think you'll become malnourished on 1200 or even 1100 a day. Some people for whatever reason (age, size, metabolism) simply cannot lose on 1400-1500 a day. I personally had trouble staying at 1100 because I work out, but if you're inactive, this might be sustainable for you as long as you're watching your micronutrients.0
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If you can buy a few weights/resistance bands and do even 20 minutes a day of strength training at home you can probably gain a couple pounds of lean muscle. You'll look leaner and you can fairly easily raise your BMR by a couple hundred calories to give yourself more wiggle room for food. Or you could do some bodyweight exercises from a workout video like Jillian michaels body shred (i think the video is available on youtube).0
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People who lose weight with just diet alone have a tendency to stall a lot. As weight goes down, so does BMR but by how much differs from person to person.
So if weight isn't moving on a non exercise program, the usual reasons are:
Inaccuracy of calorie count of intake for lowering weight
Lack of sleep/rest
Hormonal issues start
A.C.E. Certified Group Fitness and Personal Trainer
IDEA Fitness member
Kickboxing Certified Instructor
Been in fitness for 30 years and have studied kinesiology and nutrition0 -
I read thru all these posts and as most chronic dieters already know, everyone is a little different. No one plan will work for every person. No two plans are alike...and more importantly no two resources seem to say the same things.. a few examples would be the calories and protein in a 4 ounce serving of chicken breast skinned and raw. look it up...the calorie variances are there. Also the calories in cooking oils... some resources say this isn't significantly absorbed, some say lower temp oils absorb more and some say it varies by type. Also body calculators.. My best friend in HS and I are the same height and age. At 160 I have noticeably chiseled arms and legs, she looks watery at that weight..
Also subtracting for exercise is a slippery slope.. it should be more starting at a set # of cal and watching your measurements... lots of measurements... bicep, forearm, thigh, calf, waist at smallest and at navel, and hips...neck.. all of them and monitoring how the exercise you do increases the amount of chg you SEE.. muscles learn to compensate.. and exercise counters don't know how your body metabolizes.. or what it's metabolizes. Proteins and fats have to be converted for energy so the yield is less for the ATP in the cells themselves.
I think this thread offered great questions and for some of the questions the answers have to be questions like how are you calculating your data? what factors do you control? what kind of calories are you consuming? what resources do you use?
I have a caveman metabolism, but I found a diet that works for me when I follow it.. The first step has already been taken for all of us, we are here!0 -
Good. Because I *do* know the standard deviation. It's well known, you can look it up in the literature, and that's what I based the numbers on.
Great. If you have a source, please cite it instead of keeping it secret. Then I can evaluate your source against the others I've seen (all of which disagree with yours, but either could be inaccurate because, you know, internet). That way I can also run the statistics or interpret them myself.
For example, this calculator gives me a BMR of 1802: http://www.bodybuilding.com/fun/bmr_calculator.htm
This one, 1755: http://www.myfitnesspal.com/tools/bmr-calculator
Both of these are reputable sites, so honestly I'd take those numbers over the ones given to me by some guy from the internet from a secret source.
Neither has a way of adjusting for "body composition" (you claim to know mine based on my weight alone, which doesn't make any sense), but I'd be interested in seeing a calculator or formula that does.
"I'm right, you're wrong" really doesn't add anything to this (or any other) conversation.0 -
I'd be interested in hearing from anyone who has successfully maintained a diet of 1200 cal OR LESS long-term, and anyone who KNOWS that their BMR is, say, 30% below the typical numbers reported here but has still lost weight and maintained the loss.
the last week in january i began a 1200-1300 calorie diet to lose 20-ish pounds, and based on my projected BMR/RMR numbers i was expecting to lose 1 - 2 pounds a week. but the weight was barely moving, and so i decided that i'd try dropping to 1000 - 1100 cals/day - then the pounds finally started coming off, albeit still at a snail's pace.
a couple months ago i decided to have my BMR tested, and the results were that my BMR is under the lowest 30th percentile for women of my age/weight, and that with a lightly active lifestyle i should aim for 1000 - 1075 calories/day for weight loss. i felt so validated - on the one hand it's kind of sad to hear you really do have a sluggish metabolism, but it exactly meshed with my experience and confirmed the problem wasn't that i was just eating more than i thought.
so yes, it's possible - it was at a rate of only about 2.85 lbs/month, but i managed to lose 23 lbs and get to 18% body fat (bod pod tested). but i did find exercise to be critical - the losing stalled if i couldn't make it to yoga class or for a long walk for a few days.
(by the way, you mentioned in another post that you had had your thyroid tested, but typical thyroid testing doesn't necessarily identify all thyroid issues - some people produce thyroid hormones so their blood panels are fine, but the body isn't able to convert and uptake them to to do their jobs. adrenal fatigue is another culprit in slow metabolism and low energy - and the low energy you mention does make me wonder whether something might be going on. might be work checking out, especially if you also have a low body temperature, are cold all the time, have brittle hair, dry skin, moodiness, difficulty concentrating, muscle aches - well, there are bunches of symptoms, actually.)0 -
One more time - and for the last time - you are using calculators that do no account for your very high levels of body fat. You do not have a "low" BMR, you have completely incorrect expectations for what a normal BMR should be.
Your original question has been answered multiple times in multiple ways - you are using the calculators incorrectly - and I'm sorry if you don't like the answer, but I'm not responsible for your belief choices.
Good luck to you. Genuinely. Because based on this thread, you're really going to need a lot of it.0 -
Some of the BMR estimates have large populations of Italian conscripts from the 30s and similar population groups, they didn't have any 240 lb women so the straight line drawn through that population is horribly extrapolated to where some people are today.
240 lb = 140 lb with a 100 lb fat suit on, not an extra 100 lb of metabolic furnace pro rata with the Italian conscripts.
1386 ± 254 kcal/day for obese women in http://ajcn.nutrition.org/content/37/4/595.full.pdf
During weight loss and calorie restriction the RMR reduces by several percent as well http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S01406736899013350 -
YES - my bariatric surgeon tested my BMR and it is the lowest he's seen in a long time (I can't say I'm surprised).
I did lose a substantial amount of weight by eating around 1200 6 days/week (with mexican food as my cheat meal on Sunday that pushed me over), and ran 3+ miles/day. However, at my lowest weight, I got sick and ate more and exercised less and gained A LOT of weight back. After doing a lot of research, I'm gathering that this is because I didn't have as much muscle mass as I needed to keep burning what I was eating, without the cardio.
My advice to you is to do whatever you can to build muscle. Lift things around your house when you can if you don't have time to go to the gym, work in your garden, or do body weight exercises like squats, push ups, sit ups, etc. Hopefully this kicks your metabolism up, increases your BMR, and you burn more even just at rest.
Hope this helps!0 -
I do think it's possible. You should follow the advice about tracking and double-check your methods. But if you feel that's all good, experiment with ~5-10% cal reductions until you find a number where you're averaging a healthy weekly loss.
Experimentation really is a catch-all. If you're not logging accurately, even after your best efforts, you're reducing the amount of calories you're *actually* eating, which will generate losses. If you really do have some slight variation that's outside the range of what the usual calculators have you at, then you'll have reduced intake into the range that's right for you, which will generate losses. The big key is to be consistent, and give it time to work. Don't go overboard and slash a ton at once. Just go little by little, and see what happens with a week or two to judge. The cool thing is that once you know your number, it should change in a predictable way as you lose fat. You won't be "guessing" anymore.0 -
I wanted to go out and look at your food diary but it is private. Having spent a year trying to undo the damage to my body and metabolism that MANY years of Yo-Yo dieting have done I have faced many issues. Without looking at your Macros I can not give you specific advice, BUT I can give you some things to look at.
1. Lift Weights. Lifting weights (Heavy weights) are a great way to get the metabolism going and building lean body mass which also increases your metabolism
2. Look into HIIT Training. High Intensity Interval Training is also very good for metabolism and the continual change in intensity helps to get your body back on to a normal track.
3. Check your macros - Make sure you are eating enough protein (.8 - 1 gram per lb of lean body) and watch the Carbs (if you have medical issues such as early diabetis, or just a Carb Insenitify this can play wild with your hormones that control fat release.
4. Watch for food allergies that cause inflamation in the Body. (i.e. weigh in every day and if you see an increase in weight, look at your food sheet and look for high sodium. If you do not have high sodium did you eat something different? There is a chance you could have an allergic reaction to it)
5. If all else fails, add more exercase (whatever you can do) to create a greater deficit if you can not reduce your eating to create the deficit.
Good luck!0 -
As for "you're not measuring right" - again, I'll repeat. I am 240 lbs. Do we really think that if I track my steak salad as containing 4 oz instead of 3 oz of sirloin ... that THIS is the reason I haven't lost weight while cutting my intake in half last month?But also - I'm a data person, and I make my own food almost all of the time. The measurements are as correct as they can be. A 12 oz sirloin chopped into slices and divided equally onto 4 plates is ... 3 oz. I track every bite (though I missed a day when I was on a hiking trail out of cell phone reach).
Yes, it could be. Unless you're using a digital scale to measure that the steak was exactly 12 ounces, then cutting it in 4 portions and eating those 4 portions over the course of the following days all by yourself.
Otherwise you're just guesstimating. And 100 calories here, 50 calories there will add up and will result in the dreaded "you're eating more than you think."
I know you don't want to hear that. But it's just something to consider. Apologize if I missed it, but do you use a digital scale? If so, disregard my comment. :flowerforyou:0 -
I wanted to go out and look at your food diary but it is private. Having spent a year trying to undo the damage to my body and metabolism that MANY years of Yo-Yo dieting have done I have faced many issues. Without looking at your Macros I can not give you specific advice, BUT I can give you some things to look at.
1. Lift Weights. Lifting weights (Heavy weights) are a great way to get the metabolism going and building lean body mass which also increases your metabolism
2. Look into HIIT Training. High Intensity Interval Training is also very good for metabolism and the continual change in intensity helps to get your body back on to a normal track.
3. Check your macros - Make sure you are eating enough protein (.8 - 1 gram per lb of lean body) and watch the Carbs (if you have medical issues such as early diabetis, or just a Carb Insenitify this can play wild with your hormones that control fat release.
4. Watch for food allergies that cause inflamation in the Body. (i.e. weigh in every day and if you see an increase in weight, look at your food sheet and look for high sodium. If you do not have high sodium did you eat something different? There is a chance you could have an allergic reaction to it)
5. If all else fails, add more exercase (whatever you can do) to create a greater deficit if you can not reduce your eating to create the deficit.
Good luck!
Thanks - friending you so you can take a look. Although note that last week I was on vacation so there's all kinds of crappy food that I'm not generally eating - I had good days and bad days trying to navigate restaurant meals, and there's definitely a lot of guesswork. Back home and back on the wagon now0 -
Its hard to really help much without seeing your stats and diary, the only data you have available is a 7lb loss left to go? If you are close to your ideal weight, it becomes more and more difficult to lose those last pounds, your margin of error gets smaller and smaller and this may be the biggest issue. I would work on lifting weights, great for your health in any case, plus it will help to change your body composition, and maybe throw the balance towards weight loss.
You may want to re-consider dismissing people who go to the most likely answer first though. Its purely good logic to assume someone is not recording/measuring correctly, since when this is studied, everyone, including nutritionists, who's job it is to accurately track, have been found to under estimate! Many studies have shown this, and I find it even in myself (I have no reason to lie to myself, but I'm constantly finding myself forgetting a small portion of this or that later, who knows what I don't catch...). I myself should always lose faster according to my numbers, and if I never caught myself forgetting to log this or that, "low metabolism" would be an easy explanation for it, and the one I'd jump to if I didn't think I had any other possible errors. But I happen to know I accidentally forget things, since I am retrospective and re-check things for errors in my mind, I find I actually just eat more than I log. Sometimes in going what I ate for today, I remember a food and...oh wait...that was yesterday and ....nope, not in my diary! In fact, I may have a HIGHER than average metabolism if anything...
The important point is not to feel bad about possibly being wrong, just figure out what you can do to compensate for an error. Whether you want to call it "low metabolism" or "oops I screwed up logging again", it doesn't matter...if you compensate for it, you lose...so add some more exercise to the equation, walk up stairs more, add a few walks per week, etc and eventually you will balance out wherever your error is coming from. I purposefully decrease my calorie burns here and there when I exercise. This compensates for my errors nicely at times. Whether it be the same error every other person has, or maybe you are an extremely rare case who accurately logs everything and has a low metabolism, it doesn't matter, you know there *is* an error, so just compensate for the error!0 -
I really feel your pain because I can't seem to budge but I also am really close to my goal weight. If you don't want to miss family time then take family time to the pool or to the park and you can interval run for say 15 minutes? HIIT exercise are meant tto target zones for those that do not have time. There is no one on earth that has so little time for excercse-situp, pushups crunches then mix it up buy a timer and build up your stats. You sound to me to be more stocky than musckly so jump roping or turbo intervals out at the park can really boost your heart rate and a personal trainer/colleague has told us in class that your heart is the number one muscle to work to burn fat-if your rate rate isn't not up for a long enough times then your not doing much to lose weight...0
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I really feel your pain because I can't seem to budge but I also am really close to my goal weight. If you don't want to miss family time then take family time to the pool or to the park and you can interval run for say 15 minutes? HIIT exercise are meant tto target zones for those that do not have time. There is no one on earth that has so little time for excercse-situp, pushups crunches then mix it up buy a timer and build up your stats. You sound to me to be more stocky than musckly so jump roping or turbo intervals out at the park can really boost your heart rate and a personal trainer/colleague has told us in class that your heart is the number one muscle to work to burn fat-if your rate rate isn't not up for a long enough times then your not doing much to lose weight...
I know you will probably think I'm attacking you but I'm not: if your personal trainer told you you can't burn fat if your heart rate isn't high enough, and HIIT is "meant to target zones for those who do not have time", he's not a very good personal trainer, sorry Maybe that's why you aren't losing, bad advice from your trainer.0 -
I've put my numbers into several BMR calculators and come up with anywhere from 950-1120. At 59, 5'1" and 104 pounds, I clearly don't need too much to maintain. But with exercise and high general physical activity (I teach junior high), I have managed to stay the same weight for almost 2 years eating between 1400-1500 calories.0
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Have you tried changing your macros? That could help you stay satiated longer and fuel your body more effectively. Not sure what your diary looks like, but you can tweak your protein/fat/carb ratios and up the protein and/or fat a little. And make sure you're getting enough fiber--at least 25 grams/day. That can help with your hunger issues too.
As can staying hydrated. Sometimes thirst masquerades as hunger. I go through at least 3 32oz bottles/day. Two are green tea, one is a protein shake for my workouts.
My BMR/RMR are low, due to my hypothyroidism. I was tested before it went kaput and then did it again after, just for jollies. Not a shocker for me. I'm 5'3 and about 128 (now--I was about 200). I am extremely active and love working out. I also have a standing desk at work which helps my back immensely (it gets cranky). Any movement you can fit in would help. Walking stairs on a break, using a printer far from your desk or parking your car farther from your office. Tiny tweaks can make a difference. You could try a pedometer and challenge yourself to get some steps.
I do much better with a higher amount of protein. I make really careful choices about my foods (for the most part). I buy low carb/high protein/high fiber bread, I eat veggies and beans, eggs and egg whites. And protein powder. And dark chocolate (sweetened with stevia) and peanut butter. I'm not perfect, by any means, but my food choices work for me. It did take me a while to figure out.
Hang in there--you'll get it!0 -
Hi - looking to hear from anyone who knows that their BMR is substantially lower than it "should" be according to the numbers but has still had success.
I've been doing counting/tracking for 4 weeks with no success, basically losing and regaining the same 3 lbs over and over. So that means at my current level (eating 1400-1500 cal/day), I'm maintaining. I eat a good variety of healthy and nutritious foods (vegetables, limited fruit, lean meat, one egg per day, fat-and-sugar-free dairy), but have to choose very carefully in order to not get overwhelmed with hunger. I either have entire days of salad/stirfry or else basically eat very little all day if I know dinner is going to be big. As long as I'm at home (not travelling), I can maintain that. I think I could find an extra 200 calories/day to cut out (if I totally gave up alcohol, which I use as my 'treat' at the end of the day if I have calories left over). After that, it would be challenging to maintain long-term. I need a program I can live with, no matter what else is going on in my life.
I'd be interested in hearing from anyone who has successfully maintained a diet of 1200 cal OR LESS long-term, and anyone who KNOWS that their BMR is, say, 30% below the typical numbers reported here but has still lost weight and maintained the loss.
Not interested in hearing from anyone whose immediate assumption is that I'm not tracking everything I eat, or who will accuse me of lying. You're welcome to your opinions, and please keep them to yourself. My diary is open to friends so please feel free to introduce yourself, add me, and take a look.
Z
I sympathise. My BMR is allegedly 1,350. From trial and error, I'm maintaining around the1,200 (net) mark.
All the bumpf says an average woman needs 2,000 calories a day. No wonder I was fat before, I don't need that much. Even on exercise days, I can't eat 2,000 (gross).
Given how long I've been logging and weighing (both daily), I know what the sweet spot is. It's sadly very low for me.0 -
I really feel your pain because I can't seem to budge but I also am really close to my goal weight. If you don't want to miss family time then take family time to the pool or to the park and you can interval run for say 15 minutes? HIIT exercise are meant tto target zones for those that do not have time. There is no one on earth that has so little time for excercse-situp, pushups crunches then mix it up buy a timer and build up your stats. You sound to me to be more stocky than musckly so jump roping or turbo intervals out at the park can really boost your heart rate and a personal trainer/colleague has told us in class that your heart is the number one muscle to work to burn fat-if your rate rate isn't not up for a long enough times then your not doing much to lose weight...
I know you will probably think I'm attacking you but I'm not: if your personal trainer told you you can't burn fat if your heart rate isn't high enough, and HIIT is "meant to target zones for those who do not have time", he's not a very good personal trainer, sorry Maybe that's why you aren't losing, bad advice from your trainer.0
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