Calorie requirements for a thin person vs someone who lost weight to become thin.
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Apparently people who have lost weight have a lower NEAT (non-exercise activity thermogenesis) which is made up of little calorie burns like fidgeting. The body subconsciously is always trying to conserve energy after weight loss without you even realizing. I don't think there are/know of studies that follow people long term, so hopefully eventually this effect dissipates. One can hope!0
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Not sure about the science but anecdotaly, I have seen this to be true. I know for a fact that I have to eat significantly less than other women of a similar height and weight in order to maintain my weight.0
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Alligator423 wrote: »Apparently people who have lost weight have a lower NEAT (non-exercise activity thermogenesis) which is made up of little calorie burns like fidgeting. The body subconsciously is always trying to conserve energy after weight loss without you even realizing. I don't think there are/know of studies that follow people long term, so hopefully eventually this effect dissipates. One can hope!
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Outside of differences in lean body mass or activity level, the idea never makes a bit of evolutionary sense.
If your body can just choose to use less calories, why would it ever use more? We evolved an upright gait, with all the back problems that go with and reduced speed, all to save 4 calories per km walking, but we have an energy saver mode we only turn on after we suffer our first feast then famine cycle? What?0 -
Outside of differences in lean body mass or activity level, the idea never makes a bit of evolutionary sense.
If your body can just choose to use less calories, why would it ever use more? We evolved an upright gait, with all the back problems that go with and reduced speed, all to save 4 calories per km walking, but we have an energy saver mode we only turn on after we suffer our first feast then famine cycle? What?
You have to force your body to build muscle. It's not the default. I don't think it's that outrageous that the default isn't to be hyper-efficient unless circumstances nudge you toward it. It may well not be a zero-cost adaptation, even if it is a good adaptation to deal with less access to food.
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You're underestimating the role of genetics. This study found that obese people burn 60 percent less calories than non obese people in response to exercise after taking into consideration body composition, just as an example. I think I remember seeing that some people burn 3 times as much per pound of resting lean muscle than others.
http://rnd.edpsciences.org/articles/rnd/abs/2005/02/r5205/r5205.htmlI would think this would have to do with the amount of lean mass the two people have. All things equal the one with the lower BF% would have higher caloric requirements. Other than that, there could be genetic reasons for the difference, though the amount should not be large, unless there is a medical/hormonal issue going on.0 -
Outside of differences in lean body mass or activity level, the idea never makes a bit of evolutionary sense.
If your body can just choose to use less calories, why would it ever use more? We evolved an upright gait, with all the back problems that go with and reduced speed, all to save 4 calories per km walking, but we have an energy saver mode we only turn on after we suffer our first feast then famine cycle? What?
Well, you could argue that people who weigh more already have more efficient metabolisms and that they just maintain these efficient metabolisms after lost weight. It's the skinny people whose metabolisms are inefficient. Then the famine cycle stimulates changes in hormones to encourage more feeding like the body has become used to.
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eclenden01 wrote: »You're underestimating the role of genetics. This study found that obese people burn 60 percent less calories than non obese people in response to exercise after taking into consideration body composition, just as an example. I think I remember seeing that some people burn 3 times as much per pound of resting lean muscle than others.
http://rnd.edpsciences.org/articles/rnd/abs/2005/02/r5205/r5205.htmlI would think this would have to do with the amount of lean mass the two people have. All things equal the one with the lower BF% would have higher caloric requirements. Other than that, there could be genetic reasons for the difference, though the amount should not be large, unless there is a medical/hormonal issue going on.
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eclenden01 wrote: »You're underestimating the role of genetics. This study found that obese people burn 60 percent less calories than non obese people in response to exercise after taking into consideration body composition, just as an example. I think I remember seeing that some people burn 3 times as much per pound of resting lean muscle than others.
http://rnd.edpsciences.org/articles/rnd/abs/2005/02/r5205/r5205.htmlI would think this would have to do with the amount of lean mass the two people have. All things equal the one with the lower BF% would have higher caloric requirements. Other than that, there could be genetic reasons for the difference, though the amount should not be large, unless there is a medical/hormonal issue going on.
Was this adjusted for fitness level? I would assume the "thin" person would have been in better shape, meaning their V02 Max would be higher (moving more oxygen), which in turn burns more calories. Fitness plays a huge role in exercise calories, when it comes to BMR I would venture to guess that there is probably no more than a 10-15% difference if same weight and amount of lean body mass, assuming same age, gender, height, unless of course one has something like Hypothyroidism or Hyperthyroidism, or PCOS, etc., due to genetics alone.0 -
I think that somebody mentioned earlier about LBM after weight loss. I think too much emphasis is put on weight loss instead of fat loss, therefore when people reach their goal weight they are not aware of how much it effects their metabolism after losing so much muscle as well as fat. Think of people that are classed as skinny fat compared to people with a lower BF measurement, same clothes size but skinny fat weighs less. As their LBM is so different to the person with the lower BF will have a higher metabolism. Moral of the story is when losing weight concentrate of losing fat not muscle by strength training and feeding your muscles with enough protein. Think about what clothes size you want to be not what you want the scales to read.0
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I guess at the end of the day, it doesn't help much to dwell on genetic/metabolic disadvantage but I think it's important to recognize that those BMR calculators don't apply accurately to everyone... Some people are going to have to eat more or less than others at equal weight and it isn't always because they don't know how to use a kitchen scale.0
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eclenden01 wrote: »You're underestimating the role of genetics. This study found that obese people burn 60 percent less calories than non obese people in response to exercise after taking into consideration body composition, just as an example. I think I remember seeing that some people burn 3 times as much per pound of resting lean muscle than others.
http://rnd.edpsciences.org/articles/rnd/abs/2005/02/r5205/r5205.htmlI would think this would have to do with the amount of lean mass the two people have. All things equal the one with the lower BF% would have higher caloric requirements. Other than that, there could be genetic reasons for the difference, though the amount should not be large, unless there is a medical/hormonal issue going on.
Was this adjusted for fitness level? I would assume the "thin" person would have been in better shape, meaning their V02 Max would be higher (moving more oxygen), which in turn burns more calories. Fitness plays a huge role in exercise calories, when it comes to BMR I would venture to guess that there is probably no more than a 10-15% difference if same weight and amount of lean body mass, assuming same age, gender, height, unless of course one has something like Hypothyroidism or Hyperthyroidism, or PCOS, etc., due to genetics alone.0 -
eclenden01 wrote: »You're underestimating the role of genetics. This study found that obese people burn 60 percent less calories than non obese people in response to exercise after taking into consideration body composition, just as an example. I think I remember seeing that some people burn 3 times as much per pound of resting lean muscle than others.
http://rnd.edpsciences.org/articles/rnd/abs/2005/02/r5205/r5205.htmlI would think this would have to do with the amount of lean mass the two people have. All things equal the one with the lower BF% would have higher caloric requirements. Other than that, there could be genetic reasons for the difference, though the amount should not be large, unless there is a medical/hormonal issue going on.
Was this adjusted for fitness level? I would assume the "thin" person would have been in better shape, meaning their V02 Max would be higher (moving more oxygen), which in turn burns more calories. Fitness plays a huge role in exercise calories, when it comes to BMR I would venture to guess that there is probably no more than a 10-15% difference if same weight and amount of lean body mass, assuming same age, gender, height, unless of course one has something like Hypothyroidism or Hyperthyroidism, or PCOS, etc., due to genetics alone.
Yeah, I dunno, I just pulled that study from nowhere. I agree that 15% seems realistic.0 -
DeguelloTex wrote: »Outside of differences in lean body mass or activity level, the idea never makes a bit of evolutionary sense.
If your body can just choose to use less calories, why would it ever use more? We evolved an upright gait, with all the back problems that go with and reduced speed, all to save 4 calories per km walking, but we have an energy saver mode we only turn on after we suffer our first feast then famine cycle? What?
You have to force your body to build muscle. It's not the default. I don't think it's that outrageous that the default isn't to be hyper-efficient unless circumstances nudge you toward it. It may well not be a zero-cost adaptation, even if it is a good adaptation to deal with less access to food.
Seeing far distances wasn't a concern, the fauna at the time that walking evolved would have been relatively low, and you can't see that much further on the horizon standing a few feet higher.
It could be a combination of reasons, but the most compelling and explainable one is that 4 calories a km adds up enough to have the calories for one more child in a lifetime.
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Outside of differences in lean body mass or activity level, the idea never makes a bit of evolutionary sense.
If your body can just choose to use less calories, why would it ever use more? We evolved an upright gait, with all the back problems that go with and reduced speed, all to save 4 calories per km walking, but we have an energy saver mode we only turn on after we suffer our first feast then famine cycle? What?
Your body adapts but either shutting functions down, slowing them down, or getting more efficient. I feel noticeably weaker when my calories are low compared to when they're high. Sure, walking around at the mall the difference is slight. Sitting at the weight bench not so much or riding my bike up a steep hill, not so slight. If your body didn't have these adaptations and you needed a set fixed amount of calories then even a relatively small deficit would kill you over time.0 -
eclenden01 wrote: »You're underestimating the role of genetics. This study found that obese people burn 60 percent less calories than non obese people in response to exercise after taking into consideration body composition, just as an example. I think I remember seeing that some people burn 3 times as much per pound of resting lean muscle than others.
http://rnd.edpsciences.org/articles/rnd/abs/2005/02/r5205/r5205.htmlI would think this would have to do with the amount of lean mass the two people have. All things equal the one with the lower BF% would have higher caloric requirements. Other than that, there could be genetic reasons for the difference, though the amount should not be large, unless there is a medical/hormonal issue going on.
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eclenden01 wrote: »You're underestimating the role of genetics. This study found that obese people burn 60 percent less calories than non obese people in response to exercise after taking into consideration body composition, just as an example. I think I remember seeing that some people burn 3 times as much per pound of resting lean muscle than others.
http://rnd.edpsciences.org/articles/rnd/abs/2005/02/r5205/r5205.htmlI would think this would have to do with the amount of lean mass the two people have. All things equal the one with the lower BF% would have higher caloric requirements. Other than that, there could be genetic reasons for the difference, though the amount should not be large, unless there is a medical/hormonal issue going on.
Yeah, I def didn't pick a great example, but if they took into account body composition, what are the alternate causes for such a variation?
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