1
   

Study: 'Weight-ism' More Widespread Than Racism

 
 
Kratos
 
  1  
Reply Sun 6 Apr, 2008 02:52 am
hawkeye10 wrote:
Kratos wrote:
Without having read the entire thread before replying, I'd have to say that the reason is that unless you have a thyroid problem, you have the ability to control your weight; unlike the color of your skin,hair,eyes,etc.


Without having read the entire thread before replying, I'd have to say that the reason is that unless you have a thyroid problem, you have some ability to control your weight; unlike the color of your skin,hair,eyes,etc.



A lot of the controlling factors of metabolism are coded in genetics. There is a good argument that our weight problem has to do mostly with eating the wrong things for our body because the foods don't match what our bodies over time have been designed to operate on. A genetics and our current diet don't match. Diet is a cultural issue for the most part, not an individual issue. We eat what we learn to eat, what everybody else is eating, eating the wrong things in this environment is not a personal failure.

My point is that weight is a much more complicated issue than most people, even many doctors, realize.


The only thing people have control over are their actions. You either take measures to lose weight or don't. There is no "some" about it. The quantifiers only come into play when you focus on degree to which one's biological factors limit or encourage success.

I am well aware that everyone operates on different playing fields. What I was stressing is the fact that everyone either chooses to play or doesn't.
0 Replies
 
Kratos
 
  1  
Reply Sun 6 Apr, 2008 03:08 am
Butrflynet wrote:
Kratos wrote:
Without having read the entire thread before replying, I'd have to say that the reason is that unless you have a thyroid problem, you have the ability to control your weight; unlike the color of your skin,hair,eyes,etc.


Not always true. Age, physical injuries and other diseases often interfere with the effort to control weight through exercise, metabolism and diet. Health care access and the ability to pay for it also contributes to the ability to fight back against the interference of age, physical injuries and other diseases that make it harder to control weight.

It becomes a viscious circle.


And none of what you described outside of cases like ALS, MS, severe nervous tissue damage from strokes, etc does anything other than to give an "out" to someone looking for a reason not to do something. Does something being harder for some than others take away the ability to control one's own actions? Ultimately, the reason why most people who can, but don't take action choose to do so because they get to avoid responsibility. Among the excuses they use are the ones you just listed.
0 Replies
 
Bella Dea
 
  1  
Reply Mon 7 Apr, 2008 06:44 am
My question is if your body had a set weight once, can it change?

For example, if before baby my body's set weight was 120 (these are all made up numbers, btw). Can after the baby my body's set weight be 150? Or 180? Or 110?
0 Replies
 
BumbleBeeBoogie
 
  1  
Reply Mon 7 Apr, 2008 08:39 am
Hormone Wants To Keep Body At Weight Set Point
Hormone Wants To Keep Body At Weight Set Point
ScienceDaily
Jul. 8, 2004

Studies of a stomach hormone called ghrelin in normal weight women indicate that the hormone may play a part in reestablishing a body weight set-point after dieting and exercise, according to Penn State researchers.

"Most studies have analyzed physical levels of ghrelin in obese or anorexic subjects," says Heather J. Leidy, who recently received her Ph.D. in physiology. "We looked at ghrelin in healthy, normal weight women. We are trying to see how the body maintains weight and maintains its energy balance."

Prior research showed that ghrelin levels rise when fasting and fall when the subject is fed. The levels rise 60 to 30 minutes before a normal meal time and 30 to 60 minutes after a meal, the level drops. According to Leidy, studies in human and rodents have found that injections of ghrelin significantly increase both hunger and food intake.

The researchers, led by Nancy I. Williams, associate professor of kinesiology, wanted to determine if ghrelin release was associated with body weight, physical exercise, reduced food intake or an overall energy deficit.

"Changes in ghrelin appear to be most sensitive to changes in body weight created by an overall energy deficit, independent of specific effects of reduced food intake or physical exercise," the researchers reported in a recent issue of the journal, Clinical Endocrinology & Metabolism.

The researchers, who also included J.K. Gardner, research associate; B.R. Frye, graduate student; and M.L. Snook, M.K. Schuchert, and E.L. Richard, undergraduate students, looked at healthy women without eating disorders, between the ages of 18 and 30, weighing between 105 and 160 pounds with 15 to 30 percent body fat. The women were non-smokers, not taking hormonal contraceptives and had no significant weight loss or gain in the past year. The study was part of a larger one designed to assess changes in reproductive function in response to controlled feeding and exercise.

Participants had to agree to eat only food provided by the Penn State General Clinical Research Center at University Park and to eat two of their three meals at the facility. In the initial study, researchers studied all participants for about a month to establish a baseline; the subjects followed the controlled diet and exercise plans for three months. Researchers randomly assigned women to four groups, a control group that did no exercise and were given enough calories to maintain their weight, a group that exercised but were given enough calories to maintain their weight, and two groups that exercised but were given fewer calories than required to maintain their weight. One energy deficit group had a moderate energy deficit and the other had a high-energy deficit.

For the ghrelin study, the four groups were compressed to three: the control group, the weight stable exerciser group and the weight loss exerciser group. Because the participants' diets were closely controlled, those that exhibited a weight loss, clearly experienced an energy deficit caused by exercise.

The researchers measured body fat, fat mass and fat-free mass before the study, at the study midpoint and after the study. They also measured resting metabolic rate and maximal aerobic capacity. Blood samples to measure ghrelin level were done on 22 subjects and midpoint measurements on 17 subjects.

"The disruption of body weight regulation seen in obesity makes one examine physiological factors in short and long term energy balance," says Leidy. "This is the first study to show that weight loss resulting from a diet and exercise intervention leads to an increase in circulating ghrelin in normal weight, healthy young women. We found that ghrelin was significantly elevated with weight loss in exercising subjects."

The researchers found that changes in ghrelin came after changes in body weight, composition and resting metabolic rate. Previous research showed that ghrelin levels are low in obese subjects and high in anorexic subjects, however, in the study's normal women, no correlation between baseline ghrelin and body weight, body mass index, percent body fat, fat mass or fat-free mass was found. The researchers state that ghrelin levels reflect energy status and body composition only in subjects who have experienced significant alterations in energy status rather than the relatively stable energy and body composition status of the study's subjects.

"The stimulatory effect on food intake attributed to ghrelin suggests a potential role for ghrelin in returning the body to a prior set-point for body weight after weight loss," the Penn State researchers report. "The absence of changes in ghrelin in our weight stable group demonstrates that exercise training itself has little impact on at least one powerful modulator of food intake."

"The increase in ghrelin in the weight loss group was in response to the overall energy deficit created by the combination of reduced food intake and exercise, and not due to the endocrine and/or metabolic effects of physical exercise itself," says Leidy.
-----------------------------------------

The National Institutes of Health supported this research. Adapted from materials provided by Penn State.

More info: http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2004/07/040707091615.htm
0 Replies
 
 

Related Topics

T'Pring is Dead - Discussion by Brandon9000
Another Calif. shooting spree: 4 dead - Discussion by Lustig Andrei
Before you criticize the media - Discussion by Robert Gentel
Fatal Baloon Accident - Discussion by 33export
The Day Ferguson Cops Were Caught in a Bloody Lie - Discussion by bobsal u1553115
Robin Williams is dead - Discussion by Butrflynet
Amanda Knox - Discussion by JTT
 
Copyright © 2024 MadLab, LLC :: Terms of Service :: Privacy Policy :: Page generated in 0.03 seconds on 05/01/2024 at 12:31:50