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Chapter 9 Energy Balance and Healthy Body Weight

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1 Chapter 9 Energy Balance and Healthy Body Weight
Nutrition: Concepts & Controversies, 12e Sizer/Whitney

2 Introduction Health risks Weight “control” Body composition Overweight
Underweight Weight “control” Focus on weight Focus on controlling weight Focus on short-term endeavors Body composition

3 The Problems of Too Little or Too Much Body Fat
U.S. prevalence Underweight Overweight Epidemic Children and adolescents

4 Increasing Prevalence of Obesity

5 Adult Obesity and Overweight Compared with Healthy People Target

6 Underweight, Overweight, and Mortality

7 What Are the Risks from Too Much Body Fat?
Obesity-related illnesses Dying young Obesity vs. smoking Hypertension Central obesity Other risks

8 Visceral Fat and Subcutaneous Fat

9 How Fat Is Too Fat? Evaluate health risks of obesity
Body mass index (BMI) Waist circumference Disease risk profile Social costs of being overfat Economic costs of being overfat

10 The Body’s Energy Balance
Calorie needs Monitor activity and weight Energy output Basal metabolism (BMR) Voluntary activities Thermic effect of food

11 Components of Energy Expenditure

12 Body Weight Versus Body Fatness
Body Mass Index (BMI) Underweight Overweight Obesity Risks follow racial lines Drawbacks Amount or location of fat Diagnosis requirements

13 Measuring Waist Circumference

14 Measures of Body Composition and Fat Distribution
Skin fold test Underwater weighing Bioelectrical impedance Dual-energy X-ray absorptiometry Each method has advantages and disadvantages

15 Average Body Composition of Men and Women

16 How Much Body Fat Is Ideal?
Healthy BMI range Man: 12 to 20 percent Woman: 20 to 30 percent Declaration of being overfat Men age 40 and younger Men over age 40 Women age 40 and younger Women over age 40

17 The Mystery of Obesity Obesity’s cause remains elusive Hunger Satiety
Response to physiological need Chemical messengers Stomach hormone Ghrelin Stomach capacity

18 Inside-the-Body Causes of Obesity
Metabolic theories Variations in ease of body fat gain or loss Variety of theories Genetics Influence tendency to gain weight or stay lean Environmental factors

19 Outside-the-Body Causes of Obesity
External cues to overeating Available foods Human sensations Larger portions Physical inactivity Nonexercise activity thermogenesis (NEAT) Inactivity epidemic Sitting still and death from heart disease

20 Feasting and Fasting

21 Moderate Weight Loss Versus Rapid Weight Loss
Short-term fasting Seems to be tolerated Effects of deprivation Overeat or binge eating Weight loss technique Slowing of metabolism Low-carbohydrate diets DRI minimum carbohydrate intake level

22 Examples of Energy Density

23 Introduction Eating disorders Young women Beginnings of disorders
Anorexia nervosa Bulimia nervosa Binge eating disorder Young women All people Beginnings of disorders

24 Anorexia Nervosa Characteristics Role of the family Self-starvation
Cannot recognize condition Role of the family Self-starvation Physical perils Damage to whole body Death Treatment

25 Bulimia Nervosa Characteristics Role of the family
More prevalent than anorexia nervosa Role of the family Binge eating and purging Stages of a binge Methods for purging Physical and psychological perils Treatment

26 The Cycle of Bingeing, Purging, and Negative Self-Perception


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