Our struggle to lose
weight is enormous. Bombarded with a stream of mixed media messages
that thin will always be in, we battle to conform to society's weighty
expectations of what our size and shape should be. People often lose
weight, but - and here is the crux of the problem - they almost always
gain it back. According to obesity experts, more than 90 per cent
of dieters regain their lost weight within one to five years. So far,
no diet or behavioral modification programme has improved these odds.
In the meantime, we face a barrage of information on the latest
diet or diet pill, and the information is often contradictory, misleading
or even dangerous. Americans spend more than $40 billion dollars
a year on dieting and diet-related products. Everyone wants a quick
fix, a magic pill and, as a result, is more susceptible to scams
that promise tremendous weight loss in record time. Americans are
ranked as one of the heaviest nations in the world and also the
most obsessed about weight. Obviously, we are going about weight
loss the wrong way, since, on average, we are gaining weight.
Weight maintenance is a complicated process, with biological factors
and chemical pathways at work that have yet to be fully understood.
There is compelling evidence that the brain receives signals from
the body to regulate weight and keep it in a genetically determined
range. This suggests that the decisions about what and when to eat
may not be completely under a person's conscious control.
Scientists are now studying the molecular causes of appetite and
satiety, and are identifying molecules that are responsible for
controlling how much animals, including people, eat. One of these
molecules is thought to be responsible for keeping body weight stable
by controlling appetite, so that when someone eats a large meal
at night they will not have much of an appetite the next morning.
Other molecules react to messages from the body that it is not
fat enough, which results in an urge to eat calorie-dense foods.
The fact these chemical pathways exist makes perfect sense if you
consider that the brain signals all kinds of other behaviors, including
keeping a balance on the amount of water a person drinks and excretes
to keep a precise balance in their body.
The theory that offers the best explanation for the body's resistance
to weight alteration is known as the set-point theory; where the
body appears to have a set point for body fat or weight, which is
inherited and rigorously defended. It's not actually a point, but
rather a range of weights the body can comfortably maintain. It
is believed the range varies by about 10 per cent from a midpoint.
For instance, a 150-pound woman might be able to weigh 135 to 165
pounds. If, however, her weight falls below 135 pounds or increases
beyond 165, her body will respond with a series of control mechanisms
designed to bring the fat levels back in line. This is done by increasing
or decreasing the metabolic rate so as to restore the body to a
physiologically optimum weight.
A number of experiments conducted by Rudolph Leibel and his colleagues
at Rockefeller University hospital in the late 1990's support this
theory. Volunteers who had maintained a stable weight without effort
for at least six months (an indication that their weights were in
their biologically determined range) agreed to live in a metabolic
ward at the hospital. During their stay, which varied from 110 days
to two years, researchers controlled what they ate, making them
first gain weight until they weighed 10 per cent more than their
original weight and then lose until they weighed 10 per cent less.
Regardless of their size and body shape, the study found they burned
1,360 calories per square meter of body surface a day. When they
gained 10 per cent of their body weight, their metabolisms sped
up by 15 per cent. When they ate so little that their weights fell
10 per cent below where they started, their metabolisms slowed by
15 per cent.
Earlier evidence for set-point theory comes from a study often
referred to as the starvation study, which was published in 1950.
Conducted by Ancel Keys and his colleagues at the University of
Minnesota, the purpose was to investigate the effects of starvation
on otherwise healthy young men. More than 100 men volunteered for
the study as an alternative to military service; the 36 who were
chosen were those with the highest levels of physical and psychological
health.
For the first three months, the men ate normally while their eating
patterns, personality and behavior were studied in detail. For the
next six months, the men were restricted to approximately half of
their former food intake and lost on average 25 per cent of their
body weight. Decreases in body temperature, heart rate, respiration
and BMR (basal metabolic rate) together reflected an overall slowing
of the body's physiological processes during the semi-starvation
phase. During the renourishment phase, which lasted three months,
some of the men lost control of their appetites and ate almost continuously.
It took about five months for the majority of men to return to eating
normal amounts of food and about nine months for their weight and
body fat percentage to return to pre-experimental levels.
The Keys study also found that restrictive dieting and weight loss
had dramatic physical, psychological and social consequences. The
men experienced mood swings, depression, irritability and frequent
outbursts of anger and anxiety. They became withdrawn and felt socially
inadequate, while sexual interests were drastically reduced. The
men were preoccupied with thoughts about food to the point where
concentration was impaired. They collected recipes and cookbooks
and spent much of the day planning how they would eat their allotment
of food (interestingly, three went on to become chefs). This study
showed that many of the symptoms that might have been thought to
be specific to eating disorders are actually the result of starvation.
In all likelihood, it is repeated cycles of dieting that leads
to weight gain. In the Keys study all 36 men lost weight while dieting,
then regained it - plus extra pounds - when allowed to eat normally.
At the end of the study, they all weighed more than they did when
it began and it took nine months for their weights to normalize.
It's not surprising then that most dieters, who spend an average
six months of the year dieting, keep getting heavier.
But what about those individuals we read about who have successfully
kept the weight off over many years? Leibel claims to have met only
about five of these people in all his years of research. According
to Leibel, these people willingly admit they are fighting their
bodies and their lower energy requirement every day. They all claim
that the only element that seems to make a difference is exercise.
Of course, our environment also has an impact on this weight range
and can, says Leibel, overwhelm the weight regulatory process. In
an environment where you don't have to do much physical work and
high-calorie food is in abundance, it is not surprising that people
are sitting "above" their upper weight range. From an
evolutionary standpoint, our bodies were designed to live in a world
where food was not plentiful and we experienced large intervals
between eating. For our species to survive, we were programmed to
accept excessive amounts of body fat more easily. There is also
a clear association between the proportion of body fat in women
and reproductive capacity: underweight women stop menstruating,
which results in them being unable to reproduce.
Doctors rarely tell someone who is aesthetically over the normal
weight range that they don't need to diet. Recently, research on
the health risks of being moderately overweight has been scrutinized.
In the US, obesity was downgraded from the country's biggest killer
after smoking to seventh place. Scientists analyzed data, which
revealed that 112,000 people were killed by obesity each year, rather
than the 400,000 calculated by the US Center for Disease Control
in 2004. Further findings revealed that 87,000 lives were saved
because people were moderately overweight (mainly older people who
were less frail). According to statistics, we are healthier and
living longer, despite our increasing waistlines. It is only extreme
obesity that carries a severe death risk. Studies have indicated
that it may be the cycles of weight loss/gain that is causing the
hypertension among the obese rather than the excess weight.
Obviously further research is warranted, but what we understand
now is that when you lose weight it appears to "set off a bunch
of metabolic alarms".
Just as obviously, we have to be realistic when it comes to weight
management. Many of us have an ideal body weight in mind that we
aspire to and yet this number is remarkably arbitrary. Unfortunately,
many people, unhappy with their shape, focus solely on their weight.
Again, our shape is largely determined by our genes, which means
that whether we are shaped like an apple, pear, or some other fruit
there is little we can do to change it. Once we can accept the fact
that we do not have ultimate control over our size and shape we
can focus on acceptance of our bodies and work toward improving
our health. It must be a process and it must be ongoing.
Sandra Comer, Ph.D. is a Psychologist in private practice in
Hong Kong and specializes in Eating Disorders.
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