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Exercise and obesity: prevention and treatment How effective is exercise?

Exercise and obesity: prevention and treatment How effective is exercise?. BMI and mortality. Sharper, 1997. Obesity prevalence in world BMI > 30. Finucane 2011. Overweight prevalence in world BMI > 25. Finucane 2011. Energy balance. National Runners’ Study: 18-49 yo: 4769 >49 yo: 2150

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Exercise and obesity: prevention and treatment How effective is exercise?

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  1. Exercise and obesity:prevention and treatmentHow effective is exercise?

  2. BMI and mortality Sharper, 1997

  3. Obesity prevalence in worldBMI > 30 Finucane 2011

  4. Overweight prevalence in worldBMI > 25 Finucane 2011

  5. Energy balance

  6. National Runners’ Study: 18-49 yo: 4769 >49 yo: 2150 Male runners Cross-sectional Williams 1997

  7. Walking and weight reduction Richardson, 2008

  8. Walking and weight reductiondose-response relation Richardson, 2008

  9. Caloric reduction + walking / jogging, Obese female

  10. Wadden, 2011

  11. Wadden, 2011

  12. PA additive to caloric restrictionPA alone insufficient Chaput, 2011

  13. Diet intervention Mozaffarian, 2011

  14. Diet intervention Mozaffarian, 2011

  15. No diet-PA interaction Mozaffarian, 2011

  16. Coordinated Approach To Child Health (CATCH): school vs school+community OW+OB ↓1.3% OW+OB ↓8.2% Hoelscher, 2010

  17. Coordinated Approach To Child Health (CATCH): school vs school+community Hoelscher, 2010

  18. NEW Kids Program: multidisciplinary cognitivebehavioral modification in OW/OB child After > 9 months Skelton, 2008

  19. Mind, Exercise, Nutrition, Do it (MEND) :multicomponent community-based child obesity intervention Sacher, 2010

  20. School-based intervention on energy balance behaviors: mostly ineffective Yildirim, 2011

  21. Change in BW after 12 wk in elderly Witham 2010

  22. Change in cholesterol after 12 wk in elderly Witham 2010

  23. Shift in energy balance? • 10% reduction in body weight is associated with 20-30% decrease in activity energy expenditure • independent of time spent in physical activity Change in balance?

  24. Energy expenditure oppose the altered body weight Liquid diet + prescribed exercise ↓BW  ↓TEE, ↓REE, ↓nonresting (PA) EE Resenbaum 2003

  25. Decrease BW  increase skeletal muscle efficiency Resenbaum 2003

  26. Decrease BW  increase skeletal muscle efficiency Resenbaum 2003

  27. ↓energy expenditure in walking after very-low energy diet + walking in obese women Foster 1995

  28. ↓energy expenditure in walking after very-low energy diet + walking in obese women Foster 1995

  29. EE during inactivity and MVPAcompensation, but not complete Garland Jr, 2011

  30. Monkey Sullivan, 2010

  31. Subjects who have lost 10% BW at Year 1 Wadden, 2011

  32. Subjects who have lost 10% BW at Year 1 Wadden, 2011

  33. ‘Set point’ theory • Body has a weight ‘set point’ • Maintenance of reduced or elevated body weight associated with compensatory changes in energy expenditure (BMR) • Weight cycling: yo-yo effect • After weight loss, it is regained in relatively short time

  34. Set point and settling points • there is biological (active) control of BW, and also weight stability (and thus a set point at a healthy steady state) • in response to eating healthy chow diets • By contrast, this regulation is lost by Western diets • failure of biological control is due mainly to external factors • In this situation, the set point is replaced by various settling points that are influenced by energy and macronutrient intake in order for the body to reach a zero balance of energy and macronutrients and thus a new and possibly unhealthy steady state Muller, 2010

  35. International Association of Study of Obesity consensus • The current physical activity guideline for adults of 30 minutes of moderate intensity activity daily, preferably all days of the week, for preventing weight gain or regain this guideline is likely to be insufficient for many individuals in the current environment. • Prevention of weight regain in formerly obese individuals requires 60–90 minutes of moderate intensity activity or lesser amounts of vigorous intensity activity. • moderate intensity activity of approximately 45-60 minutes per day is required to prevent the transition to overweight or obesity. • For children, even more activity time is recommended. • incorporating more incidental and leisure-time activity into the daily routine Saris 2003, Jakicic 2005

  36. Finkelstein et al, 2004

  37. CATCH Program • Coordinated Approach To Child Health BasicPlus, CATACH BP+community • CATCH program incorporated elements of social ecological models and Social Cognitive Theory • Broader and more community-focused approach • extend school programs to the surrounding community Hoelscher et al, 2010

  38. Programs to reduce child obesity Hoelscher et al, 2010

  39. Results of CATCH programs Hoelscher et al, 2010

  40. Conclusion • Implementation of a community-enhanced school program can be effective in reducing the prevalence of child overweight in low-income student populations Hoelscher et al, 2010

  41. Meta-analysis of weight change in 12 months in the elderly Witham and Avenell, 2010

  42. Meta-analysis of change in total cholesterol in 12 months in elderly Witham and Avenell, 2010

  43. Conclusions • Blood lipids, blood pressure, mortality, morbidity, hospitality, quality of life, glycemic control only appeared in few studies and inconclusive • although modest weight reductions were observed, there is a lack of high-quality evidence to support the efficacy of weight loss programs in older people Witham and Avenell, 2010

  44. Exercise intensity and duration on weight loss Church, 2011

  45. high human development index TEE in men Low-mid human development index Dugas et al, 2010

  46. high human development index TEE in women Low-mid human development index Dugas et al, 2010

  47. Conclusions • TEE adjusted for weight and age or PAL did not differ significantly between developing and industrialized countries • the role of energy expenditure in the cause of obesity at the population level? Dugas et al, 2010

  48. Factors of TEE Dugas et al, 2010

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