
Has all of your green tea drinking been in vain? (Photo: Shutterstock)
Drink green tea. Build more muscle. Eat chili peppers. The list of ways you can increase your metabolic rate are endless.
But
when it comes to reaching your weight-loss goals, how much of a
difference do those tactics really make? Not as much as any weight-loss
warrior would like, says Tim Church, M.D., M.P.H, Ph.D., professor of preventative medicine at Pennington Biomedical Research Center at Louisiana State University.
That’s
because your metabolism largely comes down to two factors: your
genetics and your size. If your mom and dad had slow metabolisms, you
probably will, too. There’s not much you can do to change that, says
Church.
Meanwhile,
the larger you are, the faster your metabolism actually is. “Someone
who is morbidly obese burns an enormous amount of calories every day,”
says Church. On the flip side, the smaller you are, the slower your
metabolism is. After all, it takes less fuel (i.e., calories) to run a
tiny person than it does to run a large person. It’s a cruel twist for
any woman trying to lose weight and get in shape.

Still,
while you can’t exchange your metabolism for that of a much luckier
woman, a few calories here and a few calories there do add up. For
instance, research
shows that drinking two to four cups of green tea per day may raise
your metabolism by 50 calories per day. That’s a lot of tea and not a
ton of calories, but, hey, that equals a good five pounds lost in a
single year.
Meanwhile,
in study published in The American Journal of Clinical, people who
consumed capsinoids (compounds in chili peppers) every day for 12 weeks
didn’t enjoy a significant increase in resting metabolism, but their
rates of fat oxidation and their levels of belly fat did decrease. And
according to research from the University of Utah, for every three
percent of your body weight in water you lose (for example, if you weigh
140 pounds and lose 4.2 pounds of water weight), your resting
metabolism drops by two percent. Again, not huge, but it makes a
difference over the long term.

What’s
more, exercise, or more specifically, strength training, can help
support a healthy metabolism. After all, pound per pound, muscle burns
more calories than fat. However, the difference might not be as big as
you think: four calories, to be precise. A pound of fat burns two
calories per day, and a pound of fat burns six. To put that into
perspective, losing two pounds of fat and replacing it with two pounds
of muscle will increase your resting metabolic rate by only eight
calories per day.
However,
the biggest calorie-burning benefit of exercise isn’t muscle—it’s
getting moving. “The key to burning more calories is always going to be
more active,” says Church. “In the end, weight loss comes down to pure
hard work. People don’t like to hear it, but it’s true.”
By K. Aleisha Fetterssource:yahoo.com
0 comments :
Post a Comment