Understand the Science of Obesity And
You're On Your Way
Many people think obesity means that
a person is overweight, but that's not exactly true.
An overweight person has a surplus amount
of weight that includes muscle, bone, fat and water.
An obese person has a surplus of body fat.
Body Mass Index (BMI) is commonly used
to determine if a person is obese or not. A person
with a BMI over 30 is considered to be obese, and
a BMI over 40 is considered to be severely obese.
Factors such as poor diet, lack of physical
activity, genetics and certain medical disorders cause
obesity, but it can be conquered.
Eating Disorder
Obesity itself is not an eating disorder, but people
who are obese or who fear becoming obese may develop
one.
There are three type of eating disorder:-
Binge eating - binge eaters eat uncontrollably
and quickly eating an unusually large amount of food
at one sitting. They eat mostly sugar and fat. As
a result, they may lack certain vitamins and nutrients.
Bulimia nervosa - bulimics binge eat,
usually in secret, then purge to get rid of the calories
just eaten. They may also exercise intensely for long
periods of time to burn off the extra calories, or
they may go for long periods of time without eating.
Anorexia nervosa - anorexics literally
starve themselves due to an intense fear of being
fat. Their bodies are severely depleted of nutrients.
As a result, they develop muscular atrophy, dehydration,
low blood pressure and organ damage to name a few.
Because anorexia is so life threatening, the first
stage of treatment is getting body weight back to
normal. Treatments for eating disorder include therapy
and medications.
Fat & Cholesterol
For years we heard that a low-fat, low-cholesterol
diet would keep us healthy and help us lose weight.
And many of us jumped on the bandwagon, eliminating
fat and high-cholesterol foods from our diets.
Well, unfortunately,we were doing it
all wrong. Instead of eliminating fat completely,
we should have been eliminating the "bad fats,"
the fats associated with obesity and heart disease
and eating the "good fats," the fats that
actually help improve blood cholesterol levels.
Dietary Treatments
Americans spends millions of dollars each year on
diet books,products, and weight-loss plans. But, why
aren't they working? Because people are doing the
wrong things!
These popular diets often offer promises
of quick weight
loss with no hunger, and the majority
of those dieters who do succeed end up gaining the
weight back within a year.
It's important to remember that your
weight should be lost gradually. When you first start
dieting, you will probably lose more water weight,
therefore you may be losing more pounds initially.
But, if you're doing it right, your weight loss will
slow down to an average of one to two pounds per week.
You can only lose three pounds of fat per week, anything
over that is water loss or muscle loss.
Medical Treatments
In some instances health professionals will perform
weight
loss surgery. As with any surgery, it
comes with many risks, and it's not a solution for
everyone. In order to qualify for surgery, most people
must be severely obese or obese with serious medical
conditions.
Drug therapy is available for people
with a BMI 30 or over with no medical conditions or
for people with a BMI of over 27 with two or more
obesity-related conditions.
Natural Alternatives
Many prefer to utilize natural alternatives rather
than resorting to appetite suppressants and surgical
procedures, it's often more healthy. The alternatives
include detoxification and live-food diet, low-carb
high protein diet and ayurveda. All natural alternatives
require some form of exercise.
Exercise
Exercise is vital to shedding excess weight and keeping
it off. Any regular exercise that raise the heart
rate for at least a half hour straight, will do wonders
for your body.
Simply taking a walk, starting slow,
then working your way up to power walking,is an excellent
method of exercise.
Behavioral Changes
Changing your behavior is a key component to conquering
obesity. Crash diets that cause people to lose weight
drastically almost always backfire because there is
no change in behavior and habits.
Obesity is a lifestyle, and conquering
obesity is a lifestyle also. Losing focus is a common
problem with those who are trying to lose weight and
keep it off.
About the Author
Wan Ibrahim is a writer and owner of
AdiPublishing.Biz. He writes on Health & Wellness.
For more details on Conquering Obesity, please visit:
http://no-obese.adipublishing.biz