Test your Calorie IQ
Client Handout:

You undoubtedly know that if you consume more calories than you burn, you will gain weight—and if you do the opposite, you will lose weight. But do you know where calories come from and what the best way to burn them is? Take the following quiz, based on information from Carole A. Conn, PhD, RD, instructor of nutrition science at the University of New Mexico, Albuquerque (UNMA); and Len Kravitz, PhD, researcher and coordinator of exercise science at UNMA.
True. All foods come either from plants or from animals that have eaten plants. Plants create carbohydrates, the primary food molecules that contain the energy known as calories. From carbohydrates plants can create other molecules (including fats and proteins) that also contain captured energy. Like plants, humans can use carbohydrates to make many fats and proteins. But the primary source of all calories remains carbohydrates themselves, which plants alone can create.
False. Different foods have various calorie levels. Why? Their regular servings contain different amounts of carbohydrates, proteins and fats, and these energy-producing nutrients supply different amounts of energy per gram. Fats supply the most energy, at 9 calories per gram. Carbohydrates and proteins provide 4 calories per gram.
False. Many supplements promise to enhance calorie burning and trigger weight loss without changes in diet or activity level. The major component in these supplements is either ephedra (also known as Ma Huang) or ephedrine, the synthetic equivalent of ephedra. These supplements cannot be recommended for maintaining a healthy body weight, either because they have not been proven effective in humans or because the risks of heart or nervous system problems associated with these supplements may outweigh their benefits.
True. Endurance (cardiovascular) exercise contributes to several changes in body cells that enhance calorie burning. To be effective, endurance exercise should use the large muscles of the body in a continuous, rhythmic fashion; be relatively easy to maintain at various workout intensities; and satisfy your personal interests. To avoid overuse injury, regularly vary the mode of endurance training.
True. The largest component of the calories your body uses is the energy needed to maintain your resting metabolic rate (RMR), or the calories you need at rest to maintain all of your body’s vital processes and systems. Increasing your RMR helps enhance calorie burning. Various factors influence RMR, but the amount of muscle tissue--the body tissue that burns the most calories--is particularly important. As you probably know, strength training builds muscle. And the more muscle you have, the higher your RMR and the more calories you will burn.
© 2003 by IDEA Health & Fitness Inc. All rights reserved. Reproduction without permission is strictly prohibited.

Delicious
Digg
StumbleUpon
Reddit
Magnoliacom
Newsvine
Facebook
Google
Yahoo
Technorati



Article Comments
Add Comment