Skip to content

Posts

The basic principle of Fat loss is to maintain a calorie deficit, i.e. calorie intake should be less than the calories burned. The aim is to decrease the calories consumed and to increase the calories burned as much as possible, within comfortable limits.

I-Decrease Calorie Intake.

The first step is to calculate the ‘maintenance calories’ required daily, to maintain the weight without any gain or loss whatsoever. An easy way to estimate it, is by multiplying body weight in pounds by 14 for males and 13 for females. This is maintenance for a sedentary lifestyle and does not take into consideration additional calories for exercise or activities. The second step is to take in 200-300 calories less than this per day to create a modest calorie deficit.

II-Increase Calories Burned.

This can be achieved in three ways :

1-Increase Basal Metabolic Rate (BMR).

BMR is the basic energy required to keep body functioning at rest. It is genetically determined but can be affected by other factors. It decreases with age mainly due to decrease in the lean muscle mass (total body weight minus fat). Lean muscle mass is directly proportional to strength and increasing strength can help to maintain high BMR.

2-Increase Exercise.

This includes all cardio, sports activities and workouts.

3-Increase Spontaneous Activity (NEAT*).

This includes all involuntary movements like fidgeting and activities of daily living like, moving around, sitting, standing, etc. This does not include any workouts, cardio or sports.

  • *NEAT: Non Exercise Activity Thermogenesis 

Dr. Abrar A. Khan '100 Rules of Fat Loss'

In this age of internet and mass media there is so much information available on diet, fitness, and weight loss that it is difficult to know what is the truth. Everyday there is some new study available which contradicts our previous beliefs and understanding about losing weight. Every other day a new book is written propounding a new idea as the final breakthrough in weight loss. What people fail to understand is that obesity and weight gain is a complex process with multifactorial causes.

There is no single method or diet to lose weight. Any successful approach to weight loss and specifically fat loss involves a combined use of multiple principles and strategies. At the same time these efforts should not be so complicated that they consume all our time and cannot be followed for long.

Having said that, diet with calorie restriction is the cornerstone of weight loss. All other steps including, exercise, are additions only.

Everyone knows that they have to eat less and exercise more to lose weight, yet very few people are able to do it. The problem is more a psychological and behavioral one, with genetics and environment adding to it.

Dr. Abrar A. Khan '100 Rules of Fat Loss'

💬 24/7