Skip to main content

10 Burning Facts About Your Metabolism

Metabolism is a hot topic when you’re trying to lose weight. Many people believe the metabolism refers to the rate at which the body burns calories. However, they are confusing metabolism with basal metabolic rate (BMR), which can increase based on the amount of muscle versus fat your body contains.
Metabolism, on the other hand, refers to the process by which the cells are able to break down food nutrients into energy to fuel various and necessary bodily functions—including heart rate, digestion, breathing, circulation, and so forth.
Here are ten interesting facts that you might not know about your metabolism…

1. The Thyroid Gland Controls Metabolism

Your metabolism, which determines the rate at which your body is able to break down food into energy, is regulated by a small, butterfly-shaped gland known as the thyroid.  The thyroid gland is located at the front of your neck, near the Adam’s apple. The brain sends messages to this “master control” when it comes to energy and protein production, hormone regulation, and other bodily processes (i.e., digestion).
10 Burning Facts About Your Metabolism

2. An Underactive Thyroid Affects More Than Your Weight

Many people who have trouble losing weight claim to have an underactive thyroid, meaning they suffer from a slow basal metabolic rate (BMR). However, an underactive thyroid affects more than weight. It causes a multitude of symptoms including weight gain, fatigue, depression, hair loss, low sex drive, and dry skin, which can only be remedied by thyroid medication.
10 Burning Facts About Your Metabolism

3. Size Determines Metabolic Need

The idea that smaller, thinner individuals have a faster basal metabolic rate (BMR) or ability to burn calories is actually false. In fact, your body size and composition (fat tissues vs. muscle tissues) determines how much fuel  (i.e., food nutrients) you require in order to produce the energy to function. So in essence, the larger you are; the more fuel you’ll need to function—and the higher your BMR will be.
10 Burning Facts About Your Metabolism

4. Regular Exercise Boosts Metabolism

An increase in physical activity will increase your BMR. The main objective is to exercise at a rate where your heart rate increases when it comes to cardiovascular exercise. Resistance training (or weight bearing exercise) is the most effective way to increase BMR—the greater your muscle mass; the faster your body will burn calories.
10 Burning Facts About Your Metabolism

5. Men Have Higher BMRs Than Women

Due to the fact that lean muscle mass determines how efficiently the body burns energy, men tend to have higher BMR than women. This explains the term “hollow leg” when it comes to growing teenage boys who tend to burn up what they eat a lot faster compared to teen girls who are prone to more fat tissues.
10 Burning Facts About Your Metabolism

6. Metabolism Slows as we Age

There is some truth to the fact that our BMR gradually slows down as we age by approximately 2-percent every 10 years beginning in your early to mid 20s. This can be due to 2 factors:
  • We lose muscle tissue as we age
  • We tend to decrease physical activity as we age
10 Burning Facts About Your Metabolism

7. Other Factors That Affect Metabolism

Genetics can also be an unfair factor when it comes to the rate at which we individually burn calories. For instance, if you come from a family of naturally thin, fit ancestors; chances are you will remain thin regardless of what you eat.
10 Burning Facts About Your Metabolism

8. Crash Dieting Actually Thwarts Weight Loss

You might read about celebrities putting themselves through crazy crash diets in order to shed pounds before a big movie role or Hollywood event. However, crash diets, meaning diets that deprive us of vital nutrients and fuel to attain drastic weight loss, will only backfire. In fact, those that consume less than 1,200 calories each day actually slow down their metabolism because the body thinks it’s starving.
10 Burning Facts About Your Metabolism

9. Eat Every 2 to 3 Hours to Promote Weight Loss

An easy way to propel your body out of starvation mode and into weight loss mode is to keep it fueled with healthy food. Instead of long breaks between meals, make it a habit to consume 3 smaller meals and 2 healthy snacks each day to promote calorie burn.
10 Burning Facts About Your Metabolism

10. Raising Your BMR With Stimulants

Aside from exercise, strength training, and the consumption of small, healthful meals, you can give your BMR a slight boost with stimulants like spices and caffeine. Medical experts say that drinking 1, 8-ounce cup of coffee prior to a workout can boost BMR by 3-percent.  However, weight loss powders, drinks, and pills that promise drastic results and excess caffeine are dangerous. Spicy foods—like capsaicin peppers—can slightly stimulate BMR by turning up the body’s core temperature, however, no gimmick will ever take the place of good old fashioned, healthy exercise.
10 Burning Facts About Your Metabolism

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Dorian Yates Workout Routine, Diet Plan and Training Philosophy

Dorian Andrew Mientjez Yates is a former English professional bodybuilder who has a record of winning Mr. Olympia for six consecutive years from 1992 to 1997. Named along legends like Arnold Schwarzenegger and Lee Haney, Yates, has under his belt 15 major contest wins. Yates’s competing career was cut short by injuries. Known by the nickname, ‘The Shadow,’ because of his uncanny ability to stay out of public gaze before a competition, Yates adopted the HIT or High-Intensity Training method that emphasizes on fewer reps and maximum effort. Dorian Yates Workouts Dorian Yates HIT Workout Routine Dorian Yates was greatly influenced by Mike Mentzer’s HIT training method and started following it from his early days in bodybuilding. His training philosophy involves doing different exercises for each body part with maximum intensity for only one set to failure, excluding warm up sets. Yates follows a working split of four days and advises that moderate cardio should be done 2-...

Iron Is A Girl's Best Friend

When I first picked up weights a few years ago, maximal lifting wasn't even on my radar. I ran around in circles with my 10-pound dumbbells, completely unaware that I was missing out on an entire world of fitness. In the world of 1RM strength, you set specific goals and work for weeks or months to inch closer to them. You push your body to its limits to achieve a triumph that only lasts a couple of seconds. But you also get rewarded with a rush unlike anything else. It's a great world to be a part of, and it's changed the entire way I view health and fitness. I wouldn't say I'm an expert on heavy lifting—yet. But I've still learned some important lessons along the way, and I'm confident you'll find them just as helpful as I did. If you're looking to find your numbers or move them up into uncharted territory, here are five rules you need to take to heart. 1  TRAIN SYSTEMATICALLY WHY BOTHER WITH MAXIMAL LIFTS? Heavy weight is instructive....

9 AB Training Mistakes You Need To Stop Making

The rise of the core has led to a profusion of misinformation and confusion. Eliminate the training flubs that keep your abs in the shadows! "The first rule to get abs is: you do not do sit-ups. The second rule to get abs is: you DO NOT do sit-ups." - Tyler Durden,  Fight Club . OK, Tyler didn't really say that. But as women everywhere reminded their dates in the post-movie recap, he did have some serious abs. Or maybe it was the guy who played him—you know, ol' what's-his-obliques. But whomever they belonged to, they were the kind of muscles that weren't just made in the kitchen. They were carved by hard training, and revealed by smart diet choices. But here's the thing about ab training: What you  do  is only one half of the equation. What you don't do is the other—and I'm not just talking about the usual pre-photo shoot fitness model tricks like avoiding sodium, carbs, happiness, or air. I'm referring to the piles of abominable abdomi...