|
|
| |
|
|
| |
Fighting Mid-Life Weight Gain
Reasons for mid-life weight gain and how to
minimize or prevent it - an interview with
Pamela Peeke, MD
By Katherine Doheny WebMD Feature
First, you notice shopping for clothes isn't as
fun or simple as it used to be. Next comes the
"muffin top" spilling over the jeans. Then the
scale delivers dire news: You're 10, 15, maybe
20 pounds beyond your "normal" weight.
Midlife weight gain is common. Many people gain
a pound or so every year as they make their way
through young adulthood, ending up fat and
flabby at age 40 and beyond.
But it is not inevitable, says Pamela Peeke, MD,
MPH, the author of the best-seller Fight
Fat After Forty.
Peeke also serves as the chief medical
correspondent for Discovery Health TV and often
appears as a medical commentator on television
news and talk shows.
Why do so many people gain weight
in midlife?
Blame it on hormones in convergence with poor
lifestyle choices, overeating, not exercising
enough, and stress.
But hormones only account for about 2 to 5
pounds. The rest is the result of overeating,
poor lifestyle choices -- such as not exercising
enough -- and stress.
How can I not be one of those
people who gains?
The keys are three: mind, mouth, muscle.
Use your mind to control stress. If you walk
around and everything is stressful, you have a
problem. You may respond to stress by making
poorer lifestyle choices, such as not eating
healthfully and not exercising enough.
Look at your nutrition -- in terms of quality,
quantity, and frequency of eating. You should
eat often.
Quality is all about eating whole foods, fruits,
and vegetables, whole grains, lean protein.
Processed foods are bad. Anything that comes in
a family-size bag, turn in the opposite
direction and run.
Quantity is where a lot of people fall. The
majority are baffled by what a serving size
should look like. When eating out, and in doubt,
eat half of it or less.
Be accountable for calories. You need a general
idea of how many calories you need. An average
woman, not an athlete, in her 40s or 50s, needs
about 1,500 to 1,600 calories a day, on average,
if she is exercising. A middle-aged man, average
height and not an athlete but exercising, needs
about 1,800 to 2,000.
Muscle, of course, refers to the need to
exercise and, of course, to weight train.
Should my goal weight increase
when I hit midlife?
A better goal than focusing on scale weight is
to keep track of body fat. The goals should be
to decrease body fat and optimize bone strength.
For a man, a body fat percentage of 18% to 25%
is not bad for 40-plus. For women 40-plus, 22%
to 27% is not bad.
To get that body fat percentage, you need to
have excellent fitness to maintain a good muscle
base.
Also, a man should have a waist circumference
below 40 inches and a woman below 35 inches.
I'm 40-plus, eating right, and
exercising but not losing weight. Why do I have
midlife weight gain?
If you have tailored your portion sizes to ones
that are appropriate, look at the frequency of
your eating. Eat every three or four hours. But
not too late at night. The later you eat, the
lighter you eat is a good rule.
Eat a balance of lean protein, fats, and carbs.
Make the fat good fat, not palm oil or
hydrogenated oil, but high-quality good fats
[such as those in nuts]. The protein should be
lean -- a turkey burger or a veggie burger.
Most people have been doing the same exercise
routine for years, and your body acclimates. Fat
cells at 40 are reticent to give it up. Mix up
the exercise routine. Exercise at least five
times a week, and I mean cardio.
Add intensity. Add some level of weight
training, and challenge yourself with the
weights. [Getting professional instruction is
advised if you're a novice.] Weight train two or
three times a week.
Building muscle gives you that metabolic edge,
since muscle mass burns more calories than fat.
Does HRT cause midlife weight gain, is that the
culprit?
You can't blame the low doses of HRT in use
today for midlife weight gain, at least not for
any more than a few pounds. You do get a little
more bloated on it, but it does not cause body
fat accumulation. Overeating, not exercising,
and stress do.
What's up with this belly? I
never ever had one before.
I call it the menopot. On a man, it's the
manopot.
Excess body fat occurring in the lower abdomen
is associated with aging, after 40. This excess
body fat in the normal range is usually only 2
to 5 pounds. And you do get a little pooch.
How can I lose this belly?
You minimize it by following the
mind-mouth-muscle concepts.
But it's probably unrealistic to expect a
stomach as flat as your 20-something stomach.
Can I boost my metabolism?
Absolutely. You can optimize your metabolism
throughout life relative to your age by
maintaining the highest level of training you
can, within the limits and constraints of your
life.
If you lose muscle mass (by not exercising),
obviously your metabolism is going to drop.
Of course strength or weight training is
crucial.
What workout or workouts are best
for midlife people?
Creative cardio. Burn 400 to 500 calories a day
in cardio. On the elliptical, for instance, you
can burn about 400 calories in about 35 minutes.
Cross train as much as you can. Burn the 400 to
500 calories all at once or accrue it.
And don't forget the weight training.
What's your weakness? What's the hardest part,
for you, of staying on track and fighting flab
after 40?
Because of long days and all my commitments,
getting enough sleep. I remind myself: the
poorer your sleep, the wider your girth.
Eating dinner not too late. Sometimes I am on a
plane or a train, I don't have the control I
want over how late I eat. In general, do not eat
dinner past 8:30. I like to eat right about 7.
© WebMD Inc. All rights reserved.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
| |
|
|
| |
|
|
|
|
|
Be
accountable for calories. You need a general
idea of how many calories you need.
|
|
|
|
| |
|
- advertisement - |
|
Sunset House
Seniors,
are you looking for an alternative
to independent living facilities on Salt
Spring Island? We are offering a
comfortable, warm environment, in a
beautiful home, with modern amenities, on a
gorgeous country estate. Private yet
accessible. Singles or couples. For more
information on Sunset House and our rates,
please contact 250-538-8209 or
email
us. Discretion
assured.
|
|
|
|