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  • "The Best Time to Workout for Weight Loss"

  • What is the optimal exercise timing for weight loss?

  • Is it better to exercise in the morning or the evening?

  • Before breakfast or after breakfast?

  • There was a Nobel Prize- winning exercise physiologist

  • who said he always ran a mile every morning before breakfast.

  • Was he right? Let's find out.

  • More than a dozen experiments have been published

  • comparing the amount of fat burned

  • in a fasted versus fed state, and every single one

  • found more fat was burned on an empty stomach.

  • On average, a single bout of low- to-moderate intensity activity

  • before a meal burned off three grams more fat

  • than the same amount of exercise after a meal.

  • That's about three-quarters of a pat of butter's worth of fat,

  • enough to improve insulin sensitivity.

  • The same amount of exercise, but more fat loss,

  • all because of timing.

  • Now, just because you burn more fat while you're exercising

  • doesn't necessarily mean you end up

  • with less fat at the end of the day.

  • Maybe your body offsets the extra fat loss

  • that occurs during exercise with a little extra fat storage

  • when you finally do eat, balancing it out.

  • Researchers in Japan set out to investigate the possibility

  • that your body makes up for it later

  • by measuring 24-hour fat balance after 100 minutes

  • of running either before breakfast or after lunch.

  • On the exercise-after-lunch day,

  • they burned a total of 608 calories of fat

  • over the course of that day.

  • In contrast, on the exercise- before-breakfast days,

  • in the same 24-hour period they burned through

  • nearly 90 percent more, 1,142 calories of straight fat.

  • So, the next day, they woke up

  • with about a quarter cup of fat less

  • after the same amount of exercise.

  • That's remarkable!

  • What about just something like walking?

  • Sixty minutes before breakfast, after lunch, or after dinner.

  • Over the 24 hours they exercised in the evening,

  • 432 calories were burned off.

  • On the afternoon exercise day,

  • they burned off 446 calories of fat.

  • They also had a control day with no exercise at all,

  • and on that day, they burned through 456 fat calories.

  • That's disappointingit's like they never walked at all.

  • But the same amount of exercise before breakfast

  • resulted in 717 calories of fat loss.

  • Over the course of a day timing matters,

  • so much so that when it comes to an hour of walking,

  • exercise increases 24-hour fat burning only

  • when it is performed before breakfast.

  • Here's the fat balance graph with no exercise.

  • You can see the fat storage bump up

  • at breakfast, lunch, and supper,

  • before slowly coming back down overnight.

  • Exercise in the afternoon or evening

  • and end up with more fat than not exercising at all,

  • but exercise in the morning and at least

  • your fat balance comes back to baseline.

  • All such similar studies on both men and women

  • show we burn through more fat on the days we exercise before,

  • rather than after eating.

  • After reading the chronobiology chapter though

  • or watching my chronobiology videos,

  • an alternative explanation may spring to mind.

  • Maybe it's just a morning thing.

  • Maybe it has nothing to do with meals,

  • and your circadian rhythm is just dictating the difference.

  • No. Exercising in the morning after breakfast

  • appears no better than exercising in the evening after dinner,

  • and exercising before breakfast works better

  • than immediately after breakfast, both still in the morning.

  • It really does seem to be a pre- versus post-meal effect.

  • But why?

  • Carbohydrate is the preferred fuel of the body.

  • When you eat sugars or starches,

  • they get broken down and converted into blood sugar.

  • After a meal, blood sugars rise and your muscles are quick

  • to snatch it up for fuel without having to rely

  • much on your energy stores.

  • If you instead take a siesta,

  • and your muscles have no immediate need for energy,

  • the excess blood sugar from a meal

  • can be stored in our muscles in the form

  • of glycogen for later use.

  • Glycogen is just a bunch of blood sugar molecules

  • strung together into a mass of branches

  • that can be broken off and used

  • for quick bursts of energy any time we need them.

  • If you exercise after a meal, your muscles can siphon off

  • some of the extra blood sugar floating around for energy.

  • Before a meal, your muscles have to instead

  • resort to dipping into your energy stores

  • and end up burning mostly

  • a combination of glycogen and fat.

  • That explains why you burn more fat during fasted exercise,

  • but what about all the extra fat

  • burned throughout the rest of the day?

  • Glycogen is more than a store.

  • Glycogen isn't just an energy reserve,

  • but acts as a sensor capable of activating metabolic pathways.

  • Exercising before breakfast can exhaust

  • as much as 18 percent of your glycogen stores,

  • and that depletion can act as a powerful rallying cry

  • to your fatty tissues to start pulling

  • more of their own weight by breaking down more fat.

  • The lower glycogen stores fall,

  • the greater the sustained 24-hour fat loss.

  • How long do you have to go without food

  • in order to trigger this effect?

  • Six hours may be sufficient;

  • so, it doesn't have to be before breakfast.

  • If you timed it right, you could exercise before a late lunch,

  • or if you have an early enough lunch, maybe before dinner

  • when you get home from work.

  • If exercise in a fasted state isn't possible,

  • does it matter what you eat?

  • Insulin release after a meal appears to play a critical role

  • in suppressing fat breakdown,

  • explaining why lower glycemic foods

  • in this case, muesli versus cornflakes

  • can have less of an effect.

  • Lentils were identified as a promising option

  • for maintaining athletic endurance

  • (which can take a hit on an empty stomach)

  • while maintaining more of the fat dissolution.

  • Lentils are said to be unlikely to be consumed

  • by the general population due to 'low palatability".

  • They obviously haven't tried my mom's lentil soup.

  • It's worth mentioning that although

  • there's increased 24-hour fat burning exercising

  • in a fasted state, the only way to see

  • if this facilitates weight loss over time

  • is to put it to the test,

  • which we'll explore next.

"The Best Time to Workout for Weight Loss"

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The Best Time to Exercise for Weight Loss

  • 27 1
    林宜悉 發佈於 2024 年 02 月 27 日
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