Science has classified the human body into three general body types: ectomorphs, mesomorphs and endomorphs. We all fall into one of these categories. It’s important to note that dieting and exercise has a different effect on each group as far as weight loss and weight gain is concerned. However, for each group to realize good health and fitness, they must eat properly and engage in some form of consistent daily activity.
Someone in the ectomorph group — slim body type — would find it hard to gain weight. They need to increase their food intake and do targeted exercises to gain weight. It’s easy for an ectomorph to lose weight and I would include models and long distance runners in this group.
In contrast to the ectomorph, those who are endomorphs tend to be on the heavier side and losing weight doesn’t come easy for this group. They need to eat foods that are not conducive to weight gain, and staying physically active is almost a requirement to keep the weight in check.
Mesomorphs are those people who can exercise for ten minutes and look like they have been in the gym for hours. They have a sturdier body frame and it’s easy for them to gain muscularity.
Exercise affects each body-type differently but it’s necessary to all groups in-order to improve health and vitality.
Read the following article for more information on how exercise affects weight gain.
Exercising and Gaining Weight? Here’s What to Do
Eating less and exercising are the two pillars of weight loss, or so we’re told. But new research shows that exercise may actually push the scale in the opposite direction.
Scientists at Arizona State University discovered that exercise does not, in fact, lead to sustained weight loss for most people. Their study was published in the October issue of The Journal of Strength and Conditioning Research.
But one simple method may improve your odds of actually dropping pounds with exercise.
The study included 81 adult women between the ages of 18 and 45 who were either average weight or overweight. None were active exercisers. “They were fairly sedentary… coach potatoes,” said Glenn Gaesser, senior author of the study and director of the Healthy Lifestyles Research Center at ASU.
The researchers designed a program that required the women to vigorously walk on a treadmill at an incline for 30 minutes, three days a week at a pace that was 80 percent of their maximum heart rate. The researchers measured the women’s body fat and fitness levels at the beginning of the study and at the four, eight, and twelve-week marks.
Over half of the group became heavier after 12 weeks.
The weight increase ranged from under half a pound to 10 pounds. The added weight was fat and not muscle, according to the researchers. The other half of the women either shed pounds or maintained their pre-study weight. The researchers did not track the eating habits and physical activity of the participants.
Gaesser told Yahoo Health that the most interesting aspect of the results was that weight-loss trends were evident at just four weeks. The women who gained weight after four weeks continued to add pounds until the study was completed; those who lost weight after four weeks weighed even less after week 12.
Why did some gain weight while others didn’t?
Gaesser speculated that the women who gained weight either eat more or became less active throughout the day.
Another study that focused on exercise and weight loss arrived at similar results. The study, published earlier this year in the journal Medicine & Science in Sports & Exercise, concluded that “some individuals adopt compensatory behaviors — i.e. increased energy intake and/or reduced activity — that offset the exercise energy expenditure and limit weight loss.” The researchers, concerned that their conclusions would encourage individuals to cut back or completely curtail their exercise, added that “we need to better educate people that weight loss is not the only health benefit of exercising. There is strong evidence that people experience other health benefits (e.g. reduced blood pressure and waist circumference) despite not attaining the expected, or any, weight loss.”
The study results should not discourage anyone from working out.
“All the women became fitter and improved their cardiovascular fitness,” said Gaesser. “This study proves that fitness can be disassociated with weight. Fitness, and not the number on the scale, matters a lot more.”
And he recommended that exercisers who haven’t seen any weight-loss results in a month should reexamine their diet and activity level.
“Start a diet diary and invest in an activity tracker” that can be worn on the wrist or waist, he added. “Fitness trackers are pretty reliable.”
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P.S. Most of us want to have a body like a mesomorphic person, however it takes a focused effort to gain or lose weight. We can all be healthy in whatever body-type group we fall in — the important thing is that we get started on a proper diet and exercise routine.
P.P.S. Visit How to Prevent Pre-diabetes for information on how to control your blood sugar.