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Friday, October 6, 2023

The more people exercise, the lazier they are throughout the rest of the day, study suggests

 The more time you spend engaging in a structured exercise routine, such as going to the gym or running, the more likely you are to cut back on other physical daily activities, according to a recent study. 

This decline in physical activities could affect people's ability to lose weight successfully even if they participate in a routine exercise program, according to the study, which was published in the journal Current Nutrition Reports.

"If people are seeking weight loss, they should be aware of their non-exercise physical activity (NEPA) — activities such as walking the dog, riding a bike to work or standing at the desk at work," study author Julie Marvel Mansfeldt, a graduate student at the University of Copenhagen’s Department of Nutrition, Exercise and Sports (NEXS), told Fox News Digital.

"If these activities are suddenly stopped, the total daily energy expenditure is less than expected — and thus the weight loss will be less than expected," she added.

"Compensation of NEPA can thus be a barrier to weight loss."

Mansfeldt, under the supervision of Professor Faidon Magkos of NEXS at the University of Copenhagen, conducted a systemic review of 24 research studies that looked at people’s levels of daily physical activities before and while participating in different types of structured exercise regimens. 

The team found that a person who is more engaged in a routine exercise program is more prone to "lounge around" and avoid other, non-structured physical daily activities, like taking the stairs. 

In a prior research study, this decline in daily physical activity resulted in subjects losing 22% less weight than expected from their exercise training program, according to a news release from the university.

"Sixty-seven percent of studies reported less-than-expected weight loss, which was not explained by the change in energy intake, but likely NEPA," Mansfeldt told Fox News Digital.

In theory, exercise should result in an energy deficit — which should result in weight loss, the release noted. 

"But in practice, we see that the two things are seldom linked, and that weight loss from exercise is often less than expected," Mansfeldt pointed out, suggesting that a "compensatory mechanism" must occur.

Cutting back on daily physical activity may be a type of physical compensation for the person who is engaging in more training, the study stated.  

After exercising, people may be more tired, leading them to lounge more and avoid other physical daily activities — or it could be a reward for working out.

The study also noted that dietary compensation might occur with increased structured exercise, where people eat more after completing a workout — which then increases their energy (calorie) intake, though this compensation was less common.

"Surprisingly and contrary to what many people think, we do not typically increase the amount of food we eat upon starting exercise training," Mansfeldt said in the news release. 

"This then suggests that we must be decreasing non-exercise physical activity, which refers to all the physical activities we do in our daily lives aside from the structured exercise."

Those who enjoyed their exercise regimen were less likely to partake in these compensatory motions, the study noted, and also achieved greater weight loss than those who had a negative view of their program, according to the study.

"Depending on the feelings associated with the physical activity, people change their energy intake," Mansfeldt told Fox News Digital. 

"For example, if they did not enjoy running, they increased their energy intake afterward, which is an example of dietary compensation — and this is potentially also true for non-exercise physical activities."

Reduced non-exercise physical activity was common in both men and women across all weight ranges, the study found.

https://www.foxnews.com/health/more-people-exercise-lazier-they-are-throughout-day-study-suggests

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