Wednesday, February 1, 2012

Which is Better, Weight Loss or Inch Loss?

The University of Maryland Medical Center calculates that you can expect to lose 1-1.5 lbs a week safely, that's 6 lbs a month (18 lbs for 3 months).  Realistically speaking, weight loss at this pace can be discouraging but more important it is sustainable!
You can actually lose absolutely no weight and lose inches. The way you do this is to eat enough, lift heavy weights so you are gaining some muscle mass.

The reason this works is muscle is more dense than fat. So, if you are losing fat and exercising you are exchanging some fat for some muscle. You might not lose a lot of weight but you are losing inches that way.

Muscle is more compact than fat, therefore you can lose inches more quickly than weight.  The results you would expect to see are loss in clothes’ size. 

Remember, at the beginning of any weight loss/nutrition/exercise program, you can see dramatic weight loss (mostly due to water loss) which will later plateau as your body goes into “starvation” mode.  This will subside and your weight loss/inch loss will be back on track. 

Burn the calories in exercise and control your diet to use the fat stored there. Your body adapts slowly, it fights against change! Give yourself 4-6 weeks for REAL change to happen. That should be about 10 pounds.
To lose as many inches as possible, you need to incorporate weight lifting with your cardio exercise. You can even burn up to 30 percent more calories when combining weight lifting and cardio circuit training into one workout, according to the "Fitness Magazine" website.   Female & Fit incorporates resistance, cardio, and high intensity interval training into each workout for maximum caloric burn during and after the workout!

2 comments:

  1. What a welcome change to see that someone understands that muscle does NOT weigh more than fat and that the difference is one of volume - a pound of muscle is a smaller lump than a pound of fat.

    ReplyDelete
  2. What a welcome change to see that someone understands that muscle does NOT weigh more than fat and that the difference is one of volume - a pound of muscle is a smaller lump than a pound of fat.

    ReplyDelete