Energy Balance

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ENERGY AND

ENERGY
BALANCE
Nepomuceno
Ngujo
Panes
What is Energy Balance?

“Energy balance” is the relationship between “energy


in” (food calories taken into the body through food and
drink) and “energy out” (calories being used in the body
for our daily energy requirements).

This relationship, which is defined by the laws of thermodynamics, dictates


whether weight is lost, gained, or remains the same.
- According to these laws, energy is never really created and it’s
never really destroyed. Rather, energy is transferred between entities.

- We convert potential energy that’s stored within our food (measured


in Calories or kcals) into three major “destinations

Work Heat Storage


 Energy out, the body’s energy needs include the amount of energy required for
maintenance at rest, physical activity and movement, and for food digestion,
absorption, and transport.

We can estimate our energy needs by measuring the amount of oxygen we consume.
We eat, we digest, we absorb, we circulate, we store, we transfer energy, we burn the
energy, and then we repeat
Why is energy balance important?
There’s a lot more to energy balance than a change in body weight.

Energy balance also has to do with what’s going on in your cells. When you’re
in a positive energy balance (more in than out) and when you’re in a
negative energy balance (more out than in), everything from your
metabolism, to your hormonal balance, to your mood is impacted
Negative energy balance

● A severe negative energy balance can lead to a decline in metabolism,


decreases in bone mass, reductions in thyroid hormones, reductions in
testosterone levels, an inability to concentrate, and a reduction in physical
performance.
● Yet a negative energy balance does lead to weight loss. The body detects an
energy “deficit” and fat reserves are called upon to make up the difference.
Positive energy balance

● Overfeeding (and/or under exercising) has its own ramifications not only in terms of
weight gain but in terms of health and cellular fitness.
● With too much overfeeding, plaques can build up in arteries, the blood pressure and
cholesterol in our body can increase, we can become insulin resistant and suffer from
diabetes, we can increase our risk for certain cancers, and so on.
● The relationship between the amount of Calories we eat in the diet and the amount of
energy we use in the body determines our body weight and overall health.
Overall lifestyle habits help to properly control energy balance, and when properly
controlled, excessive swings in either direction (positive or negative) are prevented and the
body can either lose fat or gain lean mass in a healthy way.

Factors that affect energy in


Calorie intake
Energy digested and absorbed (90-99%)

Factors that affect energy out


Work
Physical work (exercise and activity)
Heat
Heat produced with physical work
Heat produced via the thermic effect of food (TEF)
Heat produced by resting metabolism
Heat produced: adipose creation
Heat produced: adipose thermoregulation
Storage
Efficiency of work
Efficiency of food metabolism
Energy stored in adipose tissue
How to create a negative energy balance
● Build muscle with weight training (about 5 hours of total exercise each week) and
proper nutrition
● Create muscle damage with intense weight training
● Maximize post workout energy expenditure by using high intensity exercise
● Regular program change to force new stimuli and adaptations
● Boost non-exercise physical activity
● Increase thermic effect of feeding by increasing unprocessed food intake
● Eat at regular intervals throughout the day
● Eat lean protein at regular intervals throughout the day
● Eat vegetables and/or fruit at regular intervals
How to create a positive energy balance
● Build muscle with weight training (at least 4 hours of intense exercise per week) and proper
nutrition
● Create muscle damage with intense weight training
● Minimize other forms of exercise (other than high intensity and resistance training)
● Limit excessive non-exercise physical activity
● Try consuming more shakes and liquids with calories
● Build in energy dense foods that don’t cause rapid satiety (nut butters, nuts, trail mix, oils, etc.)
● Eat at regular intervals throughout the day
● Incorporate additional omega-3 fats
● Take advantage of peri-workout nutrition, with plenty of nutrients consumed before, during, and
after exercise
● Sleep 7-9 hours per night
● Stay consistent with habits
THANK YOU!!

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