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by Glenn Gaesser, Ph.D.
Associate Professor of Exercise Physiology,
Univ. of Virginia
Fat. F-a-t. Perhaps no other word in our language
is despised as much, nor focused on so intensely.
Americans are obsessed about fat--body fat--and
how to get rid of it. We have been conditioned to
view health and fitness in strictly black (fat)
and white (fit) terms: A “fat” body cannot possibly
be fit and healthy. This fat-versus-fit dichotomy,
made popular in the 1970s with the publication of
fitness guru Covert Bailey’s “Fit or Fat?” (5),
has become the mantra of many a fitness and health
professional. You don’t have to read any more than
the title to grasp the fundamental message of this
perennial best-selling fitness bible: A person is
either fit, or fat--but not both.
The implications of this myopic fitness philosophy
are obvious: The road to a fitter and healthier
body is a very narrow one indeed. In order for a
fat person to become fit and healthy, that person
must lose weight and become lean. This of course
implies that “lean” is inherently good and “fat”
is inherently bad. Not only is this lipophobic paradigm
overly simplistic, it does not stand up against
a substantial amount of medical and scientific evidence.
Take coronary artery disease (atherosclerosis),
for example--the number one killer in the United
States. Conventional wisdom tells us that obesity
itself is a major cause of clogged arteries--the
rationale being that more fat on the body equals
more fat in the blood stream equals more fat build-up
in the arteries. However, most of the studies that
have looked at the relationship between body weight
(or body fat) and atherosclerosis--via coronary
angiography or by direct examination of artery disease
at autopsy--find that fat people are no more likely
to have clogged arteries than thin people (4,
11, 27). In
some instances results entirely opposite to conventional
wisdom are observed. For example, when researchers
at the University of Tennessee (4)
evaluated coronary angiograms of more than 4,500
men and women, they found that the risk of having
a clogged artery actually decreased as body weight
increased. In other words, it was the fat men and
women who had the cleanest arteries. Although this
finding is exceptional, the preponderance of angiography
studies of this nature do undermine the notion that
obesity inevitably results in clogged arteries.
Furthermore, the findings from angiography studies
are consistent with countless autopsy studies--dating
back to the middle of this century--of the link
between body weight (or body fat) and arterial disease.
The large-scale International Atherosclerosis Project
(27), for example, conducted in
the late 1950s and early 1960s, concluded after
analyzing 23,000 sets of coronary arteries--obtained
at autopsy--that no measure of body weight or body
fat was related to the degree of coronary vessel
disease. The obesity-heart disease link is just
not well supported by the scientific and medical
literature.
The same could be said for the notion that thin
people are healthiest and can expect to live longer
than everybody else. Contrary to the prevailing
medical mind-set, the “thin-live-longest” studies
frequently cited by the more vocal of the anti-fat
crusaders (26) are far outnumbered
by studies demonstrating that body weight--aside
from the extremes--is not really all that strong
a predictor of death rates, or overall health for
that matter (10,
11, 15, 29,
37, 38,
41). A 1996 publication by researchers
at the National Center for Health Statistics and
Cornell University illustrates perfectly (41).
After analyzing the results from dozens of published
reports on the impact of body weight on death rates,
encompassing more than 350,000 men and nearly 250,000
women, the researchers found that moderate obesity
(no more than about 50 pounds in excess of the so-called
ideal body weight) increased the risk of premature
death only slightly in men, and not at all in women,
during follow-up periods lasting up to 30 years.
In fact, the researchers found that thin men--even
within the range recommended by the current U.S.
government guidelines--had a risk of premature death
equal to that of men who were extremely overweight.
The researchers warned in their summary comments
that “attention to the health risks of underweight
is needed, and body weight recommendations for optimum
longevity need to be considered in light of these
risks.”
Ever since the Metropolitan Life Insurance Company
introduced its tables of “ideal” weights in 1942
(21, 22)--the
company called them “desirable” weights in 1959
(30), and did away altogether
with the terms “ideal” and “desirable” in 1983 (31)--we
have been operating under the weight loss industry-reinforced
assumption that weighing more than what the height/weight
charts say we should weigh is a sure sign of poor
health and greatly increases risk of premature death.
However, the majority of body weight-mortality investigations
have shown that weighing 20 pounds, or 30 pounds,
or even 50 pounds in excess of the height-weight
chart recommendations is associated with little,
if any, increased risk of an early check-out. For
example, the current U.S. government guidelines
indicate that a 5’4” woman should weigh between
111 pounds and 146 pounds, and a 5’10” man should
weigh between 132 pounds and 174 pounds. According
to the 1996 study previously mentioned (41),
a 5’4” woman and 5’10” man could weigh close to
200 pounds before their risk of premature death
goes up appreciably (excess body weight seems to
be riskier in men than in women). This suggests
that there are a great many “overweight” Americans--especially
women--who are agonizing unnecessarily about those
numbers on the bathroom scale.
So if being a little fatter than average might
not be so bad, and being thin (at least for men)
might not be so good, what does this say about body
weight and health? If the concept of an ideal weight
is little more than statistical fiction, should
we just chuck the bathroom scale, kick back on the
sofa with a bag of chips in one hand and the remote
control in the other, and nestle into total couch-potato-hood?
Of course not (although chucking the bathroom scale
is probably a good idea). It’s just that body weight,
and even body fat for that matter, do not tell us
nearly as much about our health as lifestyle factors,
such as exercise and the foods we eat. Consider
the following scenario.
Randomly select a few hundred men and women (matched
for age and smoking habits) and divide them into
two groups based on body fat: lean and fat. Next
take each person’s blood pressure, draw some blood
and determine each person’s serum lipid levels,
and have each person perform a glucose tolerance
test (to get an idea of each person’s insulin sensitivity).
I guarantee that you will find, on average, higher
blood pressures, unhealthier blood lipid profiles,
and poorer glucose tolerance/insulin sensitivity
in the group of fat men and women.
Does this mean that the higher body fat levels
caused the health problems? No. It just means that
you are more likely to find these kinds of metabolic
disorders in fat men and women. But associations
do not prove cause-effect. Just because you are
more likely to observe high blood pressure, elevated
blood lipids and glucose intolerance in fat persons
does not prove that body fat is the cause of these
health problems, nor does it mean that a fat person
has to become lean in order to resolve these health
problems. The proof of this assertion is quite straightforward.
Get these fat men and women to start an exercise
program and eat healthier foods--and see how they
do. Numerous research studies have done just that.
A few examples are described below.
Results from the Dietary Approaches to Stop Hypertension
(DASH) clinical trial, published in the New England
Journal of Medicine in 1997 (3),
proved that blood pressures can be effectively lowered
by simple changes in diet, without losing weight.
Among 133 men and women with high blood pressure,
just eating more fruits and vegetables, and consuming
low-fat dairy foods with reduced saturated fat,
was sufficient to reduce systolic blood pressure
by an average of 11.4 mmHg, and diastolic blood
pressure by an average of 5.5 mmHg, within two weeks
after changing their diets. The reductions in blood
pressures were comparable to those observed with
initiation of pharmacotherapy--but without the side-effects
which sometimes accompany antihypertensive medications.
Most significantly, the blood pressure reductions
were achieved without any weight loss.
To prove that it’s fat in the diet--and not fat
on the body--that is the primary cause of blood
lipid abnormalities, such as high cholesterol, researchers
at the National Public Health Institute in Helsinki,
Finland, placed 54 middle-aged men and women on
a low-fat (~24% of total calories) diet for six
weeks (16). Total cholesterol
dropped from 263 mg/dl to 201 mg/dl in the men,
and from 239 mg/dl to 188 mg/dl in the women. Body
weight did decrease modestly, by about 2 pounds.
The subjects were then switched back to their usual
diet (~39% of total calories from fat) for six weeks.
Total cholesterol levels returned to their original
levels--despite absolutely no change in body weight--requiring
the researchers to conclude that the fat content
of the diet, not weight change, was responsible
for the changes in cholesterol levels.
Combined exercise and nutrition programs have
provided even more compelling results, as illustrated
by the changes observed in the more than 4,500 men
and women who have completed a 3-week stay at the
Pritikin Longevity Center in Santa Monica, California
(6-9). The Pritikin program consists
of eating a low-fat, high-complex starch, high-fiber
diet (with no emphasis on rapid weight loss) and
daily moderate-to-vigorous aerobic exercise. Within
three weeks the average cholesterol level dropped
from about 234 mg/dl to about 180 mg/dl; low-density
lipoprotein cholesterol (the unhealthy kind) decreased
from around 151 mg/dl to 116 mg/dl; and triglycerides
were reduced by one-third (from 200 mg/dl down to
135 mg/dl) (6).
Pritikin program participants lowered their blood
pressures by an average of 5-10%, and more than
one-third of the men and women with high blood pressure
were able to discontinue antihypertensive medications
(7, 8). Those
with type II (adult onset) diabetes also experienced
tremendous improvements: 39% of those taking insulin
and 71% of those on oral hypoglycemic agents were
able to discontinue medication entirely (7,
8).
All of these improvements in health profile while
on the Pritikin program were observed within three
weeks. Although participants do lose weight (typically
about 7-11 pounds, or about 5% of their initial
body weight), statistical analysis indicates that
less than 5% of the improvements in health can be
attributed to changes in body weight. Most important
to the question at hand is the fact that most men
and women who enter the program obese leave the
program obese--but with one major difference: They
no longer have the health problems thought to be
caused by excess body fat.
Just as risk factors for heart disease can be
affected by changes in lifestyle independent of
changes in body weight, the actual disease itself
can be influenced by lifestyle modification--without
changes in body weight. The results of the Cholesterol
Lowering Atherosclerosis Study illustrate (14).
Eighty-two moderately overweight middle-aged men
with heart disease were placed in a two-year intervention
program designed to reduce consumption of dietary
fat. Men who reduced their fat intake to 27.5% of
total calories showed no new fatty deposits in their
coronary vessels (as determined by examination of
coronary angiograms taken before and after the two-year
study). On the other hand, men who failed to make
significant changes in fat intake (34% of total
calories from fat) didn’t do as well--they all showed
some evidence of new lesions in their coronary vessels.
Because neither group lost any weight during the
two-year study, the researchers concluded, in a
1990 article published in the Journal of the American
Medical Association, that “the appearance of new
[coronary artery] lesions can be influenced without
weight change by voluntary selection of acceptable
foods.”
All this evidence suggests that as far as one’s
health is concerned, lifestyle is far more important
than body weight. This goes for longevity prospects
as well, as the ongoing--since 1970--Aerobics Center
Longitudinal Study at the Cooper Institute for Aerobics
Research, in Dallas, Texas, demonstrates (10,
13). Data on more than 32,000
men and women indicate that the fittest men and
women have the lowest death rates--regardless of
what they weigh. In other words, a heavier-than-average
person who is physically fit has a better chance
of living a long life than does a thin couch potato.
Furthermore, a separate analysis of nearly 10,000
of the men in this study who performed at least
two exercise stress tests separated by an average
of about 5 years (thereby allowing the researchers
to evaluate the impact of changes in physical fitness
on subsequent death rates), revealed that improving
physical fitness level reduced death rates during
the 5+ years of follow-up. Men who were initially
classified as unfit (defined as being in the bottom
20% of fitness levels for a given age), but who--via
increasing physical activity--improved their fitness
level by the second fitness examination, reduced
their mortality rate during the subsequent 5+ years
of follow-up by 44%. Most significant in terms of
the weight debate was the fact that the improved
longevity prospects were not at all dependent upon
weight loss. Results from the ongoing Harvard Alumni
Study (33) provide similar results:
Sedentary Harvard alums who increased their level
of physical activity experienced a 23% reduction
in all-cause mortality rate. Because alums who lost
weight were no better off healthwise than those
who did not lose weight, the reduction in all-cause
death rate observed in the more physically active
men was in no way attributable to slimming down.
Despite all this evidence suggesting that lifestyle
is far more important than body weight in terms
of health, and that it might be more prudent to
focus on getting people fit and healthy rather than
trying to make them thin, the weight loss industry
still barrels along like a runaway freight train.
Aside from the cultural obsession with slimness,
health professionals have done much to sanctify
this quest for a lean body--primarily by fueling
a medical rationale for fat phobia: Obesity is a
major killer. The most blatant--but unjustified--example
of this scare tactic is the widely publicized claim
that obesity kills 300,000 Americans every year.
Former U.S. surgeon general C. Everett Koop asserted
as much when he launched his Shape Up America! campaign
in 1994. Since then, this figure has taken on a
life of its own, appearing in scientific and medical
journals (1) and mentioned repeatedly
in the media--each time reminding us of the “fact”
that obesity is the second leading cause of preventable
death in America.
The problem, however, is that there is absolutely
no way to prove this assertion. In fact, the most
frequently cited source of this statistic, a 1993
article in the Journal of the American Medical Association
(28), shows just how misinterpreted
this statistic actually is. The article, titled
“Actual Causes of Death in the Untied States,” attributes
the 300,000 deaths per year to “diet/activity patterns”--not
to obesity. Obesity is a physical trait; diet and
physical activity are behaviors. To equate them
not only is unjustified, it is absurd. While poor
diet and lack of physical activity may lead to obesity,
the truth of the matter is that the studies used
to generate the 300,000 figure looked at the health
impact of poor diet and sedentary lifestyle across
the entire weight spectrum, not just among fat persons.
[There are a great many less-than-healthy couch
potatoes with poor dietary and exercise habits who--via
luck of the genes--will never be fat.]
I am not advocating that we should be complacent
about obesity. It’s just that continued focus on
weight loss seems counterproductive, and may be
quite hazardous to the health of those who continually
battle their weight. Each year roughly 70 million
Americans--nearly one-fourth of the entire U.S.
population--attempt to lose weight, shelling out
between $30 billion and $50 billion in the process
(32). But despite our perennial
efforts to shed pounds, our waistlines are getting
bigger, not smaller. It seems what ever we lose,
we gain back--and then some. Not only can this be
damaging to our self-esteem and mental health, chronic
fluctuations in body weight may also do physical
harm (12, 17,
25). In fact, most of the epidemiological
studies on weight loss alone show that weight loss
increases risk for premature death, primarily from
heart disease (2,
12, 20, 25,
34). This obviously represents
a paradox, because weight loss is thought to improve
cardiovascular disease risk factors. But this is
not always the case.
One of the most popular weight reducing strategies
of the past 35 years, the low-carbohydrate diet,
actually raises cholesterol levels (especially low-density
lipoprotein cholesterol) and reduces high-density
lipoprotein cholesterol (the heart-healthy kind)
despite weight loss (24,
36). This suggests that going
on a low-carbohydrate diet may actually increase
risk of atherosclerosis.
Another possible explanation for the paradoxical
finding of weight loss being associated with increased
risk of dying from heart disease is the recent evidence
which shows that dieting depletes body reserves
of heart-healthy omega-3 fatty acids, thus raising
the possibility that weight loss via calorie restriction
may actually make the body more vulnerable to atherosclerosis
(39). The researchers who reported
these findings warned that “a subtle but chronic
risk state could be established if recurrent dieting
depletes omega-3 reserves and intake during maintenance
does not allow effective repletion.”
We need a new approach to health and fitness--one
that places less emphasis on body weight (or body
fat) and more emphasis on healthy metabolism--becoming
“metabolically” fit. To achieve “metabolic fitness”
does not require having a lean body, nor does it
depend upon having the cardiovascular system of
an endurance athlete.
In scientific/medical terms, metabolic fitness
can be defined in terms of how the human body responds
to the hormone insulin (9,
35). “Insulin sensitive” bodies
tend to have excellent glucose tolerance, normal
blood pressures, and heart-healthy blood lipid profiles.
Therefore, insulin sensitive people tend to be at
lower risk for type II diabetes and heart disease
than people who are “insulin resistant”--a metabolic
condition in which the body’s cells (mainly those
in skeletal muscle, liver and adipose tissue) don’t
respond normally to this hormone, and which ultimately
may result in disordered lipid metabolism and elevated
blood pressures. Insulin resistance is associated
with high risk for type II diabetes and heart disease
(9, 18,
35).
Although genes play a role, the major causes
of insulin resistance are lack of exercise and consuming
a diet high in fat (especially saturated fat) and
refined sugar, and low in fiber--a description that
fits many Americans (9). Because
these behaviors also promote obesity, the “insulin
resistance syndrome” (also known as the “metabolic
syndrome”) is observed more often in fat people
than it is in thin people. But as I have pointed
out already, a fat person with the metabolic syndrome
does not have to become lean in order to become
insulin sensitive (i.e., obesity is not the underlying
cause of the syndrome). Also, one does not have
to be obese to be insulin resistant. An estimated
one-fourth of non-obese men and women in the United
States are insulin resistant and don’t realize it
(35).
Substantial improvements in insulin sensitivity
can be changed in a matter of days or weeks (7,
8, 19), which
explains why dramatic improvements in glucose tolerance,
blood pressures, and blood lipids can be observed
so quickly after starting an exercise program or
eating healthier foods. If we can accept the fact
that metabolically fit and healthy bodies can come
in all shapes and sizes (40),
then the public health message becomes quite simple:
be more physically active and consume a healthier
diet.
As for exercise, moderate-to-vigorous activity
(heart rate in the range of ~60-75 percent of maximum)
for ~20-40 minutes per day on most days of the week
is suitable for improving metabolic fitness (9,
23). Intensity and duration of
exercise can be modified to suit individual needs.
If time is not a constraint, duration can be emphasized
while exercising at the lower end of the intensity
range. Just as effective, however, is high-intensity
exercise of only 20-30 minutes duration. As for
nutrition, the best foods to boost metabolic fitness
are those you find primarily near the base of the
USDA food guide pyramid: Whole grains, fruits and
vegetables, and legumes (beans). These foods have
plenty of fiber and have been shown to improve health
regardless of weight and independent of weight loss
(3, 9,
19).
It may seem intuitive that exercising more and
eating better will naturally result in weight loss.
This generally is true, but with a major caveat.
Not everyone will lose weight, and it is virtually
impossible to tell how much any one person will
lose. Most exercise programs and typical diets result
in a weight loss of no more than 5-10 pounds (32);
the average “overweight” U.S. adult wants to lose
20-30 pounds! This discrepancy between what Americans
want and what exercise and healthy eating are able
to deliver highlights the fundamental problem with
using weight loss or reductions in body fat to judge
the success of an exercise program or nutrition
plan. Exercise and healthy eating should not be
viewed merely as means to an end (weight loss),
but rather as having their own intrinsic value.
If someone quits an exercise program out of failure
to reach a particular weight loss (or reduced body
fat) goal, then all the benefits of the exercise
are lost as well. And far too many people who start
exercise programs don’t stay with them. Yo-yo fitness
is becoming as common as yo-yo dieting.
In America today millions of men and women (and
boys and girls) stigmatized as “too fat” are engaged
in a perpetual war with their bodies. Isn’t it about
time we called a truce? Let’s face biological reality.
Some people are naturally meant to be thin, some
naturally meant to be fat. Exercise and diet can
modify our genetic destiny only so much. The human
body is not an infinitely malleable mass of calories
that can be burned down to any shape and size desired.
But that doesn’t mean we can’t all be as metabolically
fit as our lifestyle will allow. In terms of health
and longevity, the scientific evidence is abundantly
clear: It is far more important to be fit than it
is to be thin. Contrary to prevailing dogma, the
road to a fitter and healthier body is not so narrow
after all.
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