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Why We Eat Too Much, Have an Easier Time Gaining Than Losing Weight, and Expend Too Little Energy: Suggestions for Counteracting or Mitigating These Problems
- Source :
- Nutrients, Vol 13, Iss 3812, p 3812 (2021), Nutrients
- Publication Year :
- 2021
- Publisher :
- MDPI AG, 2021.
-
Abstract
- The intent of this review is to survey physiological, psychological, and societal obstacles to the control of eating and body weight maintenance and offer some evidence-based solutions. Physiological obstacles are genetic and therefore not amenable to direct abatement. They include an absence of feedback control against gaining weight; a non-homeostatic relationship between motivations to be physically active and weight gain; dependence of hunger and satiation on the volume of food ingested by mouth and processed by the gastrointestinal tract and not on circulating metabolites and putative hunger or satiation hormones. Further, stomach size increases from overeating and binging, and there is difficulty in maintaining weight reductions due to a decline in resting metabolism, increased hunger, and enhanced efficiency of energy storage. Finally, we bear the evolutionary burden of extraordinary human capacity to store body fat. Of the psychological barriers, human craving for palatable food, tendency to overeat in company of others, and gullibility to overeat when offered large portions, can be overcome consciously. The tendency to eat an unnecessary number of meals during the wakeful period can be mitigated by time-restricted feeding to a 6–10 hour period. Social barriers of replacing individual physical work by labor-saving appliances, designing built environments more suitable for car than active transportation; government food macronutrient advice that increases insulin resistance; overabundance of inexpensive food; and profit-driven efforts by the food industry to market energy-dense and nutritionally compromised food are best overcome by informed individual macronutrient choices and appropriate timing of exercise with respect to meals, both of which can decrease insulin resistance. The best defense against overeating, weight gain, and inactivity is the understanding of factors eliciting them and of strategies that can avoid and mitigate them.
- Subjects :
- obesity
Food industry
Hunger
media_common.quotation_subject
overeating
Craving
Review
weight regain
Hyperphagia
Satiation
Overweight
Weight Gain
Eating
insulin resistance
Weight Loss
societal barriers
medicine
Humans
overweight
TX341-641
Overeating
Marketing
media_common
Nutrition and Dietetics
business.industry
Nutrition. Foods and food supply
psychological barriers
digestive, oral, and skin physiology
Body Weight Maintenance
medicine.disease
Obesity
physiological barriers
Gullibility
inactivity
medicine.symptom
Energy Metabolism
Psychology
business
Weight gain
Food Science
Subjects
Details
- Language :
- English
- ISSN :
- 20726643
- Volume :
- 13
- Issue :
- 3812
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Nutrients
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....206d1ae2f30fd5a77c288f984adf8eaf