Hi fellow ladies,
please don’t get upset by this article’s headline. If a man and a woman are doing
the same weight loss program, it may happen that the man loses weight faster
than the woman. But that’s not the end. When the woman continues working
towards her goal, she will enjoy the same weight loss results.
I have recently clipped
the article below from Medical Daily and would like to share with you.
Medical Daily - If you’re one of the many women who struggle to see any tangible results even after busting your hump in the gym or watching every single calorie you consume, don’t feel alone. The myth that men lose weight faster than women is anything but a myth. The subtle differences between male weight loss and female weight loss come down to the physiology of both men and women. Men have an easier time burning calories and, subsequently, losing weight because they tend to have the height, weight, and muscle-to-fat ratio advantage over women.
Medical Daily - If you’re one of the many women who struggle to see any tangible results even after busting your hump in the gym or watching every single calorie you consume, don’t feel alone. The myth that men lose weight faster than women is anything but a myth. The subtle differences between male weight loss and female weight loss come down to the physiology of both men and women. Men have an easier time burning calories and, subsequently, losing weight because they tend to have the height, weight, and muscle-to-fat ratio advantage over women.
Why
Do Men Hit Their Weight Loss Goal First?
Does this scenario sound familiar? A man
and a woman, whether they’re boyfriend and girlfriend, coworkers, or brother
and sister, start on the same weight loss path complete with the same diet and
the same amount of exercise. Around a month or two down that road, the man
looks in the mirror one day and finds some weight loss goals he’s been striving
for. That same day the woman looks in the same mirror only to find herself
disappointed. No, the man did not practice stricter adherence to his
diet/exercise regimen. Also, the mirror was not magic. That’s just how we were
built.
Oddly enough, men lose weight faster
because they are bigger to begin with. In fact, how fast a person loses weight
isn’t necessarily a gender issue. It’s more of a big person, little person
issue. Whether a person is bigger due to his height, weight, or muscle mass, he
has the physiological benefit when it comes to losing weight compared to a
smaller person. Since men tend to carry around more height, weight, and muscle
mass than women, their bodies need to burn more calories to function.
“Men are generally in larger bodies than
women that require more calories and therefore can create larger caloric
deficits,” Joey Gochnour, registered dietitian nutritionist and certified
personal trainer, told Medical Daily in an email. “Because their caloric
needs are higher, any modifications they make will create larger caloric
deficits. A larger body's organs will take more calories than a smaller
person's organs, so their basic burn rate of calories is larger to begin with.
A small female's body will not burn as many calories a day as a larger man's,
and any caloric deficit she creates will not be as large as a man's caloric
deficit.”
What
If Women Step It Up In The Weight Room?
Although there is very little a woman
can do to change her height, she can do something to change her muscle-to-fat
ratio. Some women have the distorted preconceived notion that if they hit the
actual free weight section of their gym they’ll end up bulky and less feminine.
Building muscle via strength training is a girl’s best friend when it comes to
losing weight. Muscle naturally burns more calories than fat — even while at
rest. Strength training doesn’t necessarily mean loading up the squat rack or
bench press. Women can build muscle just as efficiently with body weight
exercises, such as pushups and pull-ups.
Unfortunately for women, men yet again
have the advantage when it comes to building muscle thanks to the natural male
hormone, testosterone. Yes, testosterone is produced naturally by the Leydig
cells found in a man’s testicles and a woman’s ovaries. Men just produce the
hormone in larger quantities compared to women. Evidence
has shown that testosterone increase muscle mass by increasing muscle protein
synthesis, the rebuilding of muscle tissue.
A recent study conducted at the University of Missouri
set out to determine what disparities exist among men and women at the gym.
Lead researcher Prof. Jill Kanaley and her colleagues recruited 75 obese men
and women who had been diagnosed with type 2 diabetes. Each participant had
their heart rate and blood pressure monitored while completing an isometric
handgrip test — continually squeezing an object with force for a couple of
minutes. Not only did men lose more weight and experience more cardiovascular
benefits compared to women, but women had to perform 20 percent more exercises
to achieve the same benefits as men.
What
Happens In The Long-Term?
Don’t worry ladies, not all is lost. Men
may be losing all that weight in the first few months of their diet and
exercise routine, but women do catch up eventually. Researchers
from the UK recruited 201 overweight and obese women and 77
overweight and obese men who were asked to follow one of four dieting regimens,
including Atkins, Slim-Fast, Weight-Watchers, and Rosemary Conley’s Diet and
Fitness Plan, for two to six months.
Much to the dismay of each female
participant, men had lost twice the amount of weight and three times as much
weight as women two months into their dieting regimen. However, that gap in
weight loss started to narrow out as both genders continued their diet. By six
months, the rates of weight loss among both men and women were identical. So
keep working toward those goals, ladies. It will all pay off sooner or later.
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